Owners of dead giant rabbit on United
flight seek damages, probe
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[May 09, 2017]
By Dan Whitcomb
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The owners of a
giant rabbit named Simon who was found dead after a United Airlines
flight demanded on Monday that the airline pay damages, order an outside
investigation and re-evaluate how it handles animals on flights.
Attorneys for Simon's owners, who purchased him in hopes of winning the
title of world's largest rabbit at the Iowa State Fair this summer, said
they would take legal action if United failed to respond within seven
days.
The lawyers say it is possible the 3-foot-long (1-meter) hare died after
being placed in a freezer for 16 hours upon landing in Chicago on a
flight from London. They say the airline then destroyed his remains
without permission.
"United Airlines can issue any statement they like but their company's
credibility is under question when they immediately cremate the giant
rabbit Simon without anyone's consent," said Guy Cook, lead attorney for
the three-person investment group that owned the rabbit. "They destroyed
the proof."
United Airlines [UAL.N] spokesman Charles Hobart denied Simon died in a
freezer. He said in a written statement the company was reviewing a
letter outlining the claims, was saddened by Simon's death and takes its
responsibilities for transporting pets seriously. The statement did not
say how much the owners were seeking in damages.
Hobart said the hare arrived in Chicago in apparent good condition and
was seen moving around his kennel some 35 minutes later.
"Shortly thereafter, a kennel representative noticed Simon was
motionless and that he had passed away," Hobart said. He did not address
the cremation allegations.
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Cook said it would be difficult to establish a cause of death
because the rabbit's remains had been destroyed but, in the letter,
demanded that United turn over all records of its investigation,
including closed-circuit television footage.
The attorney also requested an independent investigation as well as
compensatory and economic and punitive damages.
Cook said that Simon, a Continental rabbit whose father is
considered the world's largest hare, was expected to exceed his
father's size to claim that title and that his owners should be
compensated for their potential economic losses from exhibiting him.
The investment group purchased Simon from a breeder in England and
was flying him to the United States, where he would have been
displayed at the Iowa State Fair in August and ultimately crowned
world's largest rabbit, Cook said.
(Reporting by Dan Whitcomb; Editing by Bill Trott)
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