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Jim And Donita Clark, Louisiana Monkey Owners, Flee Exotic Animal Crackdown

Louisiana Monkey Owner

First Posted: 01/30/2012 4:44 am Updated: 02/14/2012 1:11 pm

NEAR THE TEXAS-LOUISIANA LINE (AP) — Even in their Texas hideout, Jim and Donita Clark are terrified that wildlife agents from their home state of Louisiana will descend on their motorhome and seize the four Capuchin monkeys they've reared for 10 years.

Four months ago, the couple fled before authorities showed up at their house for an inspection, and ever since they've been hiding out with their monkeys — all of them cooped up in the recreational vehicle.

Exotic animal owners like them say wildlife agents have been cracking down in Louisiana and around the country after high-profile cases of exotic animals getting loose or attacking people. At least six states have also banned the ownership of wild animals since 2005, and Congress is also mulling tighter restrictions.

The couple fears the monkeys will be confiscated and sent to a zoo if they return home to DeRidder, La.

"It's not what I fought for ... to be treated like this," said Jim Clark, a 60-year-old disabled Vietnam veteran, as tears streaked his face. "It's not right to think they can come into your house and do this to you with or without a warrant."

As Clark talked on a recent day, the adorable monkeys looked on from their cages. Hands gripping the cage bars, a couple of the hyper, super-inquisitive furry creatures — capable of lightning-fast vertical leaps — barely moved and cooed softly. The motorhome is a far cry from the DeRidder house that boasts two monkey playrooms and a large outdoor enclosure.

"To take these guys out of their home and throw them in a zoo? It's like taking a little child out of a mansion and throwing it into the ghetto," Donita Clark said. "It's that devastating. It's destroyed us both emotionally. We'll never be the same."

Crackdowns in Louisiana and elsewhere have gained momentum since a man in Ohio released his personal zoo of lions, tigers, zebras, bears and monkeys before killing himself. The 2009 face-mauling of a Connecticut woman by a chimpanzee also highlighted the dangers of keeping wild animals in residential neighborhoods.

"It was a wakeup call to the nation that we should no longer tolerate the reckless decision-making by a small number of people," said Wayne Pacelle, the head of the Humane Society of the United States.

Veterinarians and primate experts generally agree that monkeys — like all wild animals — shouldn't be adopted as pets.

"They are not animated toys. They're so intelligent they're difficult to keep in a stimulated environment long term," said Dr. Patricia V. Turner, the president of the Association of Primate Veterinarians.

She said monkeys kept in homes often end up obese and suffering from emotional stress that takes the form of self-biting. Monkeys are garrulous social creatures and need to be around their own kind, she said.

In Congress, one proposed bill would ban unlicensed professionals from buying, selling or moving primates across state lines. Meanwhile, 24 states now ban the ownership of primates and 11 others require permits, according to the Humane Society. Hundreds of cities and counties also have local bans.

Exotic animal lovers feel like they are under assault.

"So many of us want to disappear, and have our own community where we can safely keep our monkeys," said Ann Newman, the owner of seven monkeys in Arkansas and the president of the Simian Society of America, a membership group for monkey lovers.

Monkey owners say their animals hardly pose a serious danger to the public — they're unlikely to do the kind of injury a wild big cat or great ape might.

To Dan Stockdale, a celebrity wild animal trainer in Tennessee, the backlash on exotic animals owners goes too far. He said many private owners do a better job than some zoos and sanctuaries.

"Unfortunately, exotic animals and those who own exotic animals are in the spotlight. Society's knee-jerk reaction is eliminate them."

Ohio lawmakers are considering whether to forbid anyone from having a wild animal as a pet after the incident there.

"If they start confiscating, you're going to see a lot of people going underground," said Nancy Nighswander, who leads Uniting A Politically Proactive Exotic Animal League, a group lobbying against bans on private ownership of wild animals. She lives in Tiffin, Ohio, and owns five monkeys and a cougar.

There is no accurate count on how many pet primates there are in the U.S., but estimates range between 3,000 and 15,000.

Louisiana has taken a hard-nosed approach. In 2003, the Legislature passed a law banning exotic animals as pets, but allowed people who already owned monkeys to keep them. Starting in 2006, owners were required to obtain permits, keep their animals away from the public and have yearly veterinary checkups. There were only about 20 households in Louisiana with wild animals, all of them monkeys, according to state officials.

Now the state says it will issue new permits only after a home inspection.

