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Ohio zoo kills gorilla after boy, 4, falls into enclosure

Hoser

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What were the fukin parents doing?????

https://Ohio zoo kills gorilla after boy, 4, falls into enclosure

Maynard said the gorilla didn't appear to be attacking the child, but he said it was "an extremely strong" animal in an agitated situation. He said tranquilizing the gorilla wouldn't have knocked it out immediately, leaving the boy in danger.

WARNING: VIDEO MAY BE DISTURBING



CINCINNATI -- The Cincinnati Zoo has temporarily closed its gorilla exhibit after a special zoo response team shot and killed a 17-year-old gorilla that grabbed and dragged a 4-year-old boy who fell into a moat.

Zoo officials said the boy fell after he climbed through a public barrier at the Gorilla World exhibit Saturday afternoon. He was picked up out of the moat and dragged by the gorilla for about 10 minutes.

Authorities said the child, who has not been identified, fell 10 to 12 feet. He was taken to Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center where he is expected to recover. Hospital officials said they couldn't release any information on him.

Zoo Director Thane Maynard said the zoo's dangerous animal response team decided the boy was in "a life-threatening situation" and that they needed to put down the 400-pound-plus male gorilla named Harambe.

"They made a tough choice and they made the right choice because they saved that little boy's life," Maynard said. "It could have been very bad."
But he mourned the loss of the gorilla, which came to Cincinnati in 2015 from the Gladys Porter Zoo in Brownsville, Texas.

"We are all devastated that this tragic accident resulted in the death of a critically endangered gorilla," he said in a news release. "This is a huge loss for the zoo family and the gorilla population worldwide."

Witness Kim O'Connor shared video she and her family recorded with WLWT-TV of the boy and Harambe. The two appear in a corner of the exhibit while a voice yells "Somebody call the zoo!" and "Mommy's right here." Later, the two are shown in the moat. At one point, Harambe touches the boy's back and arms. A woman's voice is heard saying "Be calm, be calm."

The station reports more graphic parts of the video not shown include Harambe dragging the boy.

Two female gorillas also were in the enclosure when the boy fell in but zoo officials said only the male remained with the child.

It was the first time that the team had killed a zoo animal in such an emergency situation, Maynard said. He called it "a very sad day" at the zoo.
The area around the gorilla exhibit was closed off Saturday afternoon as zoo visitors reported hearing screaming.

Maynard said the zoo believes the exhibit remains safe.

The zoo will be open on Sunday but officials said the gorilla exhibit has been closed until further notice.

The zoo prides itself for its work in protecting endangered species, and has been part of successful captive breeding efforts in recent years in the effort to save the endangered Sumatran rhino.

 
The parents have to be held accountable for the death of the Gorilla. No ifs or buts.
 
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Shoot the kid. He's the trouble maker. Then forbid the parents to breed again.
 
First of all those animals belong in the wild.....shoulnt be at the zoo. Secondly, the zoo didnt provide the necessary precautions and protections for both animals and visitors. I m not sure how the kid got there but it shouldnt have happened. Finally, i am not a big fan of zoos at all. How would you like to be locked up in a cage and be stared at all day?
 
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Michelle Gregg, a bad parent? Not according to Michelle Gregg, the mother of a 4-year-old boy who got into a gorilla enclosure at the Cincinnati Zoo on Saturday, prompting a response team to shoot the animal dead, reports . “My son … fell in the gorilla exhibit at the zoo,” writes Gregg in that’s been deleted (per one description, her account is also gone). “God protected my child until the authorities were able to get to him.” Saying her child escaped with “a concussion and a few scrapes,” she adds: “As a society we are quick to judge how a parent could take their eyes off of their child and if anyone knows me I keep a tight watch on my kids. Accidents happen…”





Gregg is responding to social media users who showered her with abuse after the death of Harambe, a 450-pound, 17-year-old, endangered gorilla. “I am SICK&TIRED of LAZY people who do not WATCH THEIR CHILDREN. RIP #Harambe you did not deserve to die,” reads one, while another vented that “#harambe was killed because of the stupid and their irresponsible parenting…their picture should be made public.” There’s also a petition with over 160,000 supporters so far seeking a criminal investigation into the boy’s parents, and a vigil is being held Monday for Harambe at the zoo, the AP reports. Meanwhile, the zoo has released astatement defending its actions and saying tranquilizers weren’t an option because they take too long to kick in.
 
