NOAA Press Release. Date: Fri, 11 Jun 1999.
Former "Flipper" dolphin trainer Richard O'Barry, and his
associate Lloyd A. Good III, have been found guilty of violating the
Marine Mammal Protection Act for releasing two captive dolphins off
the Florida coast in May that were not prepared to survive in the wild
and sustained life- threatening injuries. O'Barry, Good, and their respective
corporate entities were ordered to pay civil penalties totalling $59,500,
the Commerce Department's National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
announced today.
Judge Peter A. Fitzpatrick, a U.S. Administrative Law Judge, fined Richard
O'Barry of Coconut Grove, Fla.; Lloyd Good III of Sugarloaf Key, Fla.;
Sugarloaf Dolphin Sanctuary Inc. of Sugarloaf Key Fla.; and the Dolphin
Project Inc. of South Miami, Fla., have been fined civil penalties of
$40,000 for illegally "taking" by harassment and illegally
transporting each of the dolphins -- the maximum penalty provided by
law. The Sugarloaf Dolphin Sanctuary was fined an additional $19,500
for failing to notify NOAA Fisheries prior to the transport of thedolphins.
The defendants have 30 days in which to appeal the case.
"This case involved the reckless and intentional release of two
captive dolphins by over-zealous activists who had not prepared the
animals to survive in the wild," said NOAA prosecuting attorney
Joel LaBissonniere. "We are very pleased with the judge's decision
in this case. The judge's ruling supports our position that the release
of captive dolphins to the wild needs to be conducted according to peer-reviewed
scientific protocols and authorized pursuant to a MMPA scientific research
permit, in order to protect the health and welfare of the animals."
O'Barry and Good released the two dolphins, named "Luther"
and "Buck," approximately six miles off the coast of Key West,
Florida., on May 23, 1996. The day after the dolphins were released,
Luther appeared in a congested Key West marina with deep lacerations,
approaching people, and begging for food. Buck, found two weeks after
his release over 40 miles away, had similar deep lacerations and was
emaciated NOAA Fisheries determined that the dolphins were in need of
medical attention. With the help of members of the southeast marine
mammal stranding network, the U.S. Navy, U.S. Coast Guard and Florida
Marine Patrol, NOAA Fisheries successfully rescued the animals and provided
veterinary care.
The two dolphins had been collected from the wild off the coast of Mississippi
during the 1980's, and were in captivity for almost 10 years. They were
initially in the U.S. Navy's marine mammal program, and were transferred
to the Sugarloaf Dolphin Sanctuary in 1994 as part of a project that
intended to return them to the wild. Although the Sugarloaf Dolphin
Sanctuary obtained the necessary authorizations to have the dolphins
on public display, a scientific research permit was never obtained or
even requested prior to the release.
Releasing captive marine mammals to the wild can be hazardous to both
the released animal and wild marine mammal populations if conducted
improperly and without appropriate safeguards. Issues of concern include:
(1) the ability of released animals to adequately forage and defend
themselves from predators;
(2) any behavioral patterns developed in captivity that could affect
the social behavior of wild animals, as well as the social integration
of
the released animals; and
(3) disease transmission and/or unwanted genetic exchange between released
animals and wild stocks. According to NOAA Fisheries, any marine mammal
release should be conducted with a MMPA scientific research permit to
protect the health and welfare of marine mammals. The MMPA scientific
research permit is required to ensure that humane protocols be in place
that maximize the release's chance of success, and provide for long-term
follow-up monitoring and emergency contingency plans in case it is necessary
to rescue a released animal.
"Releasing captive dolphins to the wild has been romanticized in
recent years, and has been promoted as a noble pursuit. However, the
injuries these dolphins suffered and their obvious dependence on humans
highlights the need for any release project to be conducted responsibly
and scientifically," said NOAA Fisheries Office of Protected Resources
Director Hilda Diaz-Soltero "This decision sends a strong message
that the abuse and abandonment of dolphins will not be tolerated."
NOAA Fisheries is an agency of the Commerce Department's National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration. NOAA Fisheries is dedicated to protecting
and preserving our nation's living marine resources through scientific
research, management, enforcement, and conservation.
- press release ends-
Related
Information
A much-promoted
project to obtain and release dolphins maintained in European dolphinaria
and aquaria in 2000 failed. Animal rights activists had hoped to obtain
the facilities of a new dolphinarium bulit in a French safari park in
Port St. Pere to act as a half way house before animals were to be moved
for rehabilitation and release at an alleged and undisclosed Caribbean
location. The pool facility became vacant after the French government
refused permission for the park to export four dolphins for display
in the new facility from Spain.
One of the activists
to have been involved with the project was Ric O'Barry. O'Barry claims
to have trained dolphins for the original nineteen sixties series "Flipper".
However, for some years O'Barry has campaigned against dolphinaria and
has been involved in a number of releases of former captive animals.
The project failed
to materialise when O'Barry could not supply a number of dolphins for
display in the French park by his contractual deadline. Two of the animals
where muted to have been from the now closed Antwerp Zoo dolphinarium
in Belgium. These animals were safely relocated to a zoo in Duisburg,
Germany. The management of Antwerp Zoo had stated that they had no intention
of allowing the animals to be placed into the hands of animal-rights
activists.
The French park
continues to display sea lions in it's new dolphin facility.