border
sSNAKESs : Reptile Forum
 

Go Back   sSNAKESs : Reptile Forum > Community Forums > General Discussion

Notices

Closed Thread
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 03-21-04, 03:12 PM   #1
Retic chic
Member
 
Retic chic's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep-2003
Location: Leader Saskatchewan
Posts: 244
Dallas Zoo gorilla tragedy

http://www.cnn.com/2004/US/Southwest....ap/index.html
__________________
I have learned silence from the talkative, tolerance from the intolerant, and kindness from the unkind; yet, stranger, I am ungrateful to these teachers.
Retic chic is offline  
Login to remove ads
Old 03-21-04, 03:24 PM   #2
JeffT
Member
 
JeffT's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep-2002
Location: Calgary Alberta Canada
Posts: 1,273
Send a message via MSN to JeffT
Ah that totally sucks. I dont know why they wouldnt tranqualize it instead of shoot it...
__________________
1.1 Gehyra Vorax 1.0 Golden Gecko 1.0 Oedura Monilis 1.1 Green Tree Frogs
JeffT is offline  
Old 03-21-04, 03:38 PM   #3
Scales Zoo
Please Email Boots
 
Join Date: Mar-2007
Posts: 1,867
Quote:
Gorilla Fund International, said police could have tried to contain the gorilla with nonfatal techniques, including using rubber bullets or cornering it with a wall of 15-20 people, preferably keepers the animal recognized.
O.K, like they could find 20 people who would volunteer to corner a huge mad gorilla.

Ryan
Scales Zoo is offline  
Old 03-21-04, 04:19 PM   #4
sketchy4
Member
 
sketchy4's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun-2003
Location: Carlisle, Ohio
Age: 35
Posts: 1,072
Send a message via AIM to sketchy4
yeah that does suck. but who in their right mind would want to surround a gorilla that has twice the strength and power that you do.
__________________
Bud Wells
1.2 leopard gecko
1.0 tokay gecko
www.mowermusic.com
:eb:
sketchy4 is offline  
Old 03-21-04, 04:47 PM   #5
SaIiLdVaEnR
Member
 
SaIiLdVaEnR's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan-2004
Location: Toronto, On.
Age: 37
Posts: 677
Send a message via MSN to SaIiLdVaEnR
It's probably quite a bit more than twice the strength.

Aidan
__________________
Q. What's brown and sticky? A. A stick!
SaIiLdVaEnR is offline  
Login to remove ads
Old 03-21-04, 07:51 PM   #6
Scales Zoo
Please Email Boots
 
Join Date: Mar-2007
Posts: 1,867
I've seen Elephant's go nuts on T.V a few times, but I don't think I've ever seen a big male gorilla go ape, uh, well. I'm not saying I'd want to see a Gorilla take around out of 15 or 20 people who were cornering it - but I imagine even if they avoided the huge teeth, the large hands and feet could hand out quite a pummelling, and cause injuries like a car accident would.

Ryan
Scales Zoo is offline  
Old 03-21-04, 08:39 PM   #7
CONCEPT03
Member
 
Join Date: Mar-2004
Location: EDMONTON, ALBERTA
Age: 40
Posts: 91
Send a message via MSN to CONCEPT03
it sucks they had to shoot it but i would like to see someone shoot it with rubber bullets and live. the police did what they had to to protect themselves and the visitors
CONCEPT03 is offline  
Old 03-21-04, 08:49 PM   #8
sketchy4
Member
 
sketchy4's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun-2003
Location: Carlisle, Ohio
Age: 35
Posts: 1,072
Send a message via AIM to sketchy4
this is a bit off topic but what would you rather be shot with? rubber bullets or pepper balls?
__________________
Bud Wells
1.2 leopard gecko
1.0 tokay gecko
www.mowermusic.com
:eb:
sketchy4 is offline  
Old 03-21-04, 11:54 PM   #9
Mike177
Member
 
