Saturday, February 11, 2012

Hanna berates Ohio legislators on exotic pet laws - Celebrities ...

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Celebrity zookeeper Jack Hanna criticized Ohio lawmakers Thursday for not yet passing a bill to regulate exotic animals, months after authorities shot dozens of lions, tigers, bears and other wild creatures let loose by their suicidal owner.

A Republican state senator from Zanesville, the eastern Ohio city where the animals were shot, had planned to introduce a bill this week but then said it was not ready. There is no new timetable for the measure.

"What's it going to take, everyone, to pass a bill? Someone else getting killed?" Hanna said during his remarks to an Ohio newspaper trade group.

Hanna, a former Columbus Zoo director who has given animal demonstrations on national television for decades, said he can't believe legislation hasn't progressed.

"In fact, I'm actually in a state of shock right now because, folks, you're not dealing with some little issue of animals here. You're dealing with bombs," Hanna told members of the Ohio Newspaper Association at their convention in Columbus.

Hanna said he has no power over the Ohio Legislature and isn't running for office. But he said he has seen a tiger finish off a 2,000-pound water buffalo in less than 10 seconds and lions take down even larger animals in less than 30 seconds.

"You probably don't want to witness it," he said.

Ohio has some of the nation's weakest restrictions on exotic pets. Efforts to strengthen the state's law took on new urgency in October when authorities were forced to hunt down and kill 48 wild animals - including endangered Bengal tigers - after their owner freed them from his Zanesville farm and then committed suicide.

In August 2010, a bear attacked and killed a caretaker during a feeding at the home of a man who also kept wolves and tigers on property near Cleveland.

Hanna again defended the sheriff's decision to kill the animals released from Terry Thompson's Zanesville home. The animals destroyed included six black bears, two grizzlies, a baboon, a wolf and three mountain lions.

"When we showed up, we had 45 minutes of daylight left," Hanna said. "Tranquilization, folks, is very difficult. It's not like on TV where you pop something and it just, plop, falls over."

He said no one knew for sure how many animals were loose or captured that night, which why the dead wildlife were laid out in a row across the countryside. A photographic image of the scene was disseminated to newspapers and websites around the world.

State Sen. Troy Balderson, of Zanesville, had sent a letter last Friday to state lawmakers, asking them to sign on to his bill.

Source: http://www.sunherald.com/2012/02/09/3742481/hanna-shocked-ohio-has-no-new.html

student loan forgiveness amy winehouse cause of death amy winehouse cause of death white witch white witch occupy san francisco occupy san francisco

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.