Tiger Kills a Person..Who to Blame
From: Dr Andrew Jones
Author: Veterinary Secrets Revealed
Website: https://shop.veterinarysecrets.com
Re: Tiger Kills a Person..Who to Blame
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Good morning fellow readers.
The news has been filled with the San Franciso Zoo Story. A Tiger escaped
and killed 1 person, and injured 2 others.
The story reveals a number of BIG questions.
First the ethics of having Wild Animals in Captivity. I have NEVER been a
supporter of this, and I HOPE that this further advances those who see the
benefit of Habitat protection so that Wild Animals can survive and thrive in
their OWN environment..NOT in Zoos.
I FIRMLY believe that there are MUCH more effective ways to educate US, the
public, on the need to respect and protect these exotic animals WITHOUT having
them in cages.
There is a BIG Place for Wildlife Rehabilitation and Captive Breeding Programs-
Our Human Race has done a pretty good job of putting many of these species
on to the endangered list- BUT this is different than a ZOO.
Then as the story unfolds, it appears that the Tiger was being taunted-
this would be by Idiotic, disrespectful people- they are the ones
who should have been attacked.
Here is the story for those of you who would like to read it:
SAN FRANCISCO — The big cat exhibit at the San Francisco Zoo was cordoned off as
a crime scene Wednesday as investigators tried to determine whether a 300-pound
Siberian tiger that killed a visitor escaped from its high-walled pen on its own
or got help from someone, inadvertent or otherwise.
Police shot the animal to death after a Christmas Day rampage that began when the
tiger escaped from an enclosure surrounded by what zoo officials said are an 18-foot
wall and a 20-foot moat. Two other visitors were severely mauled.
Police Chief Heather Fong said the department has opened a criminal investigation to
“determine if there was human involvement in the tiger getting out or if the tiger
was able to get out on its own.”
Police said they have not ruled anything out, including whether the escape was the
result of carelessness or a deliberate act.
Fong said officers were gathering evidence from the tiger’s enclosure as well as
accounts from witnesses and others.
One zoo official insisted the tiger did not get out through an open door and must
have climbed or leaped out. But Jack Hanna, former director of the Columbus Zoo and
a frequent guest on TV, said such a leap would be an unbelievable feat, and “virtually
impossible.”
“There’s something going on here. It just doesn’t feel right to me,” he said. “It just
doesn’t add up to me.”
Instead, he speculated that visitors might have been fooling around and might have
taunted the animal and perhaps even helped it get out by, say, putting a board in the moat.
Similarly, Ron Magill, a spokesman at the Miami Metro Zoo, said it is unlikely a zoo
tiger could make such a leap, even with a running start.
“Captive tigers aren’t nearly in the kind of shape that wild tigers have to be in
to survive,” he said. He said taunting can definitely make an animal more aggressive,
but “whether it makes it more likely to get out of an exhibit is purely speculative.”
The police chief would not comment on whether the animal was taunted.
The same tiger, a 4-year-old female named Tatiana, ripped the flesh off a zookeeper’s
arm just before Christmas a year ago while the woman was feeding the animal through
the bars. A state investigation faulted the zoo, which installed better equipment at
the Lion House, where the big cats are kept.
Zoo director Manuel Mollinedo said Wednesday that he gave no thought to destroying
Tatiana after the 2006 incident, because “the tiger was acting as a normal tiger does.”
As for whether Tatiana showed any warning signs before Tuesday’s attack, Mollinedo said:
“She seemed to be very well-adjusted into that exhibit.”
It was unclear how long the tiger had been loose before it was killed. The three visitors
were attacked around closing time Tuesday on the 125-acre zoo grounds. Four officers
hunted down and shot the animal after police got a 911 call from a zoo employee.
The zoo has a response team that can shoot animals. But zoo officials and police
described the initial moments after the escape as chaotic.
The dead visitor was identified as 17-year-old Carlos Sousa Jr. of San Jose.
The two injured men, 19- and 23-year-old brothers from San Jose, were upgraded to
stable condition at San Francisco General Hospital after surgery. They suffered
deep bites and claw wounds on their heads, necks, arms and hands, said Dr. Rochelle
Dicker, a surgeon. She said they were expected to make a full recovery.
The zoo’s director of animal care and conservation, Robert Jenkins, said the tiger
did not leave through an open door. “The animal appears to have climbed or otherwise
leaped out of the enclosure,” he said. But the zoo’s director admitted, “We’re still
not too clear as to exactly what transpired.”
Hanna predicted other U.S. zoos would reassess their tiger enclosures if it turns out
the tiger was able to leap out. He said he never before heard of a zoo visitor being
killed by an animal.
“It’s much safer going to a zoo than getting in your car and going down the driveway,”
he said.
Hanna said that since zoo tigers are well fed, it is unlikely the animal was looking
for food when it got out. “Were they taunting the animal?” he said. “Were they throwing
things that were making it angry?”
The first attack happened right outside the tiger’s enclosure — the victim died at
the scene. Another was about 300 yards away, in front of the zoo cafe. The police chief
said the animal was mauling the man, and when officers yelled at it to stop, it turned
toward them and they opened fire.
Only then did they see the third victim, police said.
About 20 visitors were in the zoo when the attacks happened about an hour before the
6 p.m. closing time, officials said. Employees and visitors were told to take shelter
when zoo officials learned of the attacks, and some employees locked themselves inside
buildings as they had been instructed to do if an animal escaped.
There were five tigers at the zoo — three Sumatrans and two Siberians. Officials initially
worried that four of them had gotten loose.
The zoo was closed on Wednesday. Officials said they expected to reopen the place on Thursday,
but the big cat exhibit will remain closed “until we get a better understanding of what actually
happened,” Mollinedo said. He said colleagues from other U.S. zoos will be brought in to help
re-evaluate the big cat exhibit.
After last year’s attack, the state fined the zoo $18,000. The zoo added customized steel mesh
over the bars, built in a feeding chute and increased the distance between the public and the cats.
Tatiana arrived at the zoo from the Denver Zoo a few years ago, with officials hoping she
would mate with a male tiger. Siberian tigers are classified as endangered and there are more
than 600 of the animals living in captivity worldwide.
U.S. Department of Agriculture spokesman Jim Rogers, said his agency is looking into the attack
for violations of federal animal-welfare laws.
The San Francisco Zoo is as an accredited member in good standing of the Association of Zoos
and Aquariums.
“Animal escapes at accredited zoos are so very rare and each one is different,” association
spokesman Steve Feldman said. “But we are always looking for ways to improve safety for our visitors.”
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P.S. I for One NO LONGER vistit Zoos. I personally can’t
support them and I have NEVER got the big EDUCATIONAL argument.
The impact of seeing a Pod of Killer Whales of the Coast
of Vancouver is 1000% more impactful than seeing a depressed
Killer Whale doing some degrading tricks in the Vancouver
Aqarium.
P.P.S. The Veterinary Secrets Revealed Printed Manual is
available at 50% OFF but ONLY until December 31 2007 at
Midnight. If you are wanting a Copy, and the BIG Fr**ee
CD Bonus sent to your door check it out at:
It’s Your Pet. Heal Them At Home!
Best Wishes,
Dr Andrew Jones, DVM
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