"Louisiana has strict laws and regulations to prevent the kind of situation that happened in Ohio," said Maria Davidson, a former zookeeper and state Wildlife and Fisheries Department biologist who crafted the state's ban on wild pets. "You certainly don't want a monkey loose in your neighborhood."

The Clarks got their first monkey — Tina Marie — more than 10 years ago from a woman who was unable to look after the animal.

"We felt sorry for her," Donita Clark said. "I had never thought of having monkeys in my life."

They adopted three other Capuchin monkeys — Meeko Mae, Sara Jo and Hayley Suzanne — and became a bit monkey crazy.

They built a large cage and a wire walkway into their modest home in DeRidder. The monkeys slept in the house, going to sleep when the lights were turned off. They took showers in the bathroom, complete with shampoo and soap. They wore diapers.

The Clarks networked with other monkey owners and invited humans and simians to picnics at their home. The self-taught experts helped others learn to care for their monkeys and build cages.

Now, monkey owners in Louisiana accuse the state of bully tactics and unlawfully confiscating monkeys. They point to at least three instances since 2009 when monkeys were seized.

"It's like someone walking into your home and taking your kids," Donita Clark said, paging through binders with photographs, written testimony and documents she'd collected from aggrieved monkey owners.

Davidson said the right action was taken in those cases. In one case, the monkey owner did not have a permit; in another, a snow monkey allegedly bit the hand of a girl and in the third case the owners allegedly had violated their permit requirements.

The Clarks fear they could be next. On Oct. 27 wildlife agents and sheriff's deputies showed up at their home. But the Clarks had already fled after getting a tip.

Davidson said the state didn't intend to seize their monkeys and just wanted to inspect their home. She said the Clarks' flight was suspicious. But she added: "We'll give Donita the benefit of the doubt."

The Clarks, however, say they're not going home until they're assured the monkey's won't be taken.

Their exile is hard on them and the monkeys.

"They're arguing with each other like we're arguing with each other," Donita Clark said, sitting on the couch in the RV and looking at her girls.

"They have not seen daylight since October," Jim Clark said. "These guys are like humans. They need sunlight."

The couple feels stuck. They don't tell friends or family where they are because they're so terrified. And they're running low on money.

"I'm terrified 24 hours a day and there's no light at the end of this tunnel, no way out," Donita Clark said.

"But we're not going to give up," Jim Clark said to encourage his wife. "We're not going to let them go. We promised them forever a home."

