Zoo Knoxville AZA Investigation

Seriously - they found she showed no signs of aggression during the incident - in other words, while she was killing her keeper?! This is beyond ridiculous, I am speechless.
 
Seriously - they found she showed no signs of aggression during the incident - in other words, while she was killing her keeper?! This is beyond ridiculous, I am speechless.

I'm not commenting to start a debate. But it is not too hard to be accidentally killed or injured by an elephant. Just like it is easy to be accidentally killed by a horse.
 
In the official report by the zoo/AZA they say the elephant lunged forward and pinned her to a wall. That`s not consistent with "unintentional".

So it`s no surprise that the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency came to the following conclusion:
"A review of the incident conducted by the Tennessee Wildlife Resources (TWRA) concluded that Ms. James fatal injuries were the result of an intentional blow from Edie."

I really wonder how the TWRA and the zoo/AZA are so sure that Edie had no malicious intent...........
 
I have three things to add to this thread, rather than take up more room on the already explosive "Knoxville Zoo Elephant Keeper" thread. I did not join in the discussion but instead found it interesting reading.

1- Toledo Zoo fairly recently had a keeper badly injured due to their male elephant, and now all 3 of that zoo's elephants (both male and female) will be permanently managed via protected contact.

2- Knoxville Zoo fairly recently experienced an awful tragedy with the death of a keeper, and now all of that zoo's elephants will be permanently managed via protected contact. Why do zoos insist on taking the risks with free contact, especially considering that protected contact zoos in the United States are TWICE as prevalent as free contact zoos? Why wait for a tragedy or attack to occur before switching over to a system that is inevitable in the long run?

3- I just watched the new Reese Witherspoon/Robert Pattinson film "Water for Elephants" in the theatre (I've also read the book - which is naturally better!) and an elephant bullhook features prominently in the movie. There were gasps from the audience as the bullhook is used viciously on a few occasions on both pachyderm and human, and after the film was over there were a number of negative remarks referencing elephant "training" using such an implement. Whatever one thinks of the film, the method of training an elephant with a bullhook is portrayed extremely negatively, and I question what many moviegoers will think when they see a keeper handling a bullhook in their local zoo. In most cases such a tool is used wisely and considerately, but does the general public realize that?
 
It is called an ankus, not a bullhook. Bullhook is now most commonly used by animal libber nuts to try to make the tool sound worse than it actually is. A bullhook look quite different to an ankus.
 
It is called an ankus, not a bullhook. Bullhook is now most commonly used by animal libber nuts to try to make the tool sound worse than it actually is. A bullhook look quite different to an ankus.

I described the tool as a bullhook because in the film, set during the 1930's, the world bullhook is used repeatedly and the word ankus is never mentioned. In the United States free contact will almost certainly be extinct in a couple of decades so the semantics in regards to the tool's name are irrelevant.
 
I think you are jumping the gun when you say extinct. In zoos maybe. But it will most likely not be extinct completely in the US in yours or my lifetime.
 
@Caretaker: thank you for posting the detailed reports. I appreciate reading about such findings, even though elephant management is a highly contentious subject for many others.
 
Your quite welcome. I just want the truth to be told and it is quite obvious the Knoxville Zoo just can't admit they did any wrong. Some of the controversies involving elephants is because of zoos like Knoxville ignoring problems or just people not wanting to do their job. Stephanie lost her life. But overall, the elephants are the losers in all this.
 
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