Ohio zoo kills gorilla to protect boy, 4, who fell into enclosure

spaminator

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Cincinnati Zoo director defends killing gorilla to save boy
Dan Sewell, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Monday, May 30, 2016 01:26 PM EDT | Updated: Monday, May 30, 2016 08:27 PM EDT
CINCINNATI -- The Cincinnati Zoo's director on Monday defended the decision to kill a gorilla to protect a 4-year-old boy who entered its exhibit, noting it's easy to second-guess after the child was recovered safely.
The male western lowland gorilla named Harambe was killed Saturday by a special zoo response team that feared for the boy's safety. Video taken by zoo visitors showed the gorilla at times appeared to be protective of the boy but also dragged him through the shallow moat.
Director Thane Maynard said the gorilla was agitated and disoriented by the commotion during the 10 minutes after the boy fell. He said the gorilla could crush a coconut in one hand and there was no doubt that the boy's life was in danger.
"We stand by our decision," he said Monday, reiterating that using a tranquilizer on the 420-pound gorilla could have further threatened the boy because it wouldn't have taken effect immediately.
Maynard said an investigation indicates the boy climbed over a 3-foot-tall railing, then walked through an area of bushes about 4 feet deep before plunging some 15 feet into the moat. The boy was treated at a hospital and released that same day.
The director said the zoo remains safe for its some 1.6 million annual visitors, but a review is underway for possible improvements.
Kim O'Connor, who witnessed the boy's fall, told WLWT-TV that she heard the youngster say he wanted to get in the water with the gorillas. She said the boy's mother was with several other young children and told him no.
Anthony Seta, an animal rights activist in Cincinnati, helped organize a vigil Monday just outside the zoo gates. He said the gathering wasn't meant to assess blame but rather to honour Harambe, who turned 17 the day before he was shot.
"People can shout at the parents and people can shout at the zoo," Seta said. "The fact is that a gorilla that just celebrated his birthday has been killed."
In the days since, people have taken to social media to voice their outrage about the killing of a member of an endangered species. A Facebook page called "Justice for Harambe" was created along with online petitions and another page calling for a June 5 protest at the zoo.
Maynard said the zoo had received messages of support and condolences from around the world, including from other zoo directors and gorilla experts. A spokesman for Jane Goodall, the famed primatologist, said she had "a private conversation" with Maynard, who said she expressed her sympathy.
Maynard said zoo visitors have been leaving flowers at the exhibit and asking how they could support gorilla conservation.
"This is very emotional and people have expressed different feelings," Maynard said by email. "Not everyone shares the same opinion and that's OK. But we all share the love for animals."
The Gladys Porter Zoo in Brownsville, Texas, where Harambe spent most of his life, said Monday that its staff was deeply saddened by the gorilla's death.
Harambe was sent to Cincinnati less than two years ago in hopes he would eventually breed with females there. Maynard said the zoo has some of Harambe's sperm saved for research and possible future reproductive use.
Many social media commenters have criticized the boy's parents and said they should be held accountable. A Cincinnati police spokesman said no charges were being considered. A spokeswoman for the family said Monday they had no plans to comment.
"I do think there's a degree of responsibility they have to be held to," said Kate Villanueva, a mother of two children from Erlanger, Kentucky, who started the "Justice for Harambe" page and attended Monday's vigil. "You have to be watching your children at all times."
Jack Hanna, host of "Jack Hanna's Into the Wild," said the zoo made the right call by shooting the gorilla. Hanna said he saw video of the gorilla jerking the boy through the water and knew what would happen if the animal wasn't killed.
"I'll bet my life on this, that child would not be here today," Hanna told WBNS-TV.
The zoo said that it's the first such spectator breach at Gorilla World since it opened in 1978. The director said expansion plans announced for the exhibit earlier this year would proceed as scheduled.
Gorilla World remained closed Monday, but Maynard said it could reopen next weekend.
The People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals released a statement from its primatologist Julia Gallucci saying the zoo should have had better barriers between humans and the gorillas.
"This tragedy is exactly why PETA urges families to stay away from any facility that displays animals as sideshows for humans to gawk at," Gallucci said.
Cincinnati Zoo director defends killing gorilla to save boy | World | News | Tor
 

spaminator

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I'd kill any animal to protect my kids
'Justice for Harambe' petition has nearly 400,000 signatures

