No charges against mother in Cincinnati
gorilla case: prosecutor
Send a link to a friend
[June 07, 2016]
By Ginny McCabe
CINCINNATI (Reuters) - No criminal charges
will be filed against the mother of the 3-year-old boy who fell into a
gorilla enclosure at the Cincinnati Zoo, causing zookeepers to kill an
endangered gorilla to protect the child, an Ohio prosecutor said on
Monday.
A 17-year-old endangered western lowland silverback gorilla named
Harambe was shot by zoo staff in the minutes after the boy fell on
May 28, touching off a storm of criticism aimed at both the zoo and
the boy's mother.
Some critics had called for criminal charges against the mother, who
was with the boy at the zoo, for reckless endangerment. Police and
prosecutors did not provide the name of the mother, but multiple
media reports identified her as 32-year-old Michelle Gregg, who
works as a preschool administrator.
The boy suffered a concussion and some scrapes but escaped serious
injury. The family previously said it does not intend to sue the
zoo.
"I am very sorry about the loss of this gorilla but nothing about
this situation rises to the level of a criminal charge," Hamilton
County prosecutor Joseph Deters said on Monday.
 "Had she been in the bathroom smoking crack and let her kids run
around the zoo that'd be a different story," he told reporters on
Monday. "She was attending to her children by all witness accounts
and the 3-year-old just scampered off."
He said the mother, according to witnesses, never placed her son in
danger and only turned away for a few seconds to deal with another
child.
"If anyone doesn't believe a 3-year-old can scamper off very
quickly, they've never had kids because they can and they do," he
added.
Deters also said he was glad the zoo had changed the gorilla
enclosure to prevent a repeat of the incident. It will reopen
Tuesday with a higher barrier and added knotted rope netting.
[to top of second column] |

A mother and her child visit a bronze statue of a gorilla outside
the Cincinnati Zoo's Gorilla World exhibit, two days after a boy
tumbled into its moat and officials were forced to kill Harambe, a
Western lowland gorilla, in Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S. May 30, 2016.
REUTERS/William Philpott

The family was pleased with the prosecutor's decision.
"This is one more step in allowing us to put this tragic episode
behind us and return to our normal family life," the family said in
a statement.
The boy was at the zoo with his mother, three sisters, ages 7, 4 and
1, and family friends when he climbed over a 3-foot barrier and fell
15 feet into a moat, according to the Hamilton County prosecutor's
office and witnesses.
The gorilla dragged the child through the enclosure before zoo
officials shot him.
(Reporting by Fiona Ortiz, Suzannah Gonzales and Justin Madden in
Chicago; Editing by Bernadette Baum and Cynthia Osterman)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
 |