Mazie Scott

 (May 6, 1975 - April 2, 2014) was a South African-born Australian operative who later turned informant whilst serving time in prison for an arson incident in the.

Bio
Mazie was born in, and immigrated to  at the age of 3. Her parents said that Mazie was "a normal little girl growing up" and suggested she might have been forced into joining the ALF and afterwards indoctrinated by two strangers she met in at a vegfest she was attending with a friend in 1995. Mazie later admitted that two men, Thomas Miyajima and Tony Lehnertz, had "brainwashed" her into joining the ALF.

In 2007, she was shot and roughed up by Anti-Consumerist Removal League members at an attempted action at a McDonald's. She was "left to die" outside the restaurant with "Go Vegan? How About No!" written on her back with a razor blade. Mazie was found by employees opening up the restaurant the next morning and was taken to nearby where she was treated and then taken into police for questioning.

Mazie was extradited to the United States from Australia in 2010 due to a previous charge in for arson of a  restaurant. She was sentenced to 5 years in prison and placed in the. Whilst in prison, she turned informant and as a result was delisted from several support websites for imprisoned ALF members.

In 2014, she was pardoned by Nebraska governor due to a health issue and she was sent back to. Two days after her return to her home town of, she died from complications of Hepatitis C.

Mazie was cremated and her ashes were scattered off the coast of.

Attack
Mazie, as "ALF Pretty Wolf", claimed responsibility for so-called "actions" in, , and the :
 * Planting a presser cooker bomb in the bathroom of a franchise in  - an action which killed 3 people and injured an off-duty  police officer - and is believed to be the only ALF action to have fatalities of human lives
 * Burning a on the  outskirts to the ground
 * Planting a time bomb hooked up to a School Smart digital timer under a truck in,  in the  - causing an explosion which resulted in $500,000 dollars in damages and a lawsuit against several local animal welfare groups and an ALF spokesperson by the franchisee who owned the truck