By Anthony Furey, Postmedia Network
First posted: Tuesday, May 31, 2016 05:28 PM EDT | Updated: Tuesday, May 31, 2016 05:48 PM EDT
The life of a person is more valuable than the life of an animal. This should be a given. But the Cincinnati Gorilla zoo story is a reminder of how for too many people that's not the case anymore.
I think it's fair to say most everyone agrees the whole situation was unfortunate and shouldn't have happened. A four-year-old boy got into a gorilla's pen and zoo employees made the quick call to shoot the endangered animal dead to save the boy.
A lot of people are playing armchair quarterback online or at the coffee shop, asking themselves what sort of parent lets this happen on their watch or if the zoo could have retrieved the boy without shooting the gorilla named Harambe.
This is to be expected. It's natural. But what isn't natural is the impression a lot of people are giving that they place considerable value on the life of the gorilla. More than on the boy's life, it seems. Because kids, unfortunately, die in accidents all the time. And yet those tragic stories don't generate anywhere near the sort of response we're seeing online and elsewhere.
Some people aren't content being limited to online venting and are demanding real action. AA animal protection watchdog group Tuesday wants to make sure the Cincinnati Zoo is held responsible for the death of the gorilla.
There's also a Change.org petition headlined most offensively "Justice for Harambe", as if animals have or should have equal access to the justice system as people.
As of this writing, the petition has almost 400,000 signatures on it. The most liked comment on the petition argues: "I strongly believe that (the boy's mother) needs to be held fully accountable for the death of an endangered species, child endangerment, neglect, and if stupidity was a charge, that too."
It's telling that revenge for the death of the animal gets first billing. Where are our priorities, folks? It's like when a massive heat wave rolls into town, the nightly news is more likely to do a feature on what to do if you find a dog sitting in a car than one on how it's important to check in on elderly and disabled neighbours.
Cultural relativism is one thing. But species relativism, which is what we've been witnessing in recent years, is a sure sign society's going to the dogs. Literally.
I wouldn't hesitate to kill any animal to protect my kids but I'm beginning to worry fewer people are in agreement. Here's hoping it doesn't get to the point where members of law enforcement side with the paw patrol.
I'd kill any animal to protect my kids | FUREY | Canada | News | Toronto Sun

Zoo right to shoot gorilla, says Jack Hanna;
‘That child would not be here today’
Cops investigate boy's entry into exhibit, gorilla's killing
Dan Sewell, The Associated Press
First posted: Tuesday, May 31, 2016 09:37 AM EDT | Updated: Tuesday, May 31, 2016 10:25 AM EDT
CINCINNATI -- Police said Tuesday they are investigating the parents of the 3-year-old boy who fell into a gorilla enclosure at the Cincinnati Zoo and had to be rescued by a team that shot the 400-pound animal to death.
Authorities said the investigation will look at the parents' actions leading up to the incident -- not the operation of the zoo, which is overseen by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Police will then confer with prosecutors over whether charges should be filed, Hamilton County Prosecutor Joe Deters said.
The incident has triggered a furor online, with some saying the boy's mother should be charged with child endangering, while others want the zoo held responsible for the animal's death.
Separately, USDA said it will investigate Saturday's incident for any violations of the Animal Welfare Act.
Zoo authorities said the unidentified boy climbed over a 3-foot-high railing, walked through bushes and plunged about 15 feet into a shallow moat. The zoo's dangerous-animal response team killed the gorilla as it dragged the boy through the water, authorities said. The boy had only minor scrapes on his head and knee, according to police.
Ohio State University criminal law professor Ric Simmons said he doubts a charge of child endangering could be proved in this instance, since the offence typically involves leaving a youngster unattended for an extended time, not a case of a child momentarily wandering off.
"The mother was standing next to a zoo exhibit and lost track of her child for perhaps a minute or so," Simons said in an email. "That has happened to almost every parent in the world in a public place."
The boy's family said he is "doing just fine" at home, and it had no further comment.
A federal inspection by USDA less than two months ago found no problems with the Gorilla World exhibit, but earlier zoo inspections detailed an incident in March in which polar bears escaped through an open den door into a behind-the-scenes hallway. No one was hurt, but an inspector warned that the public could have been "at great risk for injury, harm or death."
Zoo director Thane Maynard said that using tranquilizers on the gorilla would not have knocked the animal out right away, leaving the boy in danger. Maynard said 17-year-old Harambe was agitated by the commotion from the crowd and was extremely powerful, capable of crushing a coconut in one hand.
He said the zoo remains safe for its 1.6 million annual visitors, but a review is underway to determine whether any improvements can be made.
Donald Trump weighed in Tuesday, saying the zoo had little choice but to kill the gorilla. Trump said it was "a very tough call," but the child's life was at stake.
The executive director of a Cincinnati-based animal rights organization is calling on the USDA to fine the zoo.
"The barrier obviously isn't sufficient to keep the public out," said Michael Budkie of Stop Animal Exploitation NOW. "Otherwise, Harambe wouldn't be dead."
Jack Hanna, host of "Jack Hanna's Into the Wild," said the zoo made the right call by shooting the gorilla, telling WBNS-TV: "I'll bet my life on this, that child would not be here today."
In an interview with Boston TV station Boston television station WFXT, conservationist and television host Jeff Corwin suggested that the boy's family should shoulder some of the blame, saying: "Zoos aren't your baby sitter."
www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zfuz7cTDNeI
Zoo right to shoot gorilla, says Jack Hanna; ‘That child would not be here today
 

