This past March, journalists from around the country descended on downtown Oklahoma City for Joe Exoticâs trial. Garretson and Glover testified against Joe. Joeâs ex-boyfriend John Finlay testified too. Joe took the stand at the end of the seven-day affair. He said he never intended for anyone to kill Carole Baskin and claimed to have known that Garretson, Glover, and Lowe were conspiring to take him down. He said he played along to better understand their plan and gather evidence he could use against them. The jury deliberated for less than three hours, then found Joe guilty on all charges, including illegally killing five tigers and illegally transporting endangered species across state lines. In January, a judge sentenced Joe to 22 years in federal prison. In a Facebook post, Joe maintained his innocence and said he plans to appeal.
Nasser hopes that Joeâs conviction triggers the beginning of what she calls âa long-overdue Blackfish moment for captive tigers,â referring to the popular documentary that exposed problems with the sea-park businessâ treatment of orcas and led to numerous SeaWorld boycotts. Pending any appeals, the Baskins and other activists believe the Tiger Kingâs downfall could topple the industry. They hope to use the momentum and notoriety of Joeâs case to usher in sweeping legal reform of big cat ownership in the U.S.
Baskin has been pushing for this type of reform since 1998, when she began working on whatâs called the Captive Wildlife Safety Act, a federal bill unanimously voted into law in 2003 that barred the sale of big cats as pets across state lines. Loopholes in the law, however, have rendered it largely ineffective. She and Howard â along with major nonprofit groups such as the Humane Society and the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) â have been
It is very stranger for others not for himself. Because he is their owners and give him food