Current Affairs

Oklahoma shows a fatal processor in front of the family during the exhibition Oklahoma


Local officials said on Monday that the tiger therapist who was subjected to one of his charges in Oklahoma was recently killed as terrified spectators – including his wife and daughter – watched at the end of a big cat.

On Saturday, Ryan Isley, 37, said on Saturday to the Growler PINES TIGER reserve near Hugo, not far from the Texas border, just minutes after the messengers received an emergency call.

Park said that the tiger began unexpectedly bitten and then shake Esley while the two were in a large cage.

“It was a big tiger,” Park told Associated Press. “This is particularly – he had for some time.”

Park said that Isley and her young daughter were present when the attack took place.

The messages that left on Monday were not returned with the Growler Pines Tiger Tiger Reserve.

“This tragedy is a painful reminder for both the beauty of the natural world and the inability to predict it,” the reserve said in a statement on the Facebook page. “Ryan understood these risks – not motivated by recklessness but out of love. Animals under his care were not just animals, but rather beings that were related to them – one rooted in respect, daily care and love.”

The statement said that all the tours were canceled until further notice.

The Preserve is a special facility where visitors can book tours to display tigers and see demonstrations on how to train animals and care for them, according to their website.

Since the facility did not put the original animals in Oklahoma, permits were issued by the US Department of Agriculture, the service of American fish and wildlife – instead of the state. This is according to a spokesman for the Wildlife Preservation Department in Oklahoma, Kelly Adams.

The messages were not returned on Monday with these federal agencies immediately.

Two different animal rights organizations, people for moral treatment of animals (PETA) and the human world of animals, said that Isley’s death is a sad reminder of the risks that are offered when wild animals such as tigers are used in performance.

“It was only a matter of time before these cats responded in a completely natural way for them, which is the use of aggression to respond to stress,” said Deby Mitzer, the director of the captive wildlife at Peta.

The veterinary inspection certificate submitted to the AP by Humane World shows that Nimrin is 11 months old obtained by Easley in 2012 came from the Wynnewood Exotal Park park, which was owned and managed by Joe Exotic, TV TV The TV program TIGER King.

Price Boir, a spokesman for the Ministry of Agriculture in Oklahoma, who obtained the certificate in 2012, said the document seemed authentic.

The EXOTIC Joe, Oklahoma, was sentenced to Oklahoma, which wears the mullet, and his real name is Joseph Maldonado, in a federal prison in a documented case in Niger Dirs King: killing, chaos and madness.

In a statement posted on the Instagram account in Maldonado-Passage, he says that Easley built a complex in his zoo in Wynnewood more than a decade ago to house Isley’s tigers during the winter.

“With all my respect as a human leader Ryan Isley,” the statement said. “She died doing what I loved.”

This is not the first time that the tiger attacked and killed its therapist. In 1997, Bangal Tiger was killed 400 pounds (180 kg) its coach in front of a crowd of about 200 people in a circus in Pennsylvania.

In Las Vegas in 2003, Roy Horn Sigarid and Roy were seriously injured in an attack by one of the famous white tigers in ACT during a presentation at Mirage Hotel-Sasino. Roy suffered from severe neck injuries and underwent long rehabilitation, and the attack actually ended in a long -term experimental production.

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