 Hollywood animal trainer Sid Yost poses with his male
chimpanzee Cody near Yost's training facility outside Devore, Calif., Feb.
12, 2006. Cody and two other chimps, Sable and Angel, who have appeared on
numerous TV shows and movies, were scheduled to be removed from Yost's
ranch, Dec. 9, 2006, under a lawsuit settlement that will retire them to
sanctuaries. [AP]
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Los Angeles - Two chimpanzees who
appeared in numerous movies and TV shows were removed from a ranch and will
retire to a sanctuary to settle a lawsuit alleging animal cruelty, an animal
rights group said.
The chimps were trucked out of San Bernardino on Saturday and were expected
to arrive at their new home in New Mexico on Sunday, said Lisa Franzetta, a
spokeswoman for the Animal Legal Defense Fund. A third chimp will be shipped to
Florida next week, she said.
"We're thrilled that they're not going to be forced to perform unwillingly
anymore," Franzetta said. "This is such a happy day to see these chimpanzees
being retired."
The chimps have appeared in productions such as TV's "That 70s Show" and "The
Craig Kilborn Show," and the upcoming movie "Evan Almighty." They were raised
from a young age by trainer Sid Yost, who runs Amazing Animal Productions Inc.
Animal Legal Defense Fund and other groups sued Yost last year in federal
court, accusing him of beating the chimps with sticks, using an electric shock
stick on them and punching, taunting and intimidating the animals.
Yost did not acknowledge any wrongdoing in the settlement.
The defense fund is part of a coalition of primatologists, attorneys,
scientists and actors who have started a campaign called "No Reel Apes" to call
for an end to the use of primates in entertainment. They contend apes are poorly
treated and infants are often separated from their mothers.
Sarah Baeckler, a primatologist with a group called the Chimpanzee
Collaboratory who worked undercover at Yost's San Bernardino ranch, claims she
saw the chimps being beaten to make them perform.
Yost denied abusing the animals and said he was unhappy the chimps were
leaving.
"I love 'em and I'll miss 'em," he said last week in a telephone interview.
Yost said he was legally forbidden to reveal details of the settlement. But
Tobin Dunlea, who has been an animal trainer at the ranch for seven years, said
Yost agreed to give up the chimps and can no longer own or work with primates.
Dunlea also denied that the animals were abused.
"They love us and they trust and that's why we've done so well with them in
the business," she said.
Dunlea said Sable, a female, and Cody, a male, have lived at the ranch for
about five years. Both are 6 1/2. Angel, a female that is nearly 10, was
acquired when she was about three days old.
Chimps can live 50 to 60 years.
Dunlea said she worried that the animals would be traumatized from their
journey, especially Angel, who dislikes traveling.
"I've been crying for days," she said. "I'm just trying to hope and pray that
they will survive."
Franzetta said Sable and Cody will remain in New Mexico, where they have
relatives, for an adjustment period. The plan is for them to eventually rejoin
Angel in a Florida sanctuary that houses dozens of primates on a series of
islands, she said.