ALDF Animal Legal Defense Fund
May 2011
Mr. Sandlin’s failure to keep Tony in an environment that is responsive to both his physical and psychological needs is not only inhumane—it is illegal.
Tony has been on exhibit at the truck stop since 2000; he has lived there with no other tiger companions since 2003, when the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) seized three other tigers from Sandlin due to violations of the Animal Welfare Act.
On November 22, 2010, the national non-profit Animal Legal Defense Fund
(ALDF) filed a petition with the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and
Fisheries, requesting that they revoke, and deny renewal of, the permit
allowing Michael Sandlin to exhibit a male Siberian tiger named Tony at the
Tiger Truck Stop in Grosse Tete, La.
Tony has been on exhibit at the truck stop since 2000; he has lived there
with no other tiger companions since 2003, when the United States Department
of Agriculture (USDA) seized three other tigers from Sandlin due to
violations of the Animal Welfare Act.
Why are attorneys and activists up in arms about Tony’s tenure at the
Tiger Truck Stop? In addition to being subjected to noise and diesel fumes
24-hours a day, Tony is also subjected to frequent harassment and taunting
by visitors at the truck stop. His enclosure is devoid of adequate
enrichment, such as logs, trees, or complex vegetation that would allow him
to engage in natural tiger behaviors. He has no pool of water large enough
to allow him to submerge himself to cool off in the blazing heat of the
summer.
As a result of confinement, Tony exhibits neurotic pacing behavior on the
hard concrete surface of his enclosure, putting him at risk for dangerous
and painful veterinary conditions. Sandlin, the owner of Tony and the truck
stop, has been cited by the USDA due to violations of the Animal Welfare
Act, including a lack of proper sanitation and improper feeding practices.
ALDF’s petition argues that Sandlin’s existing permit for Tony, which is up
for annual renewal on December 14, 2010, is in violation of both state and
Iberville Parish ordinances. Further, the petition argues that the
Department of Wildlife and Fisheries has no legal authority under Louisiana
law to issue a permit for Sandlin’s possession of Tony, and that the
Department’s granting of his current permit was unlawful.
“Mr. Sandlin’s failure to keep Tony in an environment that is responsive to
both his physical and psychological needs is not only inhumane—it is
illegal” says ALDF Executive Director Stephen Wells. “We urge the Department
of Wildlife and Fisheries to comply with already-existing regulations
designed to protect tigers like Tony, and to end his daily torment by
refusing to sentence him to another year of diesel fumes, harassment, and
the unimaginable suffering of life in his lonely cage.”
Return to Animal Rights Articles
Read more at Litigation