The parents:



[h=4]According to CNN, Michelle Gregg and Deonne Dickerson, the parents of the 3-year-old boy who climbed into the Cincinnati zoo’s gorilla enclosure are officially under investigation by the city police for possible negligence. (Dickerson was not at the zoo at the time of the incident.[/h][h=4]Investigators are “only regarding the actions of the parents/family that led up to the incident and not related to the operation or safety of the Cincinnati Zoo.” In other words, this investigation won’t focus on the zoo or the actions of zoo employees, only the events or non-events that had to do with the kid falling into the gorilla habitat.[/h][h=4]In related findings, CNN conducted independant research on the zoo’s USDA records from the last three years and found nine incidences where the zoo was out of compliance — two involved animal care, the other seven were fixed — none of the incidents involved the gorilla exhibit.[/h]
Animal rights groups demands feds investigate

https://www.cnn.com/2016/05/31/us/gorilla-shot-harambe/
 
Everyone you know has been talking about the horrific death of Harambe — the rare 17-year-old western lowland gorilla. It’s one of the only things I thought about over the weekend, mostly because it was a preventable incident.

Maybe because zoos are horrible ideas. Maybe because they could’ve lured Harambe with food or something. Mostly because the parents (specifically the mother who was there) of the kid who fell into the Cincinatti zoo gorilla habitat hasn’t once apologized for the incident.

She’s taken to her Facebook account to announce to the world her family is OK, but nothing else. She hasn’t shown any remorse for anything.


Well, now new eyewitness testimony from Kim O’Connor, the woman who recorded the footage you’ve all seen, is going on record stating that she overheard the boy and her mom argue about him going into the gorilla’s habitat.

If what this woman is saying is true, how should the boy’s mother be held accountable? Should there be a fine? Should she get a visit from her local Child Protective Services? He was raised to not take no for an answer by his parents.

Personally, all I really want to see is the mother take some responsibility — so far, she’s been nothing but indignant over the entire thing.
 
Jane Goodall: Slain Zoo Gorilla Was ‘Putting an Arm Round the Child’

Jane Goodall, one of the world’s most renowned primatologists, wrote an email on Tuesday to the director of the Cincinnati Zoo, saying she thought the slain gorilla may have been protecting the boy who fell into the animal’s exhibit.

The scientist and animal rights activist extended her sympathies to the zoo’s director, Thane Maynard, amid national backlash over the shooting death of a 17-year-old western lowland gorilla named Harambe. “I tried to see exactly what was happening—it looked as though the gorilla was putting an arm round the child—like the female who rescued and returned the child from the Chicago exhibit,” she wrote, according to the correspondence the Jane Goodall Institute made public. Goodall may have been referring to the 1996 incident at the Brookfield Zoo in Illinois in which a female gorilla carried a boy to safety after he fell into her pit. “Anyway, whatever, it is a devastating loss to the zoo, and to the gorillas,” Goodall wrote.

Harambe was shot dead after officials said he dragged around a 4-year-old boy who fell into its enclosure on Saturday. Authorities are considering possible criminal charges, a prosecutor said Tuesday.Goodall also asked how the two other female gorillas living with Harambe reacted to the death. “Are they allowed to see, and express grief, which seems to be so important?” she wrote.

