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The US influencer Samantha Jones stands in front of a Visa probe after forming a viral video from his mother in the viral video

The US influencer, who triggered outrage when she demolished a wild baby Wombat from her desperate mother for a social media video, is checked by the Australian government.

The Australian Minister of Immigration Tony Burke said that the Department checked the video of Samantha Jones, also known as @samstrays_somewhere on Instagram to determine whether her stunt had violated the country's wild animal law, reported news.com.au.

“The department is now working on the conditions for its current visa and determines whether the Immigration Act has violated,” said Burke in an explanation on Thursday.

The Australian government examines the visa status of influencer Sam Jones after causing viral video serious outrage. @samstrays_somewo/Instagram

Burke said that Jones, which had checked over the video, could be sufficient to stop her back to the country.

“In both cases, I will be surprised in view of the examination of the exam if she ever applied for a visa again if it is still bothered,” said the disruptive Minister of Immigration.

“I can hardly wait for Australia to see the back of this person. I don't expect them to return.”

In the now deleted video, which she posted more than 92,000 followers on Instagram, Jones grabbed the baby Wombat on the roadside in the middle of the night, while the man who filmed her with a laugh.

When she runs onto the camera who wears the defenseless Wombat, whose legs dangle free, her mother appears on the chase after his baby.

The Australian Minister of Immigration Tony Burke said the Department checked Jones's video to see if their stunt violates the country's wildlife laws. @samstrays_somewo/Instagram

“Look at the mother, you chase it!” The man says while he laughs hysterically.

The video then cuts with her to keep the baby Wombat when it screams with fear.

“Okay, mom is right there and she is angry, let him go,” she said before the video ends.

In the caption of the video, Jones wrote that “the baby and the mother were certainly united”.

In the now deleted video, which she posted more than 92,000 followers on Instagram, Jones grabbed the baby Wombat on the roadside in the middle of the night, while the man who filmed her with a laugh. @samstrays_somewo/Instagram

Foreign Minister Penny Wong also excluded the Hunting influencer for her cruel video.

“It looked pretty terrible, right? I will leave such questions [about whether the influencer should be deported] To Tony Burke and the authorities, but really, leave the Wombat alone, ”said Wong.

“I think everyone who had seen it would have left the baby in peace. Leave it with his mother. “

An online petition that demanded its deportation from Australia received more than 13,000 signatures on Thursday.

It is unclear whether Jones fled the video from the country after the back reaction.

Although the influencer may have believed that it was a harmless stunt for a video, said the Australian Wildlife Rescue Agency wired that the law was illegal, news.com.au reported

Wired veterinarians Dr. Tania Bishop told the news agency that the baby Wombat looks about eight months old and at an age at which it would rely on his mother to protect “at all times”.

When she runs onto the camera who wears the defenseless Wombat, whose legs dangle free, her mother appears on the chase after his baby. @samstrays_somewo/Instagram

“You can see the Joey swing, but it hisses and screams what is a sign of extreme stress,” said Bishop.

“You can also see the extreme burden in which the mother is located and hunt her across the street.”

The punishments of cruelty to animals vary from the state in Australia. Some fines reach up to $ 14,000 for individuals and $ 157.00 for companies. According to RSPCA, crimes can also bring a potential prison sentence of seven years.

An online petition that demanded its deportation from Australia received more than 13,000 signatures on Thursday. @samstrays_somewo/Instagram

Since then, the influencer based in Montana has made its public Instagram and TikTok accounts privately after the counter reaction.

According to News.com.au, Jones, who claims to be a “wildlife biologist and environmental scientist”, addressed the counter reaction to the Instagram comments before deleting the video.

“For everyone who is concerned and unhappy, the baby was carefully held overall and then released again. They went into the bush together and completely intact, ”she wrote.

“I would not have thought that I would primarily catch it and took the opportunity to estimate a really incredible animal up close. I never catch wild animals that are damaged by my TU. “

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