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Terry Thompson, Muskingum County Animal Farm Owner, Allegedly Killed Self After Freeing Exotic Animals

ANDY BROWNFIELD and KANTELE FRANKO   10/19/11 11:23 PM ET   AP

ZANESVILLE, Ohio — Sheriff's deputies shot nearly 50 wild animals – including 18 rare Bengal tigers and 17 lions – in a big-game hunt across the state's countryside Wednesday after the owner of an exotic-animal park threw their cages open and committed suicide in what may have been one last act of spite against his neighbors and police.

As homeowners nervously hid indoors, officers armed with high-powered rifles and shoot-to-kill orders fanned out through fields and woods to hunt down 56 animals that had been turned loose from the Muskingum County Animal Farm by owner Terry Thompson before he shot himself to death Tuesday.

After an all-night hunt that extended into Wednesday afternoon, 48 animals were killed. Six others – three leopards, a grizzly bear and two monkeys – were captured and taken to the Columbus Zoo. A wolf was later found dead, leaving a monkey as the only animal still on the loose.

Those destroyed included six black bears, two grizzlies, a wolf, a baboon and three mountain lions. Dead animals were being buried on Thompson's farm, officials said.

"It's like Noah's Ark wrecking right here in Zanesville, Ohio," lamented Jack Hanna, TV personality and former director of the Columbus Zoo.

Hanna defended the sheriff's decision to kill the animals but said the deaths of the Bengal tigers were especially tragic. There are only about 1,400 of the endangered cats left in the world, he said.

"When I heard 18, I was still in disbelief," he said. "The most magnificent creature in the entire world, the tiger is."

As the hunt dragged on outside of Zanesville, population 25,000, schools closed in the mostly rural area of farms and widely spaced homes 55 miles east of Columbus. Parents were warned to keep children and pets indoors. And flashing signs along highways told motorists, "Caution exotic animals" and "Stay in vehicle."

Officers were ordered to kill the animals instead of trying to bring them down with tranquilizers for fear that those hit with darts would escape in the darkness before they dropped and would later regain consciousness.

"These animals were on the move, they were showing aggressive behavior," Sheriff Matt Lutz said. "Once the nightfall hit, our biggest concern was having these animals roaming."

The sheriff would not speculate why Thompson killed himself and why he left open the cages and fences at his 73-acre preserve, dooming the animals he seemed to love so much.

Thompson, 62, had had repeated run-ins with the law and his neighbors. Lutz said that the sheriff's office had received numerous complaints since 2004 about animals escaping onto neighbors' property. The sheriff's office also said that Thompson had been charged over the years with animal cruelty, animal neglect and allowing animals to roam.

He had gotten out of federal prison just last month after serving a year for possessing unregistered guns.

John Ellenberger, a neighbor, speculated that Thompson freed the animals to get back at neighbors and police. "Nobody much cared for him," Ellenberger said.

Angie McElfresh, who lives in an apartment near the farm and hunkered down with her family in fear, said "it could have been an `f-you' to everybody around him."

Thompson had rescued some of the animals at his preserve and purchased many others, said Columbus Zoo spokeswoman Patty Peters.

It was not immediately clear how Thompson managed to support the preserve and for what purpose it was operated, since it was not open to the public. But Thompson had appeared on the "Rachael Ray Show" in 2008 as an animal handler for a zoologist guest, said show spokeswoman Lauren Nowell.

The sheriff's office started getting calls Tuesday evening that wild animals were loose just west of Zanesville. Deputies went to the animal preserve and found Thompson dead and all the cages open. Several aggressive animals were near his body and had to be shot, the sheriff said.

Sheriff's Deputy Jonathan Merry was among the first to respond Tuesday. He said he shot a number of animals, including a gray wolf and a black bear. He said the bear charged him and he fired his pistol, killing it with one shot when it was about 7 feet away.

"All these animals have the ability to take a human out in the length of a second," said Merry, who called himself an animal lover but said he knew he was protecting the community.

