The decision to permanently shutter the park follows an investigation in June by the USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service.

Image Credit: Facebook/Greater Wynnewood Exotic Animal Park
The Greater Wynnewood Exotic Animal Park, featured in the
controversial Netflix documentary Tiger King, is now closed
“effective immediately,” according to a now-deleted Facebook post by
owner Jeff Lowe, whose U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) license
to operate was recently suspended.
The decision to permanently shutter the park follows an
investigation in June by the USDA’s Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service. Numerous complaints about the animals’ welfare
also prompted the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife to inspect the
park, where injured animals were found, isolated, and given
veterinary care, according to a Facebook post by the Garvin County
Sheriff’s Office.
At around the same time, PETA released gruesome whistleblower images
of several ailing lions at the park who appeared to suffer from
severe “flystrike,” a painful ailment typically associated with
unsanitary living conditions, in which flies bite and lay eggs on
animals and maggots eat away at their skin.
Following the investigation, the USDA suspended Lowe’s exhibitor
license for 21 days.
Lowe, who claims he voluntarily forfeited his license amid the
suspension, accused animal rights groups and activists of targeting
him and levying false allegations against him, Fox Business
reported.
On June 1, before the recent USDA investigation, a federal judge
granted control of the property to Carole Baskin, CEO of Big Cat
Rescue. Lowe was given 120 days to vacate the property and
reportedly plans to relocate hundreds of exotic animals, including
lions, tigers, bears, monkeys, lemurs, snakes, a sloth, and more.