“I feel so sorry for you, having to try to defend something which you may well disapprove of,” she added. Goodall declined to comment further, a spokesman for the Jane Goodall Institute told TIME on Tuesday.

https://ca.news.yahoo.com/jane-goodall-slain-zoo-gorilla-223216216.html
 
Prim0 said:
Zoo's are great! Most people wouldn't know anything about wild animals if they couldn't go to a local zoo. A more educated populace is going to care more about the animals wild brethren than people who are ignorant of their existence. Add to that the fact that zoo breeding programs have helped increase the wild population of many species along with our knowledge of those species which helps us to help them more. In general, zoos are fantastic (though there are exceptions).

In this situation, I've heard that the mother only stopped to take a photo and that the kid was over the wall and into the enclosure in a heartbeat. I don't think there's anything in the world that would've stopped me from going in after my son in that situation. I'd rather die trying to save him than sit back and watch anything happen to him. If the zoo is at fault, it's probably for not having a better system for keeping people out. Soon every zoo is going to be required to put up extra barriers to "guarantee" the safety of the guests.

I think this was just a bad accident. You can't expect a 4 year old to know better and as a parent I know that even when you try your damnedest, kids can sneak away from you quickly.

With all due respect Primo, because I do respect you and your opinion, although I often disagree and In this instance, especially.
Zoos don't teach us anything about animals in the wild as those in captivity never act as they would if wild. Caged and enclosed animals are often depressed, kept in climates unnatural to their species and in most cases in cages and enclosures to small for them to get their needed exercise. So what we learn is simply the cruelties of caging wild animals and how they respond to that treatment. As far as breeding programs that release, if that's true, I've never heard of that. My belief and experience was that zoo bred animals remain captive.
If those people who wish to learn about animals want to see them act as they're supposed to perhaps instead of taking vacays to cuba, or mexico, save up and take a vacay to a place where they can seen in a more natural habitat.
None of us have a *right* to see anything, we can't duplicate the grand canyon for those who can't travel there, nor should we want to, so why should we do the same with animals.
 
Prim0 said:
Zoo's are great! Most people wouldn't know anything about wild animals if they couldn't go to a local zoo. A more educated populace is going to care more about the animals wild brethren than people who are ignorant of their existence. Add to that the fact that zoo breeding programs have helped increase the wild population of many species along with our knowledge of those species which helps us to help them more. In general, zoos are fantastic (though there are exceptions).

In this situation, I've heard that the mother only stopped to take a photo and that the kid was over the wall and into the enclosure in a heartbeat. I don't think there's anything in the world that would've stopped me from going in after my son in that situation. I'd rather die trying to save him than sit back and watch anything happen to him. If the zoo is at fault, it's probably for not having a better system for keeping people out. Soon every zoo is going to be required to put up extra barriers to "guarantee" the safety of the guests.

I think this was just a bad accident. You can't expect a 4 year old to know better and as a parent I know that even when you try your damnedest, kids can sneak away from you quickly.

I agree but then I read this

With all due respect Primo, because I do respect you and your opinion, although I often disagree and In this instance, especially.
Zoos don't teach us anything about animals in the wild as those in captivity never act as they would if wild. Caged and enclosed animals are often depressed, kept in climates unnatural to their species and in most cases in cages and enclosures to small for them to get their needed exercise. So what we learn is simply the cruelties of caging wild animals and how they respond to that treatment. As far as breeding programs that release, if that's true, I've never heard of that. My belief and experience was that zoo bred animals remain captive.
If those people who wish to learn about animals want to see them act as they're supposed to perhaps instead of taking vacays to cuba, or mexico, save up and take a vacay to a place where they can seen in a more natural habitat.
None of us have a *right* to see anything, we can't duplicate the grand canyon for those who can't travel there, nor should we want to, so why should we do the same with animals.

and now I'm sitting on the fence again.

STOP making me think this early in the morning please!:Crying2:
 
Go and watch a documentary on wild animals if you cannot afford a trip. It is free too. There is a reason why we call them wild animals. Leave them alone.
 
Sometimes people throw old tvs away but they stll work fine and of course they are free waiting to be picked up at some curbs. :)
 
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