Dixie Cup

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I still think they could have either used a tranquilizer gun. I am truly sad that they had to kill that wonderful creature.


I look forward to hearing how it happened in the first place, because as previous posters have stated, how did a 4 yr. old end up in the compound.
 

IdRatherBeSkiing

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I still think they could have either used a tranquilizer gun. I am truly sad that they had to kill that wonderful creature.


I look forward to hearing how it happened in the first place, because as previous posters have stated, how did a 4 yr. old end up in the compound.

From what I have been reading, the concern of that was the gorilla would just collapse (eventually) and possibly right on the boy which may have been fatal. He as also very near water which would have meant the boy could have drowned. From the point the boy got in the enclosure, the options became quite limited. If they had more time, they should have cleared the screaming *******s around the enclosure which were escalating the situation but I doubt there was time for that. Perhaps they should have shot all them with tranquilizer darts.
 

MHz

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There's enough blame to go around though, I'd say. The "public barrier" put in place by the zoo couldn't have been much of a barrier if a 4 year old kid was able to get through it.
No kidding and what parent wouldn't be over the barrier in almost record time. There are other instances where the gorilla stood over the child until help arrived. The odds that it would have been the same in this case are pretty high as King Kong was already there and if the child was viewed as a threat he would have been mauled in the first few seconds.
The parents should face some sort of 'endangerment' charges.


So they shot him while he was pulling the child to safety?? Were they all blind to what was actually going on??? (fits right in with the way the world is being run, sad to say)

Try using a leash on a child in busy places.
 
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JLM

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I still think they could have either used a tranquilizer gun. I am truly sad that they had to kill that wonderful creature.


I look forward to hearing how it happened in the first place, because as previous posters have stated, how did a 4 yr. old end up in the compound.


Can't quite agree there, Dixie. I think where a child's life is in the balance you can't be taking ANY risk. Sad indeed that the gorilla had to be killed and if I had my say, the mother would be cleaning gorilla's cages for the next 20 years while the gorilla is in it. :)
 

Decapoda

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Bummer for the big monkey, for the kid who caused all this, and for the zoo and it's visitors. This is just another symptom of entitled, dysfunctional parenting. Let your little kid run loose in a restaurant and it only just p*sses off the patrons trying to enjoy a nice meal. let them run loose in a zoo full of big animals, the stakes go up a bit.

Having said that, the zoo did the right thing.
 

