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In March 2020, Big Cat Rescue temporarily closed to the public due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Florida., [27] [28] and Baskin later announced in a Facebook post that she was considering not opening it to the public, stating; There is just too much opportunity for people to put their own desires ahead of the greater good.
Baskin, and her company Big Cat Rescue, have lobbied Congress to ban the private trade and ownership of exotic cats. [64] Her life's work, and that of her family, included passage of the Big Cat Public Safety Act when it was signed into law on December 20, 2022, by President Joe Biden. The bill closed the loopholes in the Captive Wildlife ...
The entity G.W. Exotic Animal Memorial Foundation was dissolved and its assets, but not liabilities, were transferred to The Garold Wayne Interactive Zoological Foundation. Big Cat Rescue again filed suit on the premise that the new park was a successor to the first park and had the same personnel, income, assets, property, and overall business.
Carole Baskin’s Big Cat Rescue will transport most of its cats to a wildlife refuge based in Arkansas, and Baskin and her husband, Howard, will sell the property once there are no cats left ...
A scary incident took place at Carole Baskin's Big Cat Rescue animal sanctuary Thursday morning. Candy Couser, who has been volunteering at the non-profit organization near Tampa, Florida, for ...
The law bans the controversial practice of "cub-petting," or letting members of the public touch and hold cubs of tigers, lions, leopards and more. It also bans new private ownership of big cats ...
The EFRC is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt charitable organization and the second-largest big cat rescue in the United States, spanning over 200 acres (0.81 km 2). [1] [2] Abused, disabled, and otherwise homeless wild cats such as Lions, tigers, leopards, servals, pumas, bobcats, Canada lynx, ocelots, Geoffroy's cat, and an Asian leopard cat have taken refuge in this organization.
The Black Jaguar-White Tiger Foundation (or BJWT) was an unregistered and unlicensed non-profit 501(c)(3) wildlife facility located in Mexico that hosted big cats as well as dogs and other animals. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] BJWT was shut down by Mexican authorities on July 5, 2022, due to a viral video showing the cats eating themselves alive.