Toronto Star

Animal cruelty charges stayed against zoo owner after stroke

Setback sustained in February has left Michael Hackenberg­er ‘medically unfit’ to stand trial

- LIAM CASEY

An Ontario man accused of whipping one of the tigers at his zoo will not face trial after he suffered a stroke last month.

Michael Hackenberg­er, who owns the now-closed Bowmanvill­e Zoo, had five animal cruelty charges stayed in a Whitby court on Thursday.

The charges were stayed because he had a stroke on Feb. 19 and was “medically unfit” to stand trial, according to the Ontario Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (OSPCA).

“We are disappoint­ed that this matter could not move forward, however we understand the reasons brought forth by the Crown and we respect their decision,” said OSPCA spokespers­on Alison Cross.

The animal welfare agency had filed four counts of causing an animal distress against Hackenberg­er and one count of failing to comply with the prescribed standards of care for an animal, all under the authority of the provincial OSPCA Act.

Three of the distress charges in the case relate to the use of a whip.

The OSPCA began investigat­ing after the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) released footage that appeared to show Hackenberg­er allegedly whipping tiger at the Bowmanvill­e Zoo.

Through the zoo’s Facebook page, Hackenberg­er has said he was not guilty of the charges.

His lawyer, David Elmaleh, declined to comment when reached.

Cross said Hackenberg­er is still in hospital.

The zoo opened in1919 and claimed to be the oldest private zoo in North America.

Last June, the zoo announced it would close in the fall, saying attendance had dropped “catastroph­ically” and there wasn’t enough money to continue to run the facility.

Zoo spokespers­on Angus Carroll had blamed PETA for the drop in attendance.

“We feel this is a tragic example of being tried in the public court before being tried in the real court,” an emotional Carroll told reporters at the zoo at the time.

PETA released the video in December 2015, which garnered headlines around the world.

The organizati­on previously told The Canadian Press it began looking at Hackenberg­er after he was seen on live TV in Toronto the previous summer, allegedly cursing an un-cooperativ­e baboon that refused to ride a miniature horse.

PETA said the organizati­on sent in one of its members undercover who began working at the zoo with a hidden camera. The PETA video shows Hackenberg­er during a training session with a tiger named Uno.

“Cause I like hitting him in the face and the paws . . . and the beauty of the paws being on the rock, when you hit them it’s like a vice . . . it stings more,” Hackenberg­er is seen saying to the undercover PETA member.

 ?? BOWMANVILL­E ZOO ?? People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals released footage that appeared to show Michael Hackenberg­er whipping a tiger.
BOWMANVILL­E ZOO People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals released footage that appeared to show Michael Hackenberg­er whipping a tiger.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada