Santa Fe New Mexican

5-year-old helps crack zoo’s lemur theft case

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SAN FRANCISCO — Police said Friday they arrested a man suspected of stealing a ring-tailed lemur from the San Francisco Zoo, where officials rewarded a 5-year-old boy who helped recapture the endangered primate with a lifetime membership.

The theft of Maki, an arthritic 21-yearold lemur, made the news Wednesday in San Francisco and beyond when zoo officials reported the animal missing and found evidence of a break-in at his enclosure.

Five-year-old James Trinh was unaware of the headlines when leaving his preschool Thursday in Daly City, about 5 miles from the zoo, and exclaimed, “There’s a lemur! There’s a lemur!” Cynthia Huang, director of the Hope Lutheran Day School, told the San Francisco Chronicle on Friday.

Huang was skeptical at first. “I thought, ‘Are you sure it’s not a raccoon?’ ” she said.

Maki scurried from the parking lot into the school’s playground and took refuge in a miniature playhouse, as the school called police, who quickly alerted animal control and zoo officials. The children, parents and teachers watched as caretakers arrived and coaxed the lemur into a transport cage, Huang said.

Also Thursday, police took 30-yearold Cory McGilloway into custody, San Francisco police Lt. Scott Ryan said.

McGilloway, whom investigat­ors had identified as a suspect in the lemur’s abduction, was arrested Thursday evening by San Rafael police on unrelated charges. He was expected to be transferre­d to San Francisco County Jail to be booked on charges of burglary, grand theft of an animal, looting and vandalism all related to the lemur theft, Ryan said.

Police did not provide other details, saying the investigat­ion was still underway but credited a multiagenc­y effort and tips on a public tip line that led to the suspect’s capture.

San Francisco Zoo Director Tanya Peterson said Maki was “an aging wild animal who needed special care” for ailments including arthritis. “He’s still agitated, dehydrated and hungry,” she said, adding that veterinari­an teams were working to get him back to health. Due to his travels, she added, “He’s socially distancing from his primate family” but would hopefully join the others soon.

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 ?? SAN FRANCISCO ZOO VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Maki the ring-tailed lemur is back at the San Francisco Zoo thanks to a sharp-eyed 5-year-old.
SAN FRANCISCO ZOO VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS Maki the ring-tailed lemur is back at the San Francisco Zoo thanks to a sharp-eyed 5-year-old.
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