"What a tragedy," said Barb Wolfe, a veterinarian with The Wilds, a nearby zoo-sponsored wild animal preserve. She said she managed to hit a tiger with a tranquilizer dart, but the animal charged toward her and then turned and began to flee before the drug could take effect, and deputies shot the big cat.

At an afternoon news conference, the sheriff said that the danger had passed and that people could move around freely again, but that the monkey would probably be shot because it was believed to be carrying a herpes disease.

"It was like a war zone with all the shooting and so forth with the animals," said Sam Kopchak, who was outside Tuesday afternoon when he saw Thompson's horses acting up. Kopchak said he turned and saw a male lion lying down on the other side of a fence.

"The fence is not going to be a fence that's going to hold an African lion," Kopchak said.

Danielle Berkheimer said she was nervous as she drove home Tuesday night and afraid to let her two dogs out in the yard.

"When it's 300-pound cats, that's scary," she said. She said it had been odd Tuesday night to see no one out around town, and the signs warning drivers to stay in their cars were "surreal."

Some townspeople were saddened by the deaths. At a nearby Moose Lodge, Bill Weiser said: "It's breaking my heart, them shooting those animals."

Ohio has some of the nation's weakest restrictions on exotic pets and among the highest number of injuries and deaths caused by them. At least nine people have been injured since 2005 and one person was killed, according to Born Free USA, an animal advocacy group.

On Wednesday, the Humane Society of the United States criticized Gov. John Kasich for allowing a statewide ban on the buying and selling of exotic pets to expire in April. The organization urged the state to immediately issue emergency restrictions.

"How many incidents must we catalog before the state takes action to crack down on private ownership of dangerous exotic animals?" Wayne Pacelle, president and CEO, said in a statement.

Kasich said Wednesday during a meeting of Dix Communications editors: "Clearly, we need tougher laws. We haven't had them in this state. Nobody's dealt with this, and we will. And we'll deal with it in a comprehensive way."

Barney Long, an expert at the World Wildlife Fund, noted that tigers in general are endangered. He said there appear to be fewer of them living in the wild than there are in captivity in the U.S. alone. Over the last century, the worldwide population has plunged from about 100,000 in the wild to as few as 3,200, he said.

More than half are Bengal tigers, which live in isolated pockets across Nepal, Bhutan, Myanmar, India and Bangladesh, he said in a telephone interview

"The tragic shooting of 18 tigers in Ohio really highlights what is happening on a daily basis to tigers in the wild throughout Asia," Long added in an email. "Their numbers are being decimated by poaching and habitat loss, and that is the real travesty here."

___

Associated Press writers Ann Sanner and Doug Whiteman contributed to this report.

Loading Slideshow...
  • Exotic Animals Escape, Hunted Down

    ZANESVILLE, OH - OCTOBER 19: An Ohio State Highway Patrol officer drives past a sign warning of the exotic animals on the loose from a wildlife preserve October 19, 2011 in Zanesville, Ohio. Muskingum County Animal Farm owner Terry Thompson was found dead Tuesday evening after deputies received calls reporting wild animals on the loose west of Zanesville. Authorities suspect that Thompson set the animals loose and then took his own life. Approximately 30 of the animals from the farm were shot and killed as a team of more than 50 officials patrolled the area Tuesday night in search of exotic animals such as lions, tigers, cheetahs, wolves and bears. (Photo by Jay LaPrete/Getty Images)

  • Exotic Animals Escape, Hunted Down

    ZANESVILLE, OH - OCTOBER 19: A truck and trailer owned by the The Wilds, a wildlife conservation center, leaves the property where exotic animals escaped October 19, 2011 in Zanesville, Ohio. Muskingum County Animal Farm owner Terry Thompson was found dead Tuesday evening after deputies received calls reporting wild animals on the loose west of Zanesville. Authorities suspect that Thompson set the animals loose and then took his own life. Approximately 30 of the animals from the farm were shot and killed as a team of more than 50 officials patrolled the area Tuesday night in search of exotic animals such as lions, tigers, cheetahs, wolves and bears. (Photo by Jay LaPrete/Getty Images)

