![]() ![]() (His story is told in grim but fascinating detail at New York magazine.) Sandra Herold assumed that all was well, since Travis still slept in her bed, ate lobster at the table, drank from a long-stem wine glass, and behaved in all manner of other quasi-human ways that fulfilled whatever fantasy it was that she had about him. And, also like with human teenagers, we don’t always know what they’re thinking. But, like their human cousins, chimpanzees grow up and have a mind of their own. #CHIMPANZEE HAIRLESS TV#Travis was brought up as a kind of semi-human pet, dressed like a child, traveling around with the Herolds, going shopping with them, and paying for his upbringing by spending much of his early life being rented out for TV shows and commercials.Īs long as he was a youngster, Travis could be contained. Both stories are here.) Travis still slept in her bed, ate lobster at the table, drank from a long-stem wine glass, and behaved in other quasi-human ways that fulfilled her fantasies. That same week, in Germany, five chimpanzees escaped at the Hanover Zoo and went wandering around while 2,500 terrified human visitors were evacuated. was recaptured and sent to a sanctuary in Oregon – but not before she’d escaped a second time. (A similar fate befell another pair of chimpanzees, Buddy and C.J., who escaped from the cage that was their "home" in Las Vegas in July 2012 and wandered down a suburban street. One of the boys pulled out a shotgun and killed Suzy. #CHIMPANZEE HAIRLESS FULL#They ran to a nearby housing development and lunged at a car full of teenage boys who were pulling into their driveway. ![]() Travis’s father, Coco, had been captured from the rain forest in Africa as a youngster.Ĭoco and Suzy remained in Missouri, but escaped in 2001. Suzy had spent most of her life at a zoo. ![]() Travis was born at a self-styled "sanctuary" in Missouri in 1995, and was taken from his mother, Suzy, three days later, so he could be "adopted" by the Herolds for the sum of $50,000. ![]() As such, it offers some poignant background to our work in arguing that other chimpanzees have a fundamental right to bodily liberty – i.e. While this particular case is not related to the work of the Nonhuman Rights Project, it gives distressing insight into the world of chimpanzee ownership and the tragic, long-term consequences when something goes wrong – as it so often does. But she’s unlikely to win this latest suit since the state is generally immune to lawsuits, and the claims commissioner is saying that at the time when she was attacked, the state allowed private ownership of chimpanzees. Nash has already received $4 million from the estate of Herold, who died in 2010. More than four years later, Nash has been in the news again this week as she attempts to sue the State of Connecticut for $150 million, arguing that officials knew that Travis was dangerous but did nothing about it. When they arrived at her home in Connecticut, they shot Travis dead. He tore off her nose, ears and hands, and blinded her as his owner, Sandra Herold, frantically beat him, stabbed him and called the police. In February, 2009, 14-year-old chimpanzee Travis attacked Charla Nash, a friend of the woman who "owned" him. Travis and Charla when he was a youngster ![]()
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