spaminator

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'He's dragging my son!
I can't watch this!';
911 call released of mom at Cincinnati zoo
Gorilla shot and killed after boy, 3, fell into exhibit
Dan Sewell And John Seewer, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Wednesday, June 01, 2016 07:41 PM EDT | Updated: Wednesday, June 01, 2016 07:56 PM EDT
CINCINNATI -- Confusion and panic set in after a 3-year-old boy plunged into the Cincinnati Zoo's gorilla exhibit, according to 911 recordings released Wednesday, with the boy's mother pleading for help while repeatedly shouting at her son: "Be calm!"
"He's dragging my son! I can't watch this!" the woman, who isn't identified, said in the 911 call Saturday after he dropped some 15 feet into the exhibit.
Minutes later, the Cincinnati Zoo's dangerous animal response team shot and killed the gorilla to protect the boy.
Since then, there have been numerous questions about how the boy got past the barriers around the exhibit. Police are investigating the child's parents and federal inspectors are planning their own review of the zoo.
The boy's family didn't comment on the police investigation, but they did release a statement saying he continues to do well and expressing gratitude to the zoo for protecting his life.
His mother said in the 911 call that her son had fallen into the exhibit and a gorilla was standing over him. The dispatcher told her that responders were on their way, and the caller yelled four times: "Be calm!"
A record of police calls shows nine minutes passed between the first emergency call about the boy falling into the enclosure and when the child was safe.
The zoo has an open viewing area that was among the first of its kind and is now common in many zoos around the country. The zoo says it will look at whether it needs to reinforce the barriers even though it considers the enclosure more secure than what's required.
The breach, zoo Director Thane Maynard said, was the first time a visitor had entered its Gorilla World exhibit, which opened in 1978. A federal inspection less than two months ago found no problems with the exhibit.
On Wednesday, the boy's family said he "is still doing well." The family said they continue to "praise God" and also are thankful to the zoo "for their actions taken to protect our child."
While they have been blamed for the gorilla's death by some on social media, the family expressed appreciation for those offering support. The statement said some people have offered money, which they won't accept.
"If anyone wishes to make a gift, we recommend a donation to the Cincinnati Zoo in Harambe's name," said the statement released through publicist Gail Myers.
Police said their investigation will look at the parents' actions -- not the operation of the zoo, which is overseen by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Police then would discuss with prosecutors whether charges should be filed.
At least two animal rights groups were holding the zoo responsible for the death of the 17-year-old western lowland gorilla, charging that the barrier made up of a fence, bushes and a moat wasn't adequate.
'He's dragging my son! I can't watch this!'; 911 call released of mom at Cincinn
 

spaminator

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'A devastating loss'; Jane Goodall feels sorry for Cincinnati Zoo director following gorilla shooting
The Associated Press
First posted: Thursday, June 02, 2016 08:36 AM EDT | Updated: Thursday, June 02, 2016 08:51 AM EDT
ARLINGTON, Va. -- The Jane Goodall Institute has released an e-mail sent by the primatologist and conservationist to the director of the Cincinnati Zoo expressing empathy with him over the weekend shooting of a gorilla in an effort to protect a small child who entered the primate's habitat.
In the message to zoo director Thane Maynard dated Sunday, May 29, the day after the shooting, Goodall writes that she feels sorry for Maynard having to defend a shooting that he "may disapprove of." Goodall says it looked like the gorilla was putting an arm around the child and calls it "a devastating loss."
Goodall also asks about the reaction of the other gorillas and whether they were allowed to express grief.
Goodall is known for her decades of studying wild chimpanzees in Tanzania.
'A devastating loss'; Jane Goodall feels sorry for Cincinnati Zoo director follo

