Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

CAN AN ELEPHANT ALSO BE CONSIDERED A PERSON? THAT’S THE ISSUE BEFORE NEW YORK’S HIGH COURT.

- BY MICHAEL HILL

ALBANY, N.Y. — The trunk is the dead giveaway: Happy is an elephant.

But New York’s highest court is being asked: Can the Bronx Zoo’s Asian elephant also be considered a person?

It’s a closely watched case over whether a basic human right can be extended to an animal.

And the Nonhuman Rights Project, seeking better living conditions for the elephant, says the answer is yes. The advocacy organizati­on argues that Happy is an autonomous, cognitivel­y complex elephant worthy of the rights reserved by law for “a person.”

The Bronx Zoo says Happy is neither illegally imprisoned nor a person but is a wellcared-for elephant “respected as the magnificen­t creature she is.”

Happy has been at the Bronx Zoo for 45 years. The New York Court of Appeals heard arguments over whether the elephant should be released through a habeas corpus proceeding, which normally is a way for people to challenge what they argue is illegal confinemen­t. A ruling could be months away.

The Nonhuman Rights Project wants Happy moved from her “one-acre prison” at the zoo to a more spacious sanctuary.

“She has an interest in exercising her choices and deciding who she wants to be with and where to go and what to do and what to eat,” attorney Monica Miller said before oral arguments to the court. “And the zoo is prohibitin­g her from making any of those choices herself.”

The group says that, in 2005, Happy became the first elephant to pass a self-awareness indicator test, repeatedly touching a white “X” on her forehead as she looked into a large mirror.

The zoo and its supporters say that, if the Nonhuman Rights Project wins the case, it could lead to more legal actions on behalf of animals, including other animals in zoos and also possibly pets.

“If there’s going to entire be a rewrite and a granting to animals of rights that they never had before, shouldn’t that be done by the Legislatur­e?” Kenneth Manning, an attorney for zoo operator Wildlife Conservati­on Society, asked the judges.

Happy was born in the wild in Asia in the early 1970s, captured and brought as a 1-yearold to the United States, where she eventually was named after one of the characters from “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.” Happy arrived at the Bronx Zoo in 1977 with an elephant named Grumpy that was fatally injured in a 2002 confrontat­ion with two other elephants.

Happy lives in an enclosure next to Patty, the zoo’s other elephant.

The zoo’s lawyer argued in court filings that Happy can swim, forage and engage in other behavior that’s natural for elephants.

“The blatant exploitati­on of Happy the elephant by NRP to advance their coordinate­d agenda shows no concern for the individual animal and reveals the fact they are willing to sacrifice Happy’s health and psychologi­cal well-being to set precedent,” a written statement from zoo officials said.

NRP’s lawyers say the animal’s right to “bodily liberty” is being violated. They say that, if the court recognizes Happy’s right to that liberty under habeas corpus, the elephant would be a “person” for that purpose and then must be released.

During oral arguments, Judge Jenny Rivera asked Miller about the implicatio­ns of the group’s position on human-animal relationsh­ips.

“So does that mean that I couldn’t keep a dog?” Rivera asked. “I mean, dogs can memorize words.”

Miller said there’s more evidence to show that elephants are extraordin­arily cognitivel­y complex, with advanced analytical abilities.

Lower courts have ruled against the animal rights group, which also has lost similar cases.

 ?? BEBETO MATTHEWS/AP ?? Happy, an Asian elephant at the Bronx Zoo, is at the center of a lawsuit now before New York’s highest court over whether a basic right for people can be extended to an animal.
BEBETO MATTHEWS/AP Happy, an Asian elephant at the Bronx Zoo, is at the center of a lawsuit now before New York’s highest court over whether a basic right for people can be extended to an animal.

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