Mike177's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar-2003
Location: Dallas, Texas
Posts: 1,010
Send a message via AIM to Mike177 Send a message via MSN to Mike177 Send a message via Yahoo to Mike177
the dallas zoo is already in a low on cash and i dont think this is going to help them out, i heard that they are giveing away free tickets to try to get people to go back
__________________
"Those who desire to give up Freedom in order to gain Security, will not have, nor do they deserve, either one." -Thomas Jefferson
www.MikesPythons.com
Mike177 is offline  
Old 03-22-04, 12:10 AM   #10
JonD
Member
 
JonD's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep-2003
Location: Kitchener, Ontario
Age: 49
Posts: 983
Send a message via MSN to JonD
Quote:
Originally posted by Scales Zoo
O.K, like they could find 20 people who would volunteer to corner a huge mad gorilla.

Ryan
LOL or have someone dress like a female Gorilla, with the possibility of being violated!!!
__________________
Jon Dona

Fox has one of those new reality shows at eight, 'Fast animals, slow children
JonD is offline  
Login to remove ads
Old 03-22-04, 12:13 AM   #11
Double J
Member
 
Double J's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov-2003
Location: Waterloo
Age: 43
Posts: 528
20 people could not detain a gorilla bare handed. It is just not possible. Remember... the upper body strength of a gorilla is immense.... Though they are terrestrial quadrapeds.... their arms are still made for lifting themselves into trees. This requires immense strength.. especaily condiering their weght (adult males are 180 lbs)
Also...... there was far too quick of a reaction on the part of the police officers. 20 feet away from an "angry gorilla" is quite a distance. Gorillas put on more of a show than an full fledged assault....... they will run at you baring teeth.. but this is a threat, and is instead mean't to drive you away. If you back down.. or show signs of submission, the gorilla will ease up. Police are not proplery trained to know and read gorilla behaviour.... though they were "just doing their job"...... I don't think it was their place to shoot with guns to begin with. I am sure there were tranquilizers on hand of some sort.... there had to have been. Thier job was to get people to safety.... that is rounding them up, and getting them somewhere safe. These animals are not like a rabid pitbull...... they are far too rare to be shot like an armed robber. I think the situation was handled wrong.... instead.. there should have been protocols in place in case this happened. If there were, they certainly were not followed.
Tomorrow.... I will talk to my human evolution prof... she is a primatologist... I will get her PhD opinion on the matter and get back to you.
Double J
__________________
"If there's a bustle in your hedgerow, don't be alarmed now. It's just a spring clean for the May-queen."

-Led Zeppelin
Double J is offline  
Old 03-22-04, 08:41 AM   #12
MouseKilla
Member
 
MouseKilla's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun-2003
Location: Oshawa
Posts: 1,346
.

I'm not usually one to defend cops (especially ones that wear cowboy hats) but in this situation I would have shot the gorrilla in a heartbeat.

In the Toronto Star article the representative from the zoo didn't accept the blame for the animal escaping, he tried to make it sound like it was the fault of the crowd of people around the cage.

"We believe he was taunted and tormented by a group of children. We have scoured the area and we can't see any signs at all of any wrongdoing on our part, such as a door left unlocked. We honestly don't know how he got out."

WHAT?? Here's a sign of wrongdoing: THE GORRILLA GOT OUT! We all keep animals here, who's fault is it if your 20 foot retic gets out of his cage? How can you blame a bunch of kids? Did the kids let the beast out?? Talk about BS! It's totally, 100 percent the zoo's fault this whole thing happened, not the kids and not the cops.

The cops had to worry about making sure the animal didn't hurt any MORE people, they didn't have time to think of preserving endangered wildlife, the creature had already mauled at least one toddler.

As for tranquilizing the animal, the zoo staff had the period of time between the escape and the arrival of the cops to do that themselves. They didn't have the stuff close enough at hand to use it before the cops did what they had to do to prevent people from being killed by a dangerous, escaped animal and as a result the animal is now dead. Who's responsibility is it to keep gorrilla tranquilizers handy? Seems to me that's the zoo's department, not the cop's.

I would hate to think about how secure their other enclosures are if they can't find a single thing wrong with one that obviously has gorrilla sized flaw. That zoo should be shut down until someone who knows what they're doing can audit the place and the necessary improvements are made and the idiots in charge are fired and replaced with competent people.
__________________
I feel a little light headed... maybe you should drive...