  • Exotic Animals Escape, Hunted Down

    ZANESVILLE, OH - OCTOBER 19: Muskingum County Sheriff deputies patrol the entrance to the property where exotic animals escaped from a wildlife preserve October 19, 2011 in Zanesville, Ohio. Muskingum County Animal Farm owner Terry Thompson was found dead Tuesday evening after deputies received calls reporting wild animals on the loose west of Zanesville. Authorities suspect that Thompson set the animals loose and then took his own life. Approximately 30 of the animals from the farm were shot and killed as a team of more than 50 officials patrolled the area Tuesday night in search of exotic animals such as lions, tigers, cheetahs, wolves and bears. (Photo by Jay LaPrete/Getty Images)

  • Exotic Animals Escape, Hunted Down

    ZANESVILLE, OH - OCTOBER 19: A truck driver gets in his truck near the entrance of the property where exotic animals escaped from a wildlife preserve October 19, 2011 in Zanesville, Ohio. Muskingum County Animal Farm owner Terry Thompson was found dead Tuesday evening after deputies received calls reporting wild animals on the loose west of Zanesville. Authorities suspect that Thompson set the animals loose and then took his own life. Approximately 30 of the animals from the farm were shot and killed as a team of more than 50 officials patrolled the area Tuesday night in search of exotic animals such as lions, tigers, cheetahs, wolves and bears. (Photo by Jay LaPrete/Getty Images)

  • Exotic Animals Escape, Hunted Down

    In a Tuesday Oct. 18, 2011 photo, a dead lion lays by the fence on Terry Thompson's farm near Zanesville, Ohio. Police killed dozens of animals Tuesday that escaped from the wild-animal preserve where the owner's body later was found. Warning that more animals still were on the loose, officials expected up to four school districts to cancel classes as the remaining bears, big cats and other beasts from the Muskingum County Animal Farm were hunted down.

  • Exotic Animals Escape, Hunted Down

    Investigators walk around a barn as carcasses lay on the ground at The Muskingum County Animal Farm Wednesday, Oct. 19, 2011, in Zanesville, Ohio. Police with assault rifles stalked a mountain lion, grizzly bear and monkey still on the loose after authorities said their owner apparently freed dozens of wild animals and then killed himself.

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ZANESVILLE, Ohio — Sheriff's deputies shot nearly 50 wild animals – including 18 rare Bengal tigers and 17 lions – in a big-game hunt across the state's countryside Wednesday after t...
ZANESVILLE, Ohio — Sheriff's deputies shot nearly 50 wild animals – including 18 rare Bengal tigers and 17 lions – in a big-game hunt across the state's countryside Wednesday after t...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
UrbanAddictiondotcom
Living and Loving Life
10:10 AM on 10/26/2011
There had to be a better way then to gun down these beautiful creatures in cold blood.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Gitta
New Era Feng Shui Design
01:41 PM on 10/24/2011
I just got done reading the article on BPA, the plastic ingredient now understood to cause endocrine disruption, and one of the results of this toxic ingredient is that Men in particular loose their ability to think, and erectile dysfunction.

