Before Sunrise Side closed to the public, it had racked up a long list of federal Animal Welfare Act violations.
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This morning, a North American black bear named Dolly and three foxes held at Sunrise Side Nature Trail and Exotic Park, a defunct roadside zoo in Michigan that had denied animals adequate veterinary care, arrived at The Wild Animal Sanctuary in Colorado after being rescued by PETA and the sanctuary.
Bear Dolly
The rescue comes just after federal authorities confiscated an
injured bear named Grizzy—who had suffered for months with a wound
that had become necrotic without veterinary attention—from the
defunct facility. Sunrise Side then entered into an agreement with
PETA to relinquish Dolly and foxes it still held and never again to
acquire or possess any wild or exotic animals. PETA immediately
worked to arrange the animals’ transfer to their spacious new
retirement home.
“These animals will finally have the expert veterinary care and rich
lives they deserve, now that Sunrise Side has emptied its cages,”
says PETA Foundation Deputy General Counsel for Captive Animal Law
Enforcement Brittany Peet. “PETA is urging people to help shutter
the country’s other roadside zoos by refusing to give these
depressing outposts a dime.”
Fox Roxy
Recent
U.S. Department of Agriculture inspection reports indicate
that a bobcat at Sunrise Side was obese, had matted hair, and
appeared to “walk gently as if in pain” and that a lion was so thin
that his bones were visible. PETA has just learned that the bobcat
has since died and that Sunrise Side plans to send the lion to
another roadside zoo in Michigan, after which there will be no
animals left at Sunrise Side.
Before Sunrise Side closed to the public, it had racked up a long
list of federal Animal Welfare Act violations, including ones
stemming from an incident in which a lion bit off part of a
visitor’s finger:
Sunrise Side Nature Trail and Exotic Park violations.