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NEAR THE TEXAS-LOUISIANA LINE (AP) — Even in their Texas hideout, Jim and Donita Clark are terrified that wildlife agents from their home state of Louisiana will descend on their motorhome and seize...
NEAR THE TEXAS-LOUISIANA LINE (AP) — Even in their Texas hideout, Jim and Donita Clark are terrified that wildlife agents from their home state of Louisiana will descend on their motorhome and seize...
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JohnFromCensornati
Free your mind and your ass will follow.
12:31 PM on 02/08/2012
I would do the same if the authorities wanted to confiscate my parrot.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dbrett480
01:14 PM on 02/04/2012
4 wild animals cooped up in an RV. That will turn out well. Why can't we learn to leave wild animals where they belong?
03:09 AM on 02/01/2012
No, the monkeys have not been smuggled here. Not 'snatched' after killing their mothers either. Non-human primates in private ownership have been born at USDA licensed facilities. Importation for private use has been banned in the US for more than 40 years. Most people fear the 'diseases' than can be transmitted to humans. The truth of the matter is that they can contract more from us than we can from them. And they all have routine vet care, vaccinations, etc. The state of LA requires an annual health inspection before issuing a permit to those that have been grandfathered. Unfortunately, many animal rights groups have it as their mission to eliminate all animals (including your household dog, cat or bird). And the state of LA is following their lead.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bcmom
Stop breeding puppies
09:54 AM on 01/31/2012
Exotic animals should not be pets. Monkeys carry all types of diseases which can be transmitted to humans.
08:45 AM on 01/31/2012
What if some of us were adopted by alien space creatures?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PhloxJeana
Never baptize a cat.
04:38 PM on 02/04/2012
We'd have to make the best of it. Or try to kill out captors.
08:42 AM on 01/31/2012
Very few animal owners realize their pets have a completely different personality when they're not around. We had neighbors who's rat dogs frequently got loose and bother pedestrians on the street. Not once did these owners apologize. Pet owners like these ruin it for the rest who are responsible.
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averagezoe
Don't breed or buy while homeless animals die!
03:29 PM on 01/30/2012
Until there are federal laws in place that prohibit any and all ownership, import and sale of exotic animals, they will continue to suffer. This is too important an issue to be left up to the individual states and people are too stupid to grasp the fact that these animals belong in their natural habitat, not in a cage for the enjoyment of their human captors.
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
02:53 PM on 01/30/2012
It's going to be tough in LA to separate the exotic pets from the locals. There must be a good chance that one of those monkeys could be the next governor, although they might be a bit too successful and overqualified.
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txadams
"Here, let me spark up that Mary Jane for you"
03:38 PM on 02/04/2012
What makes you think monkeys are not in charge of the State of Louisiana already?
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
04:07 PM on 02/04/2012
Photographic evidence is inconclusive. I think it's time for a blood test.
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
02:51 PM on 01/30/2012
When dangerous wild animals are outlawed, only outlaws will have dangerous wild animals.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PhloxJeana
Never baptize a cat.
04:40 PM on 02/04/2012
And dangerous wild animals don't kill people, .... oh wait, that one doesn't work.
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
05:46 PM on 02/04/2012
Don't worry, neither do any of the others - it'll be written up as a `cleaning accident'.
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02:18 PM on 01/30/2012
I would like to see the inside of these animal's mouths. They are not just tame, they are usually modified by removing their canines or worse all of their teeth. This is not a rosy existence for these animals. It is such a selfish and vain action. If you cannot obtain permits legally, than you should not possess these animals - it only promotes a market and desire for these wild animals, and more animal smuggling to the US. I am glad they are cracking down on wild animal ownership.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bcmom
Stop breeding puppies
09:56 AM on 01/31/2012
I once fostered a sweetheart of a dog. Someone had filed down his teeth for what reason I do not know. He was a doll. I wish I could be surprised by what people do to animals and humans, but I can't.
11:48 PM on 02/04/2012
This just shows your ignorance. They have their teeth. You do not know any of the facts. It had nothing to do with lack of permits.........these people were the 3rd people to get their permit in 2006 and their facility is great.......did you ever think that maybe Louisiana Wildlife and Fisheries might be out of control and unaccountable for their actions towards these people.
02:00 PM on 01/30/2012
I think I saw one of them atop the Empire State Building.
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american-dolt
Divide and Conquer
01:59 PM on 01/30/2012
Did you see 60 Minutes last night? Why don't a couple of nice rich people put on a farm so they will populate, then they can shoot them for fun.
01:48 PM on 01/30/2012
And now we have pythons in the Everglades. What else? All exotics should be outlawed.
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edva
Capitalism vs Humanity
01:44 PM on 01/30/2012
Wow, I'm surprised we have any unsolved problems left in the world, with all the ready advisors posting here, seem to have some ultimate knowledge and authority to make decisions for other, inferior humans.
Look, it's not about YOU, it's about these folks and their pets. Where would those monkeys be happier, with them, or in a zoo? And, what's so sacrosanct about zoos? Just pet-keeping on a commercial scale. A lot less one on one and love for the animals. And "the wild"?!? Give me a break, there's almost none left, and certainly no place on the entire planet safe from human's greed and destruction, no animal is safe in "the wild" anymore. No, let these people keep their monkeys, and love them. A few bad incidents shouldn't negate that. If such a yardstick were applied to humans, we'd all be done for.
04:43 PM on 01/30/2012
there are almost none left at all in the WILD because stupid POACHERS take them and sell them to people like the ones in the story for profit!
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edva
Capitalism vs Humanity
01:18 AM on 01/31/2012
These people adopted the monkeys, didn't they?
11:56 PM on 02/04/2012
Again an uneducated ignorant statement........Monkeys have not been imported into the USA since 1973/1974. The USDA has licensed breeders who breed and sell these animals. There has never been a case of rabies in monkeys. And where are all these dieases that people say they carry??? There has not been any outbreak of any of these so-called dieases in the USA. People can and do give each other diseases.
08:43 AM on 01/31/2012
Wild animals belong in the wild... "Wild" get it? We only put people in cages when they break the laws.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
edva
Capitalism vs Humanity
12:58 PM on 01/31/2012
There are no absolutes. If you don't see that, you are dreaming.
01:30 PM on 01/30/2012
"Monkey Owners Flee Louisiana Crackdown" I'm still laughing.
I was in Cape Town several years ago and the headlines read, "Monkey King Eludes Capture!"