These dangers are not exclusive to owning great apes; numerous people have reported violent attacks involving all primate species in private possession, including marmosets, capuchins, lemurs, macaques, and baboons, indicating that, irrespective of species or size, all of these animals are wild animals.
Take Action on the
Captive Primate Safety Act. Urge your lawmaker
to cosponsor this important bill!
We need this bill to pass not only for the sake of public safety but also to
preserve the lives of beautiful (and innocent) nonhuman primates, our
closest animal relatives, who, like Buck the chimpanzee, so frequently pay
the ultimate price simply for being the wild animals that that are.
On June 20, 2021, a chimpanzee named Buck was shot and killed in
Pendleton, Oregon. After escaping from his backyard cage and in a
state of agitation, Buck attacked both his owner and her daughter,
who suffered bites and extensive scratches on their legs, arms, and
abdomens. With her daughter barricaded in the basement, Buck’s owner
called authorities to the scene and stated that Buck must be shot
because the 200-pound ape could not be subdued. She emphasized that
the department must send more than one police officer because she
worried one would not be enough. The police arrived and shot Buck
dead, later stating that they had no choice but to kill Buck in
order to provide medical aid to the woman and her daughter.
The woman kept Buck as a pet for 17 years. Although almost every
article summarizing the events leading up to Buck’s sudden death
state that “it remains unclear what caused Buck to attack,“ the
truth is… what happened was no mystery. The simple answer is that
nothing prompted this attack; it was within Buck’s nature as a wild
chimpanzee to attack anything or anyone he viewed as a threat.
Without any friends or allies of his own kind, Buck would have felt
constantly threatened in his alien captive environment – a far cry
from his natural habitat. Buck was acting on his instincts as a wild
animal, which could not be extinguished even after 17 years living
among humans as a pet.
Buck’s story alongside several other haunting incidents – including
that of Charla Nash, whose face and hands were severely mauled by
Travis, a friend’s pet chimpanzee – underline the real dangers that
owning primates poses to public safety. These dangers are not
exclusive to owning great apes; numerous people have reported
violent attacks involving all primate species in private possession,
including marmosets, capuchins, lemurs, macaques, and baboons,
indicating that, irrespective of species or size, all of these
animals are wild animals. Fortunately, private ownership of primates
is now illegal in Oregon; no one can obtain a new permit, though
those who acquired permits before 2010 may maintain possession of
their exotic animals. Oregon remains just one of 22 U.S. states that
have already taken steps to ban private ownership of primates. Sadly
for Buck, these regulations came too late to save him from a life of
cruel captivity and a violent death.
The Captive Primate Safety Act, which was reintroduced to Congress
on May 12, 2021, would institute a federal-level ban on the private
ownership of nonhuman primates and restrictions on public
interactions with any nonhuman primate species.
Take Action on the
Captive Primate Safety Act. Urge your
lawmaker to cosponsor this important bill!
We need this bill to pass not only for the sake of public safety but
also to preserve the lives of beautiful (and innocent) nonhuman
primates, our closest animal relatives, who, like Buck the
chimpanzee, so frequently pay the ultimate price simply for being
the wild animals that that are.