The Delaware Gazette

Ohio man who freed wild animals was deep in debt

One of three leop­ards that were cap­tured by author­i­ties Wednes­day, a day after their owner released dozens of wild ani­mals and then killed him­self near Zanesville. Sheriff’s deputies shot and killed 48 of the ani­mals, includ­ing 18 rare Ben­gal tigers, 17 lions, six black bears, two griz­zly bears, a baboon, a wolf and three moun­tain lions. Six of the released ani­mals » three leop­ards, a bear and two mon­keys » were cap­tured and taken to the Colum­bus Zoo. (Colum­bus Zoo and Aquar­ium | Grahm S. Jones)


ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS

ANN SANNER

Asso­ci­ated Press

ZANESVILLE — The exotic-animal owner who killed him­self after turn­ing loose dozens of lions, tigers and other beasts was deep in debt, and a fel­low big-cat enthu­si­ast said Thurs­day that he had taken in so many crea­tures he was “in over his head.”

A day after sheriff’s deputies with high-powered rifles killed nearly 50 ani­mals set free by Terry Thomp­son, the sher­iff refused to spec­u­late why he did it. Many neigh­bors, mean­while, were puz­zled as to why Thomp­son — a man who seemed to like ani­mals more than peo­ple — would lash out in a way that would doom his pets.

How­ever, court records show that he and his wife owed at least $68,000 in unpaid taxes to the IRS and the county, and he had two fed­eral tax liens filed against him last year. He had just got­ten out of fed­eral prison last month for pos­sess­ing unreg­is­tered weapons.

Kenny Het­rick, who has six tigers and other ani­mals on his prop­erty out­side Toledo, said he used to see Thomp­son at exotic-animal auc­tions a few times a year in Ohio. Many of Thompson’s tigers had been donated to him by peo­ple who bought baby ani­mals that they no longer wanted once they started to grow, Het­rick said.

“He really had more there than what he could do,” Het­rick said. “I don’t know what his deal was, but he was in over his head.”

On Tues­day, Thomp­son, 62, threw open the cages at his ani­mal pre­serve and com­mit­ted sui­cide. His body was found near the empty cages with a bite on the head that appeared to have been inflicted by a big cat shortly after Thomp­son shot him­self, Sher­iff Matt Lutz said. It appeared his body had been dragged a short dis­tance, Lutz said.

Deputies killed 48 ani­mals — includ­ing 18 rare Ben­gal tigers, 17 lions and eight bears — in a hunt across the Ohio coun­try­side that lasted nearly 24 hours. Only a mon­key was still miss­ing, and it was prob­a­bly killed by one of the big cats, Lutz said.

Thomp­son had run-ins with his neigh­bors and the law over escaped ani­mals and con­di­tions at his pre­serve. But whether he acted out of des­per­a­tion or vengeance in set­ting the ani­mals loose was unclear.

“I know how much he cared for them, and he would know that they would be killed,” said Judy Hat­field, a fam­ily friend who vis­ited the farm many times and said it wasn’t unusual to have a mon­key jump on her lap.

“I don’t know what hap­pened. I’m sure some hor­ri­ble thing hap­pened to him yes­ter­day to make him do this or allow him to lose focus for a moment and do it. But I don’t know what it is, and we may never know.”

The sher­iff said Thompson’s inten­tions were not part of the investigation.

“To take your own life, Mr. Thomp­son was not in the right state of mind,” Lutz said. “And to spec­u­late on why he did this would be a belit­tle­ment, I guess, by me, to do that, and I’m not going to do that.”

Thomp­son and his wife spent much of their time and money car­ing for their menagerie, neigh­bors said. Most of the big cats and bears were declawed and had been bottle-fed by the cou­ple, Hat­field said. Thomp­son also kept them fed by pick­ing up road­kill and col­lect­ing spoiled meat from gro­cery stores, said another neigh­bor, Fred Polk.

The sher­iff said that he spoke with Thompson’s wife and that she was dis­traught over the loss of her hus­band and the ani­mals. “You have to under­stand these ani­mals were like kids to her,” Lutz said. “She prob­a­bly spent more time with these ani­mals than some par­ents do spend with their kids.”

Thompson’s Musk­ingum County Ani­mal Farm was not open to vis­i­tors, but he would occa­sion­ally take some of the smaller ani­mals to nearby pet shows or nurs­ing homes. He also pro­vided a big cat for a photo shoot with super­model Heidi Klum and appeared on the “Rachael Ray Show” in 2008 as an ani­mal han­dler for a zool­o­gist guest.

As for how he may have cov­ered the costs of tak­ing care of his ani­mals, friends said he had a pilot’s license and some­times picked up extra cash fly­ing peo­ple on his pri­vate plane. Neigh­bors also said he and wife gave horse-riding lessons on their farm. The Viet­nam vet­eran once owned a motor­cy­cle shop, friends said.

“When he came back from Viet­nam, he was a lit­tle bit dif­fer­ent. He was kind of a loner after he came back,” said Polk, whose prop­erty is about 100 yards from Thompson’s house. “He liked ani­mals more than he did peo­ple. He really did.”

Since 2004, Thomp­son had been charged by local author­i­ties with cru­elty to ani­mals, allow­ing his ani­mals to run free and improp­erly dis­pos­ing of dead animals.

The U.S. Depart­ment of Agri­cul­ture also received two com­plaints about the farm in 2008 and 2009, involv­ing such things as pens that may have been unsafe, ani­mals that were too skinny and dead ani­mals on the prop­erty, said Dave Sacks, a USDA spokesman. But the agency decided it had no author­ity to act.

Fed­eral offi­cials said the gov­ern­ment had no juris­dic­tion over the farm under either the Ani­mal Wel­fare Act or the Endan­gered Species Act since the ani­mals were held as pri­vate prop­erty and were not exhib­ited or being used for other com­mer­cial purposes.

AP News Posted by on Oct 20 2011. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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