Last edited by MouseKilla; 03-22-04 at 09:08 AM..
MouseKilla is offline  
Old 03-22-04, 11:46 AM   #13
brandi
Member
 
brandi's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec-2003
Location: AZ
Posts: 58
very sad, but i agree with mousekilla. If one of our animals escape it is our own fault, and we know it. if one of us gets bit handling a venomous animal, we all know we are responsible, because we accepted that risk. A zoo is not different.

Double J, you brought up a lot of good points, but the problem with "ifs" is they are just that, "ifs" and not "were". Tranquillizers were not immediately on hand, or used in time, or people didn't know how to use them. A thorough audit does need to be done, but that doesn't fix what happend due to human negligence. As far as the gorilla just showing agression, or bluffing, i really don't think grabbing a kid in its mouth qualifies as "bluffing".

And for the "20 foot" thing, if anything the officers waited too long. I'm told Canada has pretty strict gun laws, but if you've ever had law enforcement or concealed weapons training you will learn the "21 foot rule". basically it shows that a human being, armed only with a knife, can close 21 feet and deliver a wound before an armed person can draw their weapon and fire. I don't know what the gorilla/human rate of speed is, but if i was that officer i would not have waited around to figure it out.
__________________
ignorance can be cured, but stupidity is forever
brandi is offline  
Old 03-22-04, 12:08 PM   #14
anders_240sx
Member
 
anders_240sx's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun-2003
Location: Shwaberry, Ontario
Posts: 169
Send a message via MSN to anders_240sx
The gorillas parents are Charles and from the Toronto Zoo... since Josephine cannot produce milk, the gorilla was hand fed. So I think there is a lot more than simply the gorilla escaping .... the door had to be unlocked... besides its not like gorillas to go nuts .... typically when they escape, they quickly go back into the comforts of their cage. I do fully blame the police for killing the gorilla, however, the zoo should have reacted much faster to ensure the gorilla was tranquilized ... its all based on opinion
__________________
"We live in a society of laws..why did you think I took you to see those Police Academy movies?...for fun?!!, well I didnt see anybody laughing...did you?!!!"

Homer J.
anders_240sx is offline  
Old 03-22-04, 12:21 PM   #15
Cake
Member
 
Join Date: Feb-2004
Posts: 86
I think there are alot of misconceptions regrading gorilla behaviour. Gorilla's are by nature extremelly teritorial and will protect themselves with force if they feel threatened. When he broke free of his enclosure and was faced with 20 or so people looking at him he perceived all of them as threats. Most likely people began to scream, run away, yell, cry, ect you know the natural human way to react to something they do not understand, or fear. These loud noises and lots of frantic movement would have freaked the gorrila out, and emediatly put him on the defensive.

Had everyone relaxed and not freaked out, odds are he would have gone into an aggresive display of charging, cheast beating, and vocalizations, showing his teeth, nothing to serious.

I do not mean to put the blame on the people observing the situation, as it is not thier fault that the gorilla got out, but i think what the gorilla did was a perfectly natural reaction to being in a threatening situation. The blame for the situation must squarely be placed on the Dallas Zoo.

As for the cops shooting the gorilla, well i wasn't there so i cant say if it was warrented or not. Apparently the Zoo keepers were on their way to get tranqs to take it down, but if the gorilla was chomping on a kids head then id have to say they did what was necessary.

Reports say that the kids were teasing him and this would have prevoked agressive behavior on the gorillas part. I think that this is a lesson learned in that we need to show the respect that these 300lbs animals deserve. To many times have i seen kids at the zoo throwing things into enclosures or pushing sticks into cages right infront of their parents and them saying nothing to them, ive approached several of them asking them to stop, explaining that they are bothering the animals. The Toronto Zoo lost an Orangutan to people throwing oreo's into the enclosure 5-10 years ago.
Cake is offline  
Login to remove ads
Closed Thread


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 09:41 AM.

Powered by vBulletin®
©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © 2002-2023, Hobby Solutions.

right