G.W. Exotic Animal
Park No Abuse Found By Investigators.
Investigators find no animal abuse
By Josh Rabe
The Oklahoman
WYNNEWOOD - Local and federal
investigators found no evidence of wrongdoing at the G.W. Exotic
Animal Park, despite claims made by an activist group last week that
animals were abused and neglected by park employees.
"We are not going to pursue any charges with the Garvin County
District Attorney's office," said Steve Brooks, the county
undersheriff.
The People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals released a video
clip Nov. 2 that the group said proves animals there were suffering,
abused and malnourished. A park volunteer working for PETA used a
hidden camera to capture video between February and June.
Brooks said investigators reviewed video supplied by PETA on
Wednesday, but "there was no criminal wrongdoing we could find."
An inspector from the U.S. Department of Agriculture spent Monday
combing the park for violations, but none were listed on an
inspection report provided by the park.
"I never had anything to worry about because I hadn't done anything
criminal," said Joe Schreibvogel, park manager. "I didn't do
anything immoral, either." |
During the time the employee worked at the park, federal inspectors
visited the park twice and found none of the violations PETA claimed
to have uncovered, according to inspection reports.
"There is no way a USDA inspector is going to come into this park
twice and not find some of the things PETA claims were going on,"
Schreibvogel said.
One violation noted
The only violation noted by the USDA was a fence that surrounded the
park that was not tall enough to keep outside animals from getting
into the park. The fence should have been 8 feet tall.
The park issued PETA's volunteer, Mike Steinberg, a written warning
in May for violating USDA food preparation guidelines for the
animals. The park also supplied a written test Steinberg took to
become a park volunteer. His answers contradicted PETA's claim that
animals at the park were malnourished.
Schreibvogel said the few video clips released by PETA
misrepresented the park by showing only injured animals and using
comments made by park employees out of context.
Behavior not tolerated
He said he watched the video Wednesday and was upset by the conduct
of several employees. He said all but one of the employees shown in
the video already had been fired for other infractions of park
rules.
"There's no way in five months they could get Joe on tape saying we
don't feed the animals or get Joe on tape beating an animal because
that's not the way Joe does business," Schreibvogel said. "I don't
tolerate that kind of behavior."
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