The Oklahoman

Money offered for info on former `Tiger King' star's husband

- By Tamara Lush The Associated Press

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — The family of a Florida man who disappeare­d in 1997 and who appeared on the hit TV series “Tiger King,” has hired a lawyer and is offering $100,000 in exchange for informatio­n to help solve the case.

Attorney John Phillips held a news conference in Tampa Monday and announced an independen­t investigat­ion into Don Lewis' disappeara­nce. He also said that on behalf of the Lewis family, he's filed a lawsuit against Lewis' second wife Carole Ba skin in an attempt to depose her and get her to speak on the record. He and the family have also paid for Tampa-area billboards asking for informatio­n in the case.

Lewis vanished a day before a scheduled trip to Costa Rica and was never found. He was declared legally dead in 2002. He and Baskin started the animal sanctuary, which later became Big Cat Rescue Corp. in Tampa, Florida.

Three of Lewis' daughters were at the news conference. Lewis' youngest daughter Gale Rathbone, expressed gratitude for those interested in the case.

“Amazing ly, our little family tragedy has become your tragedy. Our search for closure and truth has become your mission also,” she said. “We all know by now that (Lewis) was not a perfect man. But do only the perfect among us deserve justice?”

Baskin did not immediatel­y respond to an email or Facebook message Monday for comment on the latest legal developmen­ts.

Lewis' case, and Baskin, were featured in Tiger King. Baskin is still the owner of Big

Cat Rescue, and lobbies for abolishing private wildlife ownership.

Tiger King was a documentar­y series about Joseph Maldonado-Passage, also known as “Joe Exotic,” an eccentric former Oklahoma zookeeper who loves big cats.

Earlier this year, Maldonado- Passage was sentenced to 22 years in prison for his role in a murder-for-hire plot. He was convicted of trying to hire someone to kill Baskin, who had tried to shut him down, accusing the Oklahoma zoo of abusing animals and selling big cat cubs.

In retaliatio­n, Maldonado-Passage raised questions about Baskin's former husband, Jack “Don” Lewis. The documentar­y extensivel­y covered Maldonado-Passage's repeated accusation­s that Baskin killed her husband and possibly fed him to her tigers. Baskin hasn't been charged with any cr i me and has repeatedly released statements refuting the accusation­s made in the series.

Maldonaldo- Passage is currently in prison. A federal judge in June granted control of the Oklahoma zoo that was previously run by Maldonado-Passage — also known as Joe Exotic — to Big Cat Rescue Corp.

Baskin previously sued Maldonado-Passage for trademark and copyright infringeme­nts and won a $1 million civil judgment against him. The judge found that ownership of the zoo was fraudulent­ly transferre­d to Maldonado- Passage's mother in an attempt to avoid paying the judgment.

In March, the Hillsborou­gh County sheriff asked for tips in the case of Lewis and announced a reopening of Lewis' case.

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