Cincinnati Zoo to re-open gorilla exhibit with higher barrier
Dan Sewell And John Seewer, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Thursday, June 02, 2016 01:37 PM EDT | Updated: Thursday, June 02, 2016 05:19 PM EDT
CINCINNATI -- The Cincinnati Zoo said Thursday it will re-open its gorilla exhibit next week with a higher, reinforced barrier after a 3-year-old boy got into the enclosure, leading to the fatal shooting of a male gorilla.
Zoo spokeswoman Michelle Curley said the outer barrier will now be 42 inches high -- a half foot taller than before -- with solid wood beams on top and at the bottom, plus knotted rope netting at the bottom.
The zoo said there had been no earlier breaches in Gorilla World's 38-year history and that the previous barrier had passed multiple inspections by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums, which accredits zoos.
"Our exhibit goes above and beyond standard safety requirements, but in light of what happened, we have modified the outer public barrier to make entry even more difficult," zoo director Thane Maynard said in a statement.
Meanwhile, a prosecutor reviewing the police investigation of the case said he'll announce a decision on charges Monday.
Hamilton County Prosecutor Joe Deters has been reviewing the actions of the parents of the boy, who fell about 15 feet Saturday into a shallow moat after apparently climbing over the barrier. A special response team shot and killed the gorilla, 17-year-old Harambe, after concluding the boy's life was at stake.
Legal experts have told The Associated Press a prosecution in the case seems unlikely. Deters will hold a Monday afternoon news conference, said spokeswoman Julie Wilson.
A Cincinnati police report identifies the boy's mother as Michelle Gregg, 32, who works at a preschool near Cincinnati. The child's father isn't named in the report, and it's not clear whether he was at the zoo Saturday.
The boy's family has said he is doing well at home after being treated at a hospital Saturday evening. Police said he had scrapes to on his head and knee.
"The child was alert and talking," the police report stated.
A spokeswoman said the family requests privacy and has no comment on the investigation.
University of Dayton law professor Lori Shaw said child endangering cases are complicated and fact-specific. She said Ohio law requires that the defendant be found "reckless" and to have exposed a child to "substantial risk," or a strong possibility of harm.
Police released 911 tapes on Wednesday highlighting the confusion and panic in the moments when the boy plunged into the gorilla exhibit.
"He's dragging my son! I can't watch this!" a woman says in the 911 call on Saturday. As she pleads for help, she shouts at her son repeatedly: "Be calm!"
A record of police calls shows nine minutes passed between the first emergency call about the boy falling into the enclosure and when the child was safe.
The police report states that witnesses said the gorilla initially appeared to be protecting the child, but after onlookers began screaming, he became "agitated and scared" and began dragging the child.
The boy's family has expressed gratitude to the zoo for protecting his life.
In this Sunday, May 29, 2016 file photo, a child touches the head of a gorilla statue where flowers have been placed outside the Gorilla World exhibit at the Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden. On May 28, 2016, a western lowland gorilla was fatally shot to protect a 3-year-old boy who had entered its exhibit. (AP Photo/John Minchillo, File)

Cincinnati Zoo to re-open gorilla exhibit with higher barrier | World | News | T
 

spaminator

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No charges against mom of boy who got into gorilla enclosure: Prosecutor
Dan Sewell, The Associated Press
First posted: Monday, June 06, 2016 01:22 PM EDT | Updated: Monday, June 06, 2016 03:58 PM EDT
CINCINNATI -- A prosecutor Monday announced no charges will be brought against the mother of the little boy who got into the gorilla exhibit at the Cincinnati Zoo, saying the 3-year-old "just scampered off" as children sometimes do.
The shooting of a 400-pound gorilla that was dragging the child through a moat May 28 set off a torrent of criticism online, with some attacking the zoo for the animal's death and others blaming the mother for not watching her child more closely.
Hamilton County Prosecutor Joe Deters said the case didn't come close to warranting a charge of child endangerment, and he defended the mother as an attentive parent undeserving of the sharp criticism and threats.
He said the mother had three other children with her at the zoo and had turned away "for a few seconds" to attend to one when the boy took off.
"If anyone doesn't believe a 3-year-old can scamper off very quickly, they've never had kids. Because they can. And they do," Deters said.
In a statement, the family said it was pleased with the decision.
"This is one more step in allowing us to put this tragic episode behind us and return to our normal family," the statement said.
The boy apparently climbed over a 3-foot barrier, made his way through bushes and fell 15 feet into a shallow moat. The zoo's dangerous-animal response team shot the agitated, 17-year-old gorilla, Harambe, after concluding the boy's life was in danger.
The zoo plans to reopen its Gorilla World on Tuesday with a higher, reinforced barrier. Deters said he was glad to see the improvements.
The zoo's actions will be reviewed separately by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. An animal protection group has urged that the zoo be fined.
The zoo had no immediate comment on the prosecutor's announcement.
Legal experts had said all along that child-endangerment charges were unlikely under such circumstances. Echoing those experts, Deters said there was no evidence the mother heedlessly put her child in danger, as prosecutors who have had to show.
"If she had been in the bathroom smoking crack, that would be a different story. But that's not what happened here," the prosecutor said.
The prosecutor said the mother was there with her four children, ranging in age from 1 to 7, and was also with a friend with her own two sons.
Deters said he has been "a bit taken aback" by the reaction to the gorilla's death. He said the zoo suffered a great loss, "but it is still animal. It does not equate with human life. And they felt that this boy's life was in jeopardy and they made the painful choice to do what they did."
Cincinnati police said some of the online posts contained threatening language such as "shoot the mother." Family spokeswoman Gail Myers said they "are taking appropriate precautions."
The zoo has said that there had been no previous breaches in Gorilla World's 38-year history and that the barrier had passed repeated inspections by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums, which accredits zoos.
Zoo spokeswoman Michelle Curley said the barrier will now be 42 inches high -- a half-foot taller than before -- with solid wood beams on top and at the bottom, plus knotted rope netting at the bottom.
A Cincinnati police report identified the boy's mother as Michelle Gregg, 32, who works at a preschool near Cincinnati. The child's father isn't named in the report, and it was not clear whether he was at the zoo that day.
The boy's family has said he is doing well. He was treated at a hospital and released the evening of the incident. Police said he had scrapes on his head and knee, but was alert and talking when rescued, despite the fall into the moat.
This June 20, 2015 file photo provided by the Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Garden shows Harambe, a western lowland gorilla, who was fatally shot Saturday, May 28, 2016, to protect a three-year-old boy who had entered its exhibit. (Jeff McCurry/Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Garden via The Cincinatti Enquirer via AP, File)

