1 February 2012
The lawyer acting for Lion Man Craig Busch's mother says he fears for her health now that her son has apparently returned to Zion Wildlife Park, and she has been locked out of the property.
Mr Busch has reportedly been spotted at the park north of Whangarei following yesterday's announcement the park had been sold.
Following the sale announcement, Mr Busch's mother Patricia was locked out of the park, which she had previously been legally entitled to manage.
Lawyer Evgeny Orlov said today he was unsurprised at Mrs Busch's eviction as he believed Mr Busch was involved in the purchase.
Mrs Busch had been fighting a long-running legal battle with the receivers and Mr Busch as to who had rights to the animals.
An accountant for Mr Busch was at the park yesterday trying to get Mrs Busch to sign documents preventing her speaking to the media, Mr Orlov said.
She went all day without food and when she finally left to get something to eat she was not allowed back in, he said. Police had issued her with a trespass notice.
A team of ''thuggish looking'' security guards were preventing her from returning to the grounds, he added.
''She is extremely stressed - I am worried for her health, she is deeply affected by this.''
Mr Orlov said the main issue was still the future of the 36 big cats on the property.
The park was uneconomical, and strict Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries guidelines had meant it would be too difficult to keep them. Mr Orlov said they would be removed and sold.
''It's just a matter of time. We have lost a collection of cats, you have to ask who is that good for?''
Receivers PricewaterhouseCoopers yesterday announced the business and assets of the park, including the 36 big cats, had been sold to a company which had engaged Mr Busch to help with its operation. The company would hire new staff.
Receiver Colin McCloy said the purchaser was a company called Zion Wildlife Kingdom Ltd. The director of the company is listed as Tracey Beth McVerry, from Tauranga.
Ms McVerry helped organise the Small Block Expo at the Waikato Events Centre. In 2006, Mr Busch was invited to participate in the event with some of his big cats. Visitors to the expo were among the first to witness two new white tiger cubs, which were part of the display.
Ms McVerry could not be reached for comment today.
Receivers went to the gardens site yesterday morning to advise staff of the sale. Staff were given notice and stood down from work on full pay.
Mrs Busch's daughter, Megan, was trespassed and arrested by police as receivers handed the keys to the park's new owners.
Mr Orlov has said he planned to launch wide-ranging injunctions against the purchase, including filing an official complaint against Whangerei police for unlawful search and seizure and assault.
Barriers to the sale had been removed at the High Court at Auckland last week, when representatives for both mother and son, as well as a legal counsel for PricewaterhouseCoopers, appeared.
At that time, Mr Orlov said PricewaterhouseCoopers was no longer challenging Mrs Busch's right over the animals.
The park was placed into liquidation in August last year after the High Court in Whangarei ruled that it could not pay its debts, believed to be up to $100,000.
Mr Busch opened the park in 2002 but sole directorship was handed to his mother after she raised loans to help pay growing debts.
Mr Busch's employment ended in 2008, sparking a long-running legal battle between mother and son.