AR-News: Wilkes County, NC Bans Pet Exotic Animals
Nicole Paquette
npaquette at api4animals.org
Wed Apr 21 08:51:30 EDT 2004
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Nicole Paquette, API Legal/Government Affairs Director (916)
447-3085 ext. 214 / npaquette at api4animals.org
North Carolina County Bans Pet Exotic Animals
Animal Protection Institute Lauds Action as Important Safety Measure, Model
for Nation
April 21, 2004 Following the tragic death of a North Carolina boy killed
by his aunts tiger, the county where the incident occurred has outlawed
the private possession of exotic animals as pets within county
limits. Last December, 10-year-old Clayton James Eller was fatally mauled
by a 400-pound Bengal tiger at his aunts Wilkes County, North Carolina home.
Wilkes County lawmakers Tuesday night unanimously passed an ordinance
prohibiting exotic pets after receiving assistance and model language
from the Animal Protection Institute (API), a national animal advocacy
non-profit organization with 85,000 members and supporters. API has drafted
an exotic animal ordinance that is used as a model across the
country. Under the ordinance, exotic animals are defined as
non-domesticated wildlife such as bears, wolves, tigers and other wild
cats, non-human primates, dangerous reptiles, and other non-traditional
exotic animals.
API worked closely with Wilkes County attorney Tony Triplett, in the
drafting of the ordinance. API has long advocated against the private
possession of dangerous exotic animals. The incident that resulted in the
death of the Wilkes County boy, like hundreds of others reported around the
country, could have been avoided if a wild animal had not been kept captive.
We commend Wilkes County lawmakers for moving in the right direction by
taking a pro-active step to protect their residents and the animals
welfare, says APIs Director of Legal and Government Affairs Nicole
Paquette. These incidents should send a message that no one is safe and
that state lawmakers should enact a ban on the private possession of these
animals, before another child is killed. North Carolina currently has no
statewide laws safeguarding the public from dangerous exotic pets. We urge
North Carolina state lawmakers and the rest of America to follow suit
before another incident occurs Paquette adds.
This incident demonstrates that wild animals, even those kept as pets,
are unpredictable and can prove to be dangerous, says Paquette. Its
impossible to totally eliminate the wild from wild animals - these
animals are time bombs waiting to explode, she says.
The Animal Protection Institute has an extensive list of incidents
involving wild animals in captivity, including dangerous exotic animals in
private possession. For more information on APIs exotic pet campaign,
visit: <http://www.api4animals.org/321.htm>http://www.api4animals.org/321.htm.
The Animal Protection Institute is a national non-profit animal advocacy
organization with 80,000 members, working to end animal cruelty and
exploitation through legislation, litigation, and public education. API
also operates a 186-acre primate sanctuary near San Antonio, Texas that is
home to over 400 rescued and retired snow monkeys, baboons, and
vervets. For more information about API, APIs Primate Sanctuary, and the
organizations mission, campaigns and activities, please visit:
<http://www.api4animals.org/>www.api4animals.org.
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