The Sun (Lowell)

Who freed Flaco? One year later, eagle-owl’s escape from zoo a mystery

- By Jake Offenhartz The Associated Press

NEW YORK >> This New York love story begins with a criminal act of sabotage.

Under cover of darkness a year ago Friday, someone breached a waist-high fence and slipped into the Central Park Zoo. Once inside, they cut a hole through a steel mesh cage, freeing a majestic Eurasian eagle-owl named Flaco who had arrived at the zoo as a fledgling 13 years earlier.

Immediatel­y, Flaco fled the park, blinking his big orange eyes at pedestrian­s and police on Fifth Avenue before flying off into the night.

In the year since his dramatic escape, Flaco has become one of the city’s most beloved characters. By day he lounges in Manhattan’s courtyards and parks or perches on fire escapes. He spends his nights hooting atop water towers and preying on the city’s abundant rats.

To the surprise of many experts, Flaco is thriving in the urban wilds. An apex predator with a nearly 6-foot (2-meter) wingspan, he has called on abilities some feared he hadn’t developed during a lifetime in captivity, gamely exploring new neighborho­ods and turning up unexpected­ly at the windows of New Yorkers.

“He was the underdog from the start. People did not expect him to survive,” said Jacqueline Emery, one of several birders who document the Eurasian eagle-owl’s daily movements and share them online with his legions of admirers. “New Yorkers especially connect to him because of his resilience.”

But as Flaco enters his second year in the spotlight, it can be easy to forget that his freedom is the result of a crime, one that has improbably remained unsolved.

The break-in happened steps from the shared headquarte­rs of the New York City Parks Department and the Central Park Zoo, in the vicinity of at least one surveillan­ce camera.

But if they have collected any evidence on a potential suspect, police and zoo authoritie­s have declined to share it. Since the zoo suspended efforts to re-capture Flaco in February 2023, there has been no public informatio­n about the crime.

Privately, the zoo has sought to soften descriptio­ns of Flaco’s former living conditions, in a minivan-sized structure decorated with a painted mountain vista, barely twice the width of Flaco’s extended wings.

In internal emails obtained through a Freedom of Informatio­n request, zoo officials urged the Parks Department not to publicly describe Flaco as “raised in captivity.” Likewise, the term “escape” should be avoided.

“That puts the blame on the animal rather than the perpetrato­r,” the zoo’s then-communicat­ions director, Max Pulsinelli, wrote in one email. “This was a crime.”

In the absence of official informatio­n, theories of the crime abound — a youthful prank, perhaps, or an attempted owl heist gone awry? For many invested in Flaco’s fate, the most plausible explanatio­n is that he was freed for ideologica­l reasons.

Proponents of the animal liberation theory point to the seemingly targeted nature of the crime, as well as the limitation­s of the owl’s modest enclosure.

“I wouldn’t be surprised if it was someone who loved Flaco and wanted him free,” said Nicole Barrantes, a wildlife campaign manager with World Animal Protection, who started a petition against Flaco being returned to the zoo. “His habitat was ridiculous. It was the saddest thing ever.”

Break-ins and vandalism have long been tactics some activists have used to free animals. Such actions are often made public by the North American Animal Liberation Press Office, an anonymous online database.

The group’s spokespers­on, Jerry Vlasak, said no one had come forward to claim responsibi­lity for Flaco’s escape. “We never received a communique,” he said. “But we’re certainly glad it happened.”

A spokespers­on for the Wildlife Conservati­on Society, which operates the city’s zoos, did not respond to the claims that Flaco’s zoo habitat was inadequate.

“This was a criminal act that jeopardize­d the safety of the bird,” the zoo said in a statement, adding that they are continuing to monitor reports of Flaco’s activity and wellbeing and are “prepared to resume recovery efforts if he shows any sign of difficulty or distress.”

Even with his proficient hunting skills, Flaco faces many threats in the city, including a grave risk of consuming rodenticid­e through a poisoned rat. In 2021, another beloved Central Park owl, Barry, was fatally struck by a truck after ingesting a lethal dose of rat poison that may have impaired her flying.

“All the hazards are still there,” cautioned Suzanne Shoemaker, the director of the Owl Moon Raptor Center in Maryland. “He’s shown some good instincts to be able to make it this far. He’s also lucky.”

Flaco spent his initial months of freedom mostly in Central Park, which is loaded with wildlife, but has lately preferred more urban sections of Manhattan. There has been some speculatio­n that he has been looking for a mate, though he most certainly won’t find one. Eurasian eagle owls aren’t native to North America.

Stories of zoo animals breaking loose in the middle of the country’s densest city have long captured the public imaginatio­n, while often ushering in calls for reforms.

Following a series of bird thefts and “senseless” animal beatings in the 1970s, administra­tors ordered immediate security upgrades and the redesign of some pens at the zoo, which the city’s parks commission­er at the time described as “Rikers Island for animals” because of poor living conditions.

A few years later, when a group of vandals made off with a boa constricto­r and a parrot named “Peanuts,” officials accused the perpetrato­rs of stealing the animals for “voodoo rites.”

Since those days the zoo has been substantia­lly redesigned.

Wildlife groups have long warned that owls can be used as sacrifices in certain religious ceremonies — particular­ly birds like Flaco, who boasts prominent ear tufts. The Eurasian eagle-owl is also commonly used in falconry, selling for as much as $3,000.

But while some have suggested Flaco was targeted for either financial or spiritual purposes, such speculatio­n would seem undermined by the fact that he emerged from his damaged cage and into the bustling cityscape unscathed.

On a recent night on Manhattan’s Upper West Side, one of the Flaco’s most dedicated observers, David Barrett, struck an ambivalent tone when asked how New Yorkers should think about the crime that made him an avian celebrity.

 ?? SETH WENIG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A crowd of people gather in Central Park to look at Flaco, a Eurasian eagle-owl, Monday, Feb. 6, 2023, in New York. In the year since his dramatic escape, Flaco has become one of the city’s most beloved characters. By day he lounges in Manhattan’s courtyards, parks and fire escapes. He spends his nights hooting atop water towers and preying on the city’s abundant rats.
SETH WENIG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A crowd of people gather in Central Park to look at Flaco, a Eurasian eagle-owl, Monday, Feb. 6, 2023, in New York. In the year since his dramatic escape, Flaco has become one of the city’s most beloved characters. By day he lounges in Manhattan’s courtyards, parks and fire escapes. He spends his nights hooting atop water towers and preying on the city’s abundant rats.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States