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Lion on the lam in western Quebec after it escapes from owner's home - CP

Yrys

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Lion on the lam in western Quebec after it escapes from owner's home , By The Canadian Press

MANIWAKI, Que. - A helicopter and a search party wielding a heat-detection device were scouring a Quebec aboriginal reserve in pursuit of a lion on the loose
Wednesday. The 70-kilogram king of the jungle has been on the lam since he escaped Tuesday night from a house - where he was kept as a man's personal pet. "What
we've heard is he left the house," said Melanie Larouche, a spokeswoman for Quebec provincial police. "He was a domestic pet."

The lion was last spotted beside Highway 105, near Maniwaki, about an hour north of Ottawa. Schools and day-care centres have been advised of the lion's presence in
the area. Police have provided extra protection. The search party includes police, provincial wildlife officials, a police helicopter flown in from Montreal, sophisticated
heat-detection equipment, and the lion's owner.

Police declined to say whether the man could face legal repercussions for keeping a large beast as his pet. "He's helping with the search. For now, we're focusing on the
search," Larouche said. An official at Quebec's Natural Resources Department said in an interview that someone would need a permit to keep such an animal at home.

"We have issued no lion permits in the area," said regional spokeswoman Catherine Rooney.

I'm not sure the man legally needed a permit, as in French articles they say that he is living on a local reserve ...


 
:D

Well, never heard of anyone in Canada, which don't mean there isn't. But I saw a program some months ago about
Americans keeping tigers, leopards, etc in their homes or in their courtyard ... Some neighbors were a bit frisky about it  ;D.
 
Lion cub escapes in western Quebec

A male African lion cub is believed to be roaming near Maniwaki, Que., Wednesday after escaping from its owner the night before.

A woman related to the owner, Stanley Dumas Whiteduck, told CBC News the lion is a 150-pound cub that's less than a year old, not a two-year-old adult as previously reported.

She said the animal, who is named "Boomer," escaped from a home at the Kitigan Zibi Algonquin First Nation reserve after being taken out for a walk Tuesday evening and then tied with a dog leash. The reserve is near Maniwaki, a town about 145 kilometres north of Ottawa.

The lion reportedly comes when he is called, has been fed from a bottle and is litter trained.

Nevertheless, schools and daycares in the area are in lockdown and police are urging the public to be careful.

Cpl. Gordon McGregor of the Kitigan Zibi reserve police force said police had set up a security perimeter, were looking for the animal and were deploying a helicopter Wednesday afternoon to help with the search.

“In the meantime, we’re putting out a security message to all our community members and [those] at the town of Maniwaki to stay near your kids, be careful, don’t go out at night and especially don’t go out in the woods.”

McGregor said the force was previously unaware of the presence of the lion, which has been nicknamed Boomer and is used to interacting with humans.

"We were caught by surprise by this," he said.

"Apparently, what we've been told … it's like a little pet, but that's not a little pet to us and we're taking this situation very seriously," McGregor said.

"The fact that it's been in the woods for a little while now, that concerns me because natural instincts might come back into play."

The Quebec provincial police have said they are also looking for the lion.

Maniwaki is in a pretty vast area. They may never find the lion if he went for the woods...
 
Yrys said:
I'm not sure the man legally needed a permit, as in French articles they say that he is living on a local reserve ...
THIS is why all of Canada's citizens should have the right to the equal protection and equal benefit of the law without discrimination and, in particular, without discrimination based on race, national or ethnic origin, colour, religion, sex, age or mental or physical disability.

 
Yrys said:
At least, he won't be able to mate  :p !
Well, he may be able to go through the motions, but certainly he won't be able to reproduce ;D
 
Name of the lion is  Boomer. So if you see him  don't call him "Kitty, kitty " :). At four feet, he must be young.

Lion on the loose in western Quebec

MANIWAKI, Que. - An African lion on the lam in western Quebec may be domesticated as far as lions go, but it is cold comfort to thousands of residents
concerned that a few days hungry and lost in the bush might rekindle his ferocious side. A helicopter circled the area and a search party wielded a heat-detection
device Wednesday as they scoured sprawling forests near a Quebec aboriginal reserve in pursuit of the lion.

The 70-kilogram king of the jungle, which goes by the name of Boomer, has been on the lam since he escaped Tuesday night from a house where he was kept as
a man's personal