Zanesville animal escape | |||
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Date | October 18, 2011 | ||
Location | 39°56′48″N82°03′45″W / 39.9466772°N 82.0625522°W | ||
Caused by | The suicide and release of animals by Terry Thompson | ||
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Casualties and losses | |||
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The Zanesville animal escape occurred on October 18, 2011, when the owner of Muskingum County Animal Farm in Zanesville, Ohio released multiple exotic animals before committing suicide. The Muskingum County Sheriff's Office and Ohio State Highway Patrol subsequently killed 48 of the animals. Additionally, two were presumed eaten by the other animals, and six were captured and relocated to the Columbus Zoo and Aquarium. The event led to widespread media attention and legislative changes regarding exotic animal ownership in Ohio.
Muskingum County Animal Farm was a private zoo located in Zanesville, Ohio, United States owned by Terry Thompson, a 62-year-old Vietnam War veteran, pilot, and exotic animal collector. He had acted as an animal handler on Wild Kingdom in 2008 and provided a lion cub to a photoshoot with Heidi Klum. [1] In the years leading up to his death, he went to prison on federal firearm charges (for having an unregistered machine gun), was heavily in debt, and his wife had left him. [2]
The animal farm had been repeatedly reported for inadequate and unsafe housing for the animals, as well as insufficient water and food. Neighbors had previously complained of animals escaping "improper fencing" and causing damage to neighboring property. [3]
On October 18, 2011, owner Terry Thompson allegedly set free 50 of his 56 exotic animals before taking his own life by shooting himself in the head. Lions, tigers, bears and wolves were among the animals that escaped and were hunted by local law enforcement, including the Muskingum County Sheriff's Office and Ohio State Highway Patrol, out of fear for public safety. [4] [5] The law enforcement did not use tranquilizers because they take time to take effect, and they must be tailored to an animal's size to be effective. [6] Additionally, officers feared that animals shot with tranquilizers would run off and hide in the darkness once night fell. [4] The animals were malnourished and diseased when they were released. [7] [8]
Forty-eight animals were killed by the local police while two were presumed eaten by the other animals. [9] [10] The animals confirmed to be dead were eighteen Bengal tigers, [11] six American black bears, two grizzly bears, two wolves, one macaque monkey, one baboon, three mountain lions, and seventeen African lions (nine males and eight females). [10] Three leopards, a small grizzly bear, and two Celebes crested macaques were left caged inside Thompson's home. These animals were tranquilized and sent to the Columbus Zoo and Aquarium. [12]
Jack Hanna, TV wildlife expert and Director Emeritus of the Columbus Zoo and Aquarium, lamented the killings but deemed the police actions necessary, saying that the animals would have likely killed people if tranquilizers had been used. [13] Ohio governor John Kasich called for a temporary moratorium on the sale of exotic animals. [10] Troy Balderson, Zanesville's representative in the Ohio Senate at the time, sponsored a bill requiring a permit and liability insurance for private owners of dangerous wild animals in the next legislative session. [14] [15] The bill was signed into law on June 5th, 2012, and owners were required to have permits by January 1st, 2014. Ohio had not regulated exotic animal ownership previously. [16] Following the incident, media outlets and commentators noted that the 2010 documentary film The Elephant in the Living Room had essentially forecasted such a tragedy, highlighting the risks of exotic pet ownership in Ohio a year earlier. [17] [18]