Behavior like this makes me reflect that humanity is slowly commiting suicide, and this slaughter reflects just how far from our natural vitality we've come. So precious, so little reflection on law enforcements side. Nature is unsafe from our awfulness.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jottlover26
10:53 PM on 10/23/2011
I am deeply saddened by the fact that that many of those poor animals had to die. I'm sure even a few could have been saved if they would have tried. Poor animals paying the price for the human carelessness that started it all.
04:59 PM on 10/21/2011
As always, it is the animals that pay the price for human folly. I am outraged that they were shot with extreme prejudice. Not one person was concerned about the animals until Hanna arrived. The killings were unnecessary. The animals had been fed that day and had not threatened a single human being and were not likely to do so. Seeing their lifeless bodies piled together turned my stomach and reminded me of the picture I had seen of tiger hunts in India. What a horrible tragedy and waste of beautiful creatures with many of them endangered! Man's inhumanity to man is only surpassed by his cruelty to animals.
12:22 PM on 10/21/2011
This whole situation was a tragedy and never should have happened in the first place. These poor (some endangered), animals lost their lives for no good reason because some idiot wanted a private collection. OH needs to change these laws today!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
debnaert
09:59 AM on 10/21/2011
This went on to long... The county law should have shut this guy down long before this happened.
04:30 AM on 10/21/2011
48 innocent lives were lost.
11:45 PM on 10/20/2011
While I agree that there needs to be restrictions on private keeping of exotic animals, that are reasonable and developed to enable competent people to have Sanctuaries, the untold story here is not only the unnecessary, and tragic loss of the animals's lives, but also that a man was so harassed and villified by his ignorant and vindicitive neighbors and authorities, instead of being able to seek a reasonable solution, that he killed himself. NO ONE IS TALKING ABOUT A HUMAN LIFE ALSO LOST. There is plenty of blame to go around ! My opinion also of Hanna, has taken a nose dive also... he had the expertise and resources to have helped set up a perimeter and save some of these rare animals... yet goes along with the partyline !.Appalling !
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
2tru4u2c
Politically correct is neither!!
04:27 AM on 10/22/2011
Jack Hanna was in Pennsylvania when the situation erupted. All or most of the animals were already shot by the time he arrived on Wednsday. No party line, just facts.
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BoFo
Like, you talkin' to me?
05:28 PM on 10/22/2011
You wrote:

"... but also that a man was so harassed and villified by his ignorant and vindicitiv­e neighbors and authoritie­s, instead of being able to seek a reasonable solution ..." [sic]

From the article:

"Thompson, 62, had had repeated run-ins with the law and his neighbors. Lutz said that the sheriff's office had received numerous complaints since 2004 about animals escaping onto neighbors' property. The sheriff's office also said that Thompson had been charged over the years with animal cruelty, animal neglect and allowing animals to roam."

