Bears, tigers, lions and wolves escape from Ohio zoo

 

Sheriff Matt Lutz and wildlife expert Jack Hanna on the situation in Ohio

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Police have shot and killed dozens of exotic animals that escaped from a private zoo in Zanesville, Ohio.

Sheriff Matt Lutz said he personally gave the order to shoot the escaped animals, including grizzly bears, black bears, wolves, tigers and lions.

On Wednesday, Mr Lutz said police believe they have now accounted for all 56 animals except one monkey.

The animals' owner, Terry Thompson, was found dead at the zoo, and police believe he killed himself.

Mr Lutz said a preliminary investigation suggested Mr Thompson left fences open at the farm.

'Incredibly dangerous'

Officials said the "volatile situation" of animals escaping from the 73-acre (29-hectare) Muskingum County Animal Farm and the approach of nightfall on Tuesday had prompted the shoot-to-kill order.

Start Quote

This is like Noah's ark wrecking here in Zanesville”

End Quote Jack Hanna Former director, Columbus Zoo

Forty-eight of the 56 animals were then shot dead on the sheriff's orders.

Among those killed were 17 lions and 18 Bengal tigers. US nature TV host Jack Hanna said the killing of the tigers was especially tragic as there were only about 1,400 remaining in the world.

Six animals - three leopards, one grizzly bear and two monkeys - were captured and have been sent to the nearby Columbus Zoo. One wolf was also found dead, leaving just a monkey unaccounted for.

Staff from the nearby Columbus Zoo were called on to tranquilise the roaming animals.

Mr Hanna, a former director of Columbus Zoo, in the nearby Ohio state capital, said tranquilising animals in the dark was incredibly dangerous, and told reporters that "the sheriff did the right thing".

Escaped lion shot dead near Zanesville, Ohio (Pic: ABC TV) The shoot-to-kill order has been criticised, but also supported by one wildlife expert

"You cannot tranquilise an animal like this, a bear or a leopard or a tiger [at night]," Mr Hanna told ABC before the news conference.

"If you do that, the animal gets very excited, it goes and hides, and then we have [police officers] in danger of losing their life, and other people."

Sheriff's Deputy Jonathan Merry was one of the first to respond to the incident.

Mr Hanna said the scope of the event was immense.

"This is like Noah's Ark wrecking here in Zanesville," he said.

He shot a gray wolf and a black bear, firing his pistol as the bear charged at him. The policeman said the bear was about 7ft (2m) away when he killed it with a single round.

"All these animals have the ability to take a human out in the length of a second," he told the Associated Press news agency.

Lax regulation

Overnight, police have urged people in Zanesville to stay indoors and flashing signs along nearby highways told motorists: "Caution exotic animals" and "Stay in vehicle".

Several local school districts cancelled classes.

Animals shot dead

  • 1 wolf
  • 6 black bears
  • 2 grizzly bears
  • 17 lions
  • 1 baboon
  • 3 mountain lions
  • 18 Bengal tigers

"We didn't want kids waiting by the bus stop and seeing these big animals," Mr Lutz said.

Police have several suspects in custody after they attempted to steal one of the animals Tuesday evening.

Another animal was struck by a car on a nearby highway.

Ohio has some of America's most lax regulation of exotic pets, reports say - and some of the country's highest rates of injuries and deaths caused by them.

In 2010, an animal caretaker was killed by a bear at a property in Cleveland. The death was eventually ruled a workplace accident.

Sheriff Lutz said his office began getting phone calls at about 17:30 local time (21:30 GMT) on Tuesday, saying animals were loose on a road just west of the town.

Dead lion around Zanesville Dead animals were scattered around Zanesville on Wednesday morning

Four armed deputies were dispatched to the zoo, where they found Mr Thompson's body and the animal cages open. Several aggressive animals found near the body were shot, Mr Lutz said.

Mr Lutz said his main concern was protecting the public in the largely rural area.

"This is a bad situation," Mr Lutz said. "It's been a situation for a long time."

Federal Division of Wildlife officers were drafted in to help with the situation, a local official said.

A neighbour of Mr Thompson, Danielle White, said he had been in legal trouble, and police said he had recently been released from jail.

A colourful character

"He was in hot water because of the animals, because of permits, and [the animals] escaping all the time," Ms White said. A few weeks ago, she said, she had to avoid some camels grazing on the side of a freeway.

Map

Mr Thompson had been released from federal prison three weeks earlier after serving a one-year term on firearms charges, according to the AFP news agency.

His farm was reportedly raided June 2008, seizing more than 100 guns.

A local resident, Bill Weiser, said Mr Thompson had been a colourful character who flew planes, raced boats and owned a custom motorcycle shop which also sold guns.

"He was pretty unique," Mr Weiser told AP. "He had a different slant on things. I never knew him to hurt anybody, and he took good care of the animals."

 

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  • rate this
    +2

    Comment number 299.

    When you have dangerous animals running around your town, you don't take risks with the lives of its citizens. The sheriff did the only thing he could under the circumstances and should be commended for his swift, decisive action. The state of Ohio really needs to look at its laws on exotic 'pets'.

  • rate this
    -3

    Comment number 297.

    People claim these animals should have been rounded up instead of shot. Then what? Sent to another zoo to live on display? Its more humane to shoot them. I think a sheriff or anyone responsible for the public's safety would rather face the public's disgust over shooting tiger, than the mother of a child mauled by a tiger which ran off in the dark and hid after being darted.

  • rate this
    -3

    Comment number 288.

    As a current resident of Ohio some of the comments sadden me. These animals were not in a zoo, but in a private collection (a practice I condone). The Sheriffs were trying to protect the locals from the danger, not being "trigger happy". In the beginning of the incident before zoos where brought in where would they have kept darted animals? Sheriffs are not trained to deal with these animals!

  • rate this
    -4

    Comment number 260.

    Hungry, stressed tigers that have lost their fear of people pose a threat to the populace- they found the corpse of a monkey the tigers ate, but it could have been some ten-year-old taking out the trash.

    Dart guns are less effective at range than the rifles used, and don't always act fast (a safe dose for the monkey may not affect the tiger before it gets you).

    The officers had to act prudently.

  • rate this
    -7

    Comment number 258.

    I can't believe people are making such a big deal about this. The danger is over, mischief managed, case closed. If you don't mind dangerous wild animals running loose in England that's your business but here in the US public safety is number one.After dark a tranquilizer gun is a bad idea according to our experts.The order to shoot to kill was the only rational choice.

 

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