No charges against mom of boy who got into gorilla enclosure: Prosecutor | World
 

JLM

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No charges against mom of boy who got into gorilla enclosure: Prosecutor
Dan Sewell, The Associated Press
First posted: Monday, June 06, 2016 01:22 PM EDT | Updated: Monday, June 06, 2016 03:58 PM EDT
CINCINNATI -- A prosecutor Monday announced no charges will be brought against the mother of the little boy who got into the gorilla exhibit at the Cincinnati Zoo, saying the 3-year-old "just scampered off" as children sometimes do.
No charges against mom of boy who got into gorilla enclosure: Prosecutor | World


This ain't rocket science. The zoo is 100% at fault. A 3' high fence separating children from potentially life threatening animals is ridiculous, as is the 42" fence.
 

spaminator

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Ontario junior hockey team to wear, auction 'Harambe' jersey
Postmedia Network
First posted: Friday, October 14, 2016 07:07 PM EDT | Updated: Friday, October 14, 2016 07:18 PM EDT
It’s not exactly “Win One for Harambe” ... but close.
The Trenton Golden Hawks of the Ontario Junior Hockey League will celebrate “Wildlife Week” by wearing jerseys bearing the likeness of Harambe, a gorilla killed at the Cincinnati Zoo earlier this year. The Golden Hawks will wear the Harambe jerseys during the warmup prior to a home game against the Burlington Cougars on Oct. 19.
“We felt #HockeyForHarambe was the best way to honour Harambe’s life and also bring awareness to the plight of the lowland gorilla,” said Rob McDonald, director of game day operations for the Golden Hawks.
The special jerseys, which feature the likeness of a gorilla instead of the team logo and “Harambe” featured prominently, will be auctioned off during the game. Proceeds will go to the Jane Goodall Institute of Canada.
Harambe, a 17-year-old gorilla, was shot and killed by zoo staff in May after he approached a three-year-old boy who had fallen into the enclosure. The killing, which was recorded on video, created an uproar around the world.

Ontario junior hockey team to wear, auction 'Harambe' jersey | Hockey | Sports |
 

spaminator

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Ohio Zoo improves exhibit barrier following Harambe death
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Tuesday, October 25, 2016 01:29 AM EDT | Updated: Tuesday, October 25, 2016 01:31 AM EDT
CINCINNATI — Officials with the Ohio zoo where a gorilla was shot and killed when a 3-year-old got into its enclosure say they’ve improved the exhibit’s barrier.
The Cincinnati Enquirer reports the new barrier at the Cincinnati Zoo has mesh fencing from top to bottom and stands 42 inches high. That’s 6 inches taller than the previous barrier.
Zoo Director Thane Maynard told Hamilton County Commissioners on Monday that the zoo will hand over any internal reports or analyses that could explain what happened and how the zoo responded to the May killing of Harambe the gorilla.
The county commissioners say they’re satisfied with how the zoo handled the incident and its aftermath.
The commissioners must approve the zoo’s levy before it goes on the ballot.
A boy brings flowers to put beside a statue of a gorilla outside the shuttered Gorilla World exhibit at the Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden, Monday, May 30, 2016, in Cincinnati. A gorilla named Harambe was killed by a special zoo response team on Saturday after a three-year-old boy slipped into an exhibit and it was concluded his life was in danger. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)

