Alice Springs Reptile Centre Alice Springs Reptile Centre

that is one really sick kid. It is I think well-documented that children who torture animals often progress onto people later in life and become serial killers.
 
When I read the article and what that boy did I felt physically sick. And the fact that he cannot be prosecuted because he is under 10 years old is even more disturbing. We in the zoo world can feel the horror of this kid's acts, but what if he had done that to a child--would he still be allowed to skip prosecution. A pshycopath is a psychopath is a psycopath no matter what age and no matter what species he is torturing or killing, and I don't think that they ever get better.
 
This is really bad news, there has to be a real problem here lets hope something can be done about it
 
This is very saddening hmmmp, suing the parents shouldn't he be sent to some sort of facility?! :mad:
 
I guess there have been worse cases like the time how someone beat a koala to death, ( sad much?)
 
I heard of a zoo in Europe where someone snuck in at night and beat all of the penguins to death. I thought i was going to throw up.
 
With a seven year old kid, definately there is something wrong in what is going on in his mind, yet the cases with adults I just wonder what kind of motive these kid of people have?
 
Truly disgusting. This just has to be one of the most horrific events that have happened during my residence here. To find out a 7 year old kid could cause so much damage with a big smile on his face just freaks me out completely and I surely hope I don't have the unfortunate chance of passing him down town. I know some of the people who work there and I really feel for them, this is bound to leave a stain for many years to come. I do hope they will find justice however knowing how things are run here it seems rare. Since about the only thing the laws here will permit is for action to be taken against the kid's guardians and it’s most likely they can’t even literary afford to be sued, the sad reality of this town...
 
I feel so sorry for the staff at the zoo, there is only so much they can do to protect the animals.
More to the point what was a child of 7 doing there on his own? The parents should be charged with endangering a child's life from lack of supervision. Then as it has been suggested in the Toronto Star this morning be sued for the amount of damage the child caused. As you say Jusin they will probably claim they can't afford to pay and get away with it. I would think there are major problems in this child's life and hopefully the authorities will look into it before he goes on a rampage killing in his school as we have all soon before in High Schools and colleges. Very sad. :(
 
"At one point, he tried scaling the outer enclosure himself to get to "Terry", the 11ft (3.3m) saltwater crocodile. "

Pity he didnt manage to get in!
 
I hate to say it but I agree. Does anyone know where his parents were, I haven't seen anything about them in our news reports?
At age 7 maybe there is time to change him so I guess it is a good job he did meet up with Terry. :)
 
How did he get to the animals in the first place? and how did nobody notice what he was doing?
 
No one comes out clean in this horrible event: not the kid, not the parents, certainly not the zoo, or his teachers and neighbors. I cannot believe that a child who was peaceful and social in all other areas suddenly became an Hannibal Lechter. Why wasn't he given help or put away before this? Where were all the adults who didn't protect him, his classmates, or zoo animals???
 
How did he get to the animals in the first place? and how did nobody notice what he was doing?
he climbed over the zoo's perimeter fence in the morning before the zoo was open (and presumably before any of the staff had arrived for work)

The following article goes into more detail: http://news.scotsman.com/world/Australia-in-shock-at-39killer.4558659.jp
Australia in shock at 'killer brat' who fed zoo animals to crocodile
By Shan Ross
THE boy made his way past Billygoat Hill, ignoring the groups of itinerant drinkers and drug addicts waking up after a night sleeping rough on the parched land beside one of Australia's most popular Outback zoos.
But instead of heading for school, the seven-year-old deftly jumped a security fence at the Alice Springs Reptile Centre, before calmly going on a 30-minute killing spree, throwing live animals to a crocodile and using a rock to bludgeon several lizards to death.

Among the 13 dead reptiles was the zoo's beloved 20-year-old goanna, a monitor lizard, which the boy fed to "Terry", an 11ft long, 440lb saltwater crocodile.

Last night, the zoo's director said he was considering suing the parents because the child is too young to be prosecuted.

The boy's escapade began at about 8am on Wednesday and was captured by CCTV cameras.

At one point the boy, who cannot be named for legal reasons, is seen climbing over the outer fence to get closer to the giant reptile.

In the footage, the boy's face remains mostly blank, but in other shots he is spotted smiling as he goes about his business.

Rex Neindorf, the zoo's director, said all the keepers had been deeply saddened by the animals' death.

He said: "The fact a seven-year-old can wreak so much havoc in such a short time, it's unbelievable. In my day he'd get a big boot up the a***.

"It was like he was playing a game. We're horrified that anyone can do this, and saddened by the age of the child."

