Houston Chronicle

Rabbit’s death may go to trial

- By Scott McFetridge

A group sues United over the demise of 3-foot-long Simon.

DES MOINES, Iowa — A group of Iowa businessme­n filed a lawsuit Wednesday against United Airlines over the death of Simon, a giant rabbit whose lifeless body was discovered in a kennel after a flight from London to Chicago.

The lawsuit comes as United struggles to repair its image after a string of events, including the videotaped forced removal of a 69-year-old doctor from a plane at Chicago’s O’Hare Internatio­nal Airport and the banning of two young girls from a flight because they were wearing leggings.

The businessme­n filed the lawsuit more than three months after airline workers found the continenta­l rabbit dead on April 20. Simon had been placed in a United kennel at O’Hare while awaiting a connecting flight to Kansas City, where his new owners planned to pick him up.

The lawsuit seeks unspecifie­d damages to cover the costs of the rabbit as well as punitive damages.

Attorney Guy Cook represents the three Des Moines-area businessme­n who bought Simon with the intention of showing him at the Iowa State Fair and then displaying him and selling related merchandis­e to raise money for the annual event.

The lawsuit said United was negligent in the care and transporta­tion of Simon and that the airline improperly cremated the rabbit.

United spokesman Charles Hobart released a statement saying: “We were saddened by Simon’s death in April. We have received this complaint and are currently reviewing it.”

Cook said the businessme­n — Mark Oman, Steve Bruere and Duke Reichardt — never intended to profit from the rabbit and that they plan to donate any money from the lawsuit to a state fair foundation that funds upkeep at the fairground­s in Des Moines.

“They’re frustrated with how United has handled this from the start,” Cook said. “None of them stand to benefit financiall­y from the resolution.”

The lawsuit alleges United has a poor record of transporti­ng animals, stating the airline accounted for one-third of all animal deaths via U.S. air travel in the last five years.

The lawsuit doesn’t explain how the rabbit died but puts forth several possibilit­ies, including that it was exposed to low temperatur­es in the cargo compartmen­t or that dry ice might have been left in the same compartmen­t as the animal.

When Cook threatened legal action in May, Hobart said United had reached “a satisfacto­ry resolution” with the rabbit’s breeder, Annette Edwards, in Worcesters­hire in the United Kingdom.

However, the lawsuit contends the rabbit had been sold to the Iowa group, which also had arranged and paid for the animal’s transport to the United States.

The lawsuit states that a veterinari­an examined Simon before the flight to the U.S. and found him to be in “good physical condition and fit to travel.”

The lawsuit seeks a jury trial in Des Moines.

 ?? Annette Edwards ??
Annette Edwards
 ?? Charlie Neibergall / Associated Press file ?? Attorney Guy Cook speaks at news conference this spring in Des Moines, Iowa, about the death of Simon, a giant rabbit who was found dead after flying from the UK to Chicago.
Charlie Neibergall / Associated Press file Attorney Guy Cook speaks at news conference this spring in Des Moines, Iowa, about the death of Simon, a giant rabbit who was found dead after flying from the UK to Chicago.

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