Ohio Zoo improves exhibit barrier following Harambe death | World | News | Toron
 

spaminator

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Feds: Barrier to gorilla exhibit entered by boy ineffective
Dan Sewell, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Thursday, November 17, 2016 04:42 PM EST | Updated: Thursday, November 17, 2016 09:21 PM EST
CINCINNATI — A barrier separating Cincinnati Zoo visitors from a gorilla exhibit wasn’t in compliance with standards when a 3-year-old boy slipped inside, resulting in the shooting death of an endangered gorilla named Harambe, federal inspectors concluded.
A U.S. Department of Agriculture inspection report, obtained Thursday by The Associated Press, also stated the zoo’s dangerous-animal response team properly followed procedures after visitors called 911 on May 28 to report a child in the gorilla enclosure. A team member concluded the child was in “life-threatening danger.”
The death of the 17-year-old male western lowland gorilla led to mourning around the globe and a storm of criticism and unending social media attention.
The zoo quickly made the barrier taller and added nylon mesh and surveillance cameras. It said there had been no previous problems in the Gorilla World exhibit’s 38-year history and its barriers were always found compliant in earlier federal inspections, including in April.
The federal investigation is continuing and could lead to fines or other disciplinary action.
The department’s animal welfare arm confirmed the zoo’s barrier system had been considered to be in compliance during earlier inspections.
Department spokeswoman Tanya Espinosa said the barriers must restrict public contact from the gorillas.
“It became apparent on May 28 that the barrier was no longer effective,” Espinosa said via email. “The Cincinnati Zoo took swift and comprehensive corrective action in response.”
Zoo Director Thane Maynard said the zoo will continue to work with authorities to ensure its exhibits meet or exceed standards.
“We remain committed to visitor and animal safety,” Maynard said.
The Department of Agriculture inspectors said in a report dated June 6 there had been “some slack” in wire cables in the barrier that could have been “manipulated to an eight-inch gap.” Beyond the barrier were bushes and other landscaping that was 18 to 24 inches tall, followed by a 15-foot drop-off into a moat.
The report stated visitors had notified a keeper and called 911 to report a child was in the exhibit and the keeper activated the zoo’s emergency response.
A member of the Dangerous Animal Response Team arrived in about nine minutes, the report stated. It said Harambe didn’t respond to attempts to return him to the gorilla holding area after making contact with the boy, dragging the boy by the leg in the shallow moat water and again on the ground.
“The DART team member determined the child’s life to be in imminent, life-threatening danger and shot the gorilla with a single gunshot and the gorilla died instantly,” the report stated.
The boy, who had slipped away from his mother, recovered without major injury. Hamilton County prosecutor Joe Deters concluded after an investigation that no charges were warranted.
Animal welfare activists and other gorilla fans expressed anger at Harambe’s death, and it became the subject of countless memes and popular culture references. The zoo recently reactivated its Twitter account after suspending it because of hacks by critics.
The People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals Foundation said it hopes people will remember the gorilla’s death.
“Harambe’s death was as preventable as it was tragic, just as it’s tragic to deny any wild animal everything that’s natural and important to him for the sake of selling tickets to a zoo exhibit,” said Brittany Peet, a PETA Foundation director.
Feds: Barrier to gorilla exhibit entered by boy ineffective | World | News | Tor
 

spaminator

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Family of boy who fell into Harambe exhibit thanks Cincinnati Zoo
Dan Sewel, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Friday, November 18, 2016 07:33 PM EST | Updated: Friday, November 18, 2016 07:44 PM EST
CINCINNATI — The family of the boy who slipped into a gorilla exhibit is expressing its appreciation to the Cincinnati Zoo in the aftermath of a federal report that found the exhibit hadn’t been in compliance with standards.
The zoo’s dangerous-animal response team concluded the 3-year-old boy’s life was in danger and fatally shot an endangered gorilla named Harambe, which led to mourning and criticism.
In a statement, the boy’s relatives say they appreciate the quick actions by zoo staff and “mourn with them the loss of Harambe.”
A U.S. Department of Agriculture spokeswoman says although the zoo barrier previously passed inspections, the May 28 breach showed it was no longer effective. She says the zoo took quick and comprehensive corrective action in making the barrier taller and adding nylon mesh.
Family of boy who fell into Harambe exhibit thanks Cincinnati Zoo | World | News
 

Angstrom

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Our bias towards ourselves is still very strong. It's as discusting as racism.