Alice Springs police said they had identified the boy, who lives locally, and had spoken to him and his mother but were unable to press charges because of his age. Children under ten are not criminally liable under the law of the Northern Territory.

Mr Neindorf said: "If we can't put the blame on to the child, then someone has to accept the responsibility.

"We'll be looking at suing the parents, who were supposedly in control of him at the time.

"I just want people to learn that they can't let their children go and run amok."

The live reptiles that became an early breakfast for the crocodile were a turtle, four western blue tongue lizards, two bearded dragons, two thorny devils and the adult goanna – in total, they were worth about £3,000.

Those smashed to death were a small blue tongue lizard and two thorny devils.

The zoo's security system, which relies on sensors, probably did not detect the boy because he is so small, Mr Neindorf said.

The Centralian Advocate, an Alice Springs daily newspaper, ran the headline "Killer Brat" on its coverage of the story.

However, Phillip Hodson, a fellow of the British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy, said it was wrong to vilify a child.

"Such a headline would be justified for a 21-year-old. But at only seven, this child is at the stage we describe as "before reason", he said. "Obviously, it is offensive when animals are gratuitously killed. But the world of childhood and children is severely distorted and we should be more tolerant because such a young child can't look at things subjectively.

"Children can be quite cruel, which is why we have to bring them up. You only have to read Lord of the Flies to see how badly things can go."

Mike Flynn, the chief superintendent of the Scottish SPCA, said: "While we can't comment on this specific incident, research clearly demonstrates that children who hurt animals are at an increased risk of being violent towards humans later in life.

"There is also an increased risk of domestic abuse in a household in which an animal has been deliberately harmed.

"It is essential that these links are recognised across all government agencies."
the last bit by Phillip Hodson really annoys me, about how children aren't responsible for their actions because they don't know right from wrong. He's seven years old for Christ's sake! Of course he knows the difference between right and wrong!
 
I am deeply saddened by this news and I hope some sort of action will taken. As much as I wish the boy jumped in himself. I am glad he didn't, or the Zoo would have been under scrutiny for in-proper security. I will be interested in how this turns out.
 
I feel so sorry for the staff at the zoo, there is only so much they can do to protect the animals.
More to the point what was a child of 7 doing there on his own? The parents should be charged with endangering a child's life from lack of supervision. Then as it has been suggested in the Toronto Star this morning be sued for the amount of damage the child caused. As you say Jusin they will probably claim they can't afford to pay and get away with it.
Well it’s a bit deeper than that. Here we have an ongoing problem of indigenous families living without well established homes and having to camp in the Todd river or on the side of a street. The farthers spend their lives getting drunk so consequently any money given to them by the government is usually wasted on alcohol and thus the parents can’t afford to send the kids to school or give them adequate protection. Sure the government could send the kids to school and to new homes but in most cases they end up running away from their new homes and to bother to stay in school. The government is trying to do everything they can (set up homes for them, implement dry town restrictions) however it is hard to keep control of all these laws when we have less police than other areas do. It’s a very complex issue we have going here that can’t really be summed up in a couple of sentences. It’s not uncommon to see kids wondering the streets unsupervised and thus it’s most likely the kid was uneducated and bored and that led to his rampage and no that doesn’t excuse what he did, he must have been very determined and had the whole thing planned to commit such a thing so I do think he knew what he was doing was wrong - if he didn’t think it was wrong why not do it in broad daylight while all the staff were there? And what I meant was the parents probably don’t even have the money to pay for the damage that was caused, that’s why the staff may not gain much by taking action against the parents. The only way they may have justice is if the laws were changed and something was done to the kid, he’s not even know what he did was wrong if there are no consequences against him.

Anyway I somewhat wish this didn’t make global news because we now have people who don't know a thing about our laws saying this place needs to be shut down because they didn’t protect the animals well enough. What could they do? Set up an electric fence and then be the ones getting sued if the kid gets hurt by his own actions? :rolleyes:
 
But the world of childhood and children is severely distorted and we should be more tolerant because such a young child can't look at things subjectively.

If a child has been taught right from wrong as soon as they are able to stroke the family pet or move around on their own their world is not going to be distorted. I find Phillip Hodson's remarks very strange when referring to a normal healthy child which we assume this child is. If children have a routine and well balanced up bringing whether with their natural parents or foster parents the world will be an exciting place for them and not distorted.
I would have thought a 7 year old was subjective, only seeing things as he sees them rather than objective. Surely we learn to be objective as we mature.
I hope the child gets help from someone other than Phillip Hodson who to me appears to have a distorted veiw of a childs world and mind. :confused:
 
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