So I guess you're OK with animals escaping onto neighbors' property, animal cruelty, animal neglect, and allowing animals to roam.
01:05 AM on 10/24/2011
I am not ok with the high and mighty ASPCA not shutting this guy down after the first time he was found guilty of animal abuse and neglect, like they do on their vaunted "Animal Cops" shows. I guess the only animals that count are dogs, cats, and horses...
10:54 PM on 10/20/2011
The unstated assumption of the police actions in immediately resorting to a shoot-on-sight solution is that the lives of these rare and endangered animals is worth virtually nothing. Their right to exist has no intrinsic value. Sadly, this is a view that I suspect would be shared by most people. Even the threat to a single human life - not a human life itself, but simply the THREAT - justifies a wholesale slaughter. This is a microcosm of how humans tend to view and treat the natural world on a larger scale. Human welfare always comes first. Indeed nothing else is worthy of consideration unless it has economic value to us. Is there any wonder why we have so many environmental problems?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Carolab
Just another hostage of the poopy heads
11:51 PM on 10/20/2011
If only people were as upset about brutality toward other humans.
01:09 AM on 10/24/2011
They are too busy crying about the death penalty.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
melanielgross
10:13 AM on 10/22/2011
Totally agree with you!
07:56 PM on 10/20/2011
I would really, really, really like to hear what Ron Paul has to say about this. I wonder if the state should be protecting people against every random wild animal let loose in our communities, or if it should be up to the individual to save his own life if a gigantic mama grizzly happened to climb into his bedroom window.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
07:11 PM on 10/20/2011
I would have preferred to see the people die. We humans sadly aren't in any danger of going extinct, but these rare and invaluable beasts are as good as gone. But I'm glad these poachers- I mean police officers - are working so hard to save human lives so that we can all live to see and enjoy absolutely nothing beautiful or vital left in the world. Its truly a worthwhile sacrifice so that these inbred hicks in Ohio can continue to survive and thrive. Bravo, humanity!
01:47 AM on 10/21/2011
Really! I am a firm supporter of animal rights, but these rights were already imperiled by the laws which allow people to own, stockpile, and sell exotic animals. These creatures were released at night by the owner and presented imminent danger to people living in this area, not all of whom were the inbred hicks mentioned by Natasza. I am appalled that anyone could own 15 tigers, leopards, cheetahs, etc. and keep them in unsanitary cages with no oversight. Yes, I would have been very happy if they could have been captured and led a happy healthy life elsewhere, but...!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
melanielgross
10:18 AM on 10/22/2011
Agreed! I too am appalled that anyone was allowed to own these endangered animals. No one should be allowed to do this!
07:01 PM on 10/20/2011
Governor John Kasich just wanted a reason to shoot something. Since he past that moronic law allowing alcoholics to carry guns into their favorite bars (GEESUS) he's found out that drunken gun toters CAN SHOOT BACK and that's NO FUN, but since animals cannot CARRY FIREARMS (unless he's legalized that too) he thought some target practice was in order. That way he could sure up his aim on those wobbling drunks at his bar.
06:53 PM on 10/20/2011
SUE THE POLICE DEPARTMENT UNDER THE "ENDANGERED SPECIES ACT" of 1973. The department had the OPTION of calling in zoo officials or animal control to subdue the animals with tranquilizer guns. Yeah, Yeah people are going to use "fear for their lives" as an excuse, but it sounds like to me everyone was safely in their homes. It would have been, at most, an inconvenience to save the animals for all involved. Also, the police department was FAMILIAR WITH THOMPSON and had a "history" of complaints with him. Thompson was TRAFFICKING ENDANGERED/ILLEGAL/UNREGISTERED EXOTIC ANIMALS so why did the "ZANY-VILLE" police department wait so long to confiscate the animals rather than just log neighbor complaints?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Denisehh3
redneckislandgirl
07:07 PM on 10/22/2011
@ Garret Hood......I think it's very sad these exotic cats had to be killed.....law enforcement should have done a much better job to ensure he had the animals adequately penned and fed......I wish they would have tranquilized them instead......it is a terrible loss......
06:35 PM on 10/20/2011
Stupid Police department!!! Have those MORON COPS ever heard of TRANQUILIZER DARTS? Bengal Tigers are on the ENDAGERED SPECIES LIST. I hope a an animal rights group sues the Ohio State Police department for kill an endangered species. It never ceases to amaze me how such mentally deficient people can get jobs that involve carrying a gun. The world has lost 18 of the most beautiful creatures in the world i.e. Bengal Tigers not to mention all the other senseless SLAUGHTER of innocent creatures. SUE THE STUPID BAST____!
07:49 PM on 10/20/2011
The darts can take up to 15 min to work so are the police suppose to let the animals attack people for those 15 min???? Why didn't you tie a prime rib around your neck then you could have tried to corral them back into their cages! KNOW ALL THE FACTS before you start bashing the police for doing their job!
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12:50 PM on 10/21/2011
Speaking of facts, I don't recall seeing anything in any of the news accounts about the animals "attacking" anyone or even acting aggressively before your cohorts started shooting.
02:16 PM on 10/21/2011
Who are the all the people milling around the animals waiting to be attacked during these 15 minutes? One of the cool things about people is that we can communicate complex ideas to each other like "go into your house and close the door idiot."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cdiasmd
Honey Badger Don't Care!
01:20 AM on 10/24/2011
educate yourself...the 30 animals still in their cages and withen the compound were not a threat, and in areas where tranq. would have been fine. Especially the ones who were too scared to even leave their cages or sleeping boxes...