www.mozilla.com Hot Stories Weather Central

Temp: 81.0°F

Wind: S 11.5 MPH (10 KT)

Sky: Fair

Voices
Headlines

Storm blows through Olympics -7/29/2010, 2:49 PM

Hays Wind might have to file turbine permit again -7/29/2010, 2:49 PM

Community rallies around firefighters -7/29/2010, 2:49 PM

State requests federal disaster declaration -7/29/2010, 12:09 PM

Czech dignitaries to attend festival -7/29/2010, 12:09 PM

Business venture brings new style to small town -7/29/2010, 11:49 AM

Woman reports being raped on U.S. 183 -7/29/2010, 7:08 PM

Judge blocks parts of Arizona immigration law -7/28/2010, 3:10 PM

CRP sign-up begins in August -7/28/2010, 12:09 PM

Victoria girl attends Washburn law camp -7/28/2010, 11:49 AM

Former investment firm exec: U.S. addicted to energy, debt -7/28/2010, 11:29 AM

Library volunteer files complaint -7/28/2010, 11:34 AM

Fair mixes fun with hard work -7/28/2010, 11:29 AM

WikiLeaks: Source is unknown -7/28/2010, 11:29 AM


Tee It Up
SPOTLIGHT
<p>Conflict surrounds case involving Oakley lions, tigers</p>

[var top_story_head]

Conflict surrounds case involving Oakley lions, tigers

Published on -3/1/2009, 10:17 PM

Printer-friendly version
E-Mail This Story

By MIKE CORN

mcorn@dailynews.net

Two starkly different pictures emerge when discussion turns to the Prairie Cat Animal Refuge where an Oakley man was bitten by a lion a week ago.

Even some of the details of the mauling are starkly different, based on interviews with Thomas County Sheriff Rod Taylor and refuge owner Jeff Harsh.

Taylor said the wounds suffered by Bradley Buchanan were severe, with bites going all the way to the bone, and with some tearing of the flesh.

"You could see the bone down there," Taylor said of the bite marks. "It was bad."

Harsh, who referred to Buchanan instead as Jeff, his middle name, said the bites were severe, but that he was transferred to a Denver hospital only because a surgeon was not available at Citizens Medical Center in Colby.

Photographs show gaping holes and torn flesh.

While Harsh tells a tale of persecution for his efforts to preserve and protect lions and tigers, Taylor said Harsh has been trouble for years, costing Thomas County considerable time and money.

In addition, Taylor said Harsh has no permit to keep the animals, a requirement under state law.

"It's a filthy mess," he said of where Harsh keeps the animals, just north of the Free Breakfast Inn near the intersection of Interstate 70 and U.S. Highway 83 at Oakley. The refuge is just inside the Thomas County line.

PETA -- People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals -- has helped find a home for the lions, and agreed that conditions are deplorable, that the animals are living in a junkyard.

They also expressed astonishment problems haven't developed before.

"It's not a safe site," said Lisa Wathne, PETA's captive exotic animal specialist. "It's truly a miracle that nothing has happened before like the recent lion bite, The cages are dilapidated. Our experts said they could get out. It really is to me a wonder that nothing has happened before this."

Wathne said the experts are zoo officials who have examined the cages holdings Harsh's lions and tigers. Photos provided by PETA show that the cages have gaping holes.

Taylor is hopeful that the three Barbary lions -- one of which bit Buchanan on Feb. 21 -- will soon be gone from the High Plains of northwest Kansas.

Arrangements have been made, and agreements reached, to transfer ownership of the three lions to the Detroit Zoo within the next two to three weeks if tests show that the lions are not suffering from any sort of malady that might jeopardize other animals at the zoo.

Blood tests might be taken as early as Tuesday to determine the health of the lions, Wathne said. Those costs could fall to Thomas County, Taylor said.

If the lions are healthy, the Detroit Zoo will dispatch a transfer team and a zoo veterinarian to take possession of the animals.

That still doesn't resolve the fate of two tigers at the refuge, a Bengal and Siberian tigers.

"I hope we find a home for the other two," Taylor said.

PETA has sent out a plea to the Association of Zoos and Aquariums to help find a home for the tigers.

If a facility can be located for the tigers, Wathne said PETA is willing to cover the cost of blood tests and transportation, as well as the cost of neutering both males.

Harsh said both tigers are old, so he doubts if any zoos will be interested in them. Harsh said he would resist any efforts to force him to get rid of the animals, going to court, appealing whatever decision is handed down.

"It will delay it another two to three years, and they will be dead," he said.

Taylor agreed that Harsh has had a practice of filing a multitude of documents to slow down the legal system.

* * *

There's also some disagreement on how Buchanan was injured.

Harsh said he had gone down to the refuge to feed the animals on the evening of Feb. 21.

"Normally, I don't feed that late, but I had something come up," he said. That's when he saw an outside gate open. The pen for the lions is surrounded by an outer perimeter fence.

And that's when he heard screaming coming from the cage.

Harsh then saw Buchanan with his arm over the top of the door leading to the pen, a lion biting down on his arm.

Both Harsh and Taylor say it appears Buchanan was intoxicated.

Harsh used a metal pipe to beat off the lion, and then drove Buchanan to the Colby hospital. Taylor said Harsh called 911 on the way, alerting officials to the incident.

Taylor said Harsh dropped Buchanan off at the hospital and then headed back to the refuge. Buchanan was then flown to a hospital in Denver for treatment.

"They sewed him back up, and he has been released," Harsh said.

The sheriff's office headed to the refuge to investigate the incident.

Harsh said that's when the sheriff's office once again raised the issue of problems with owning the animals.

"What happens is political people come after us," Harsh said.

Over the years, he said, the sheriff's office and the Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks have harassed him about the animals.

"This has been going on out here 20 to 25 years with Jeff Harsh," Taylor said.

While Harsh said he's not the owner of the Free Breakfast Inn near where the animals are kept, and that Buchanan was not his employee, Taylor said otherwise. He said Harsh is the owner and that he listed Buchanan as an electrician and carpenter.

Harsh instead said Buchanan was homeless and was staying in one of several rooms in the motel that is leased for help house the homeless. Buchanan was working on some carpentry projects to help pay the costs of staying at the motel.

"We've had over 100 people we've run through the program here," Harsh said of his efforts to help homeless people.

4 comment(s) found
Don't whine: 3/6/2009
Sometimes the price of freedom is that the county has to deal with complaints. That's what it's there for. Harsh is deserving of protection and PETA's complaints are in bad faith.
(Posted by: Tom)
Lion Bite: 3/2/2009
It is sad to say that this is not the first incident with someone getting bitten by these animals (it is also not the second or third time either). If Harsh doesn't have a permit to have them, why has it taken so many people being bitten to get these defenseless aniamls a new home? You really can't blame the animals, if they feel threatened, they use the fight or flight response that is just second nature to them. Jeff Harsh should have to pay everyone's medical bills and also pay Thomas County for every cent they have spent trying to get these animals to a safe place. It should not fall on the tax payers of Thomas County. Someone needs to put Jeff Harsh in the pen with these animals with no way out and see what happens. That is essentially what he is doing with the people that have been bitten. If the area was secure so the people couldn't get to the animals, none of this would have happened. I know there was a time when at least one of the animals had escaped and it took Jeff Harsh several hours before he notified officials. Doesn't seem like a real responsible action on his part. All of Northwest Kansas would be a lot better off is Jeff Harsh would just leave the country!
(Posted by: Concerned Citizen)
How can this be?: 3/2/2009
"It's a filthy mess," doesn’t quite capture the disgusting and foul scene surrounding the Prairie Cat Animal Refuge near Oakley Kansas. It’s a shame that you didn’t send a photographer to provide a visual component to your story, but I doubt that you could have ran some of the pictures in your paper. At the northeast corner of the property are piles of rotting bones composed of hundreds if not a thousand animal carcasses. Spilling out of this pile are the severed heads of bovine in various stages of decomposition, probable being drug away by dogs or coyotes.
(Posted by: DEA)
Cats: 3/1/2009
Time for Hays, to start a zoo, other then the bar life! Hays can get the lions and take care of the stray dog problem...a win,win! The collage could use a tiger?
(Posted by: )

COMMENT ON THIS STORY

Subject:
Comment:
Poster: (your name)
captcha 579cc98f65484f898dd2eb6aee1328dd
Enter text above:

All comments are subject to approval before being posted. Please keep comments constructive and relevant. Opinions certainly can be expressed, but comments that are rude, abusive, slanderous, threatening, sexually oriented, contain profanity or are vulgar will not be tolerated. Comments will not be edited. Any comment that violates the above-listed rules will be deleted.

Discuss this story at MyTown

digg delicious facebook stumbleupon google Newsvine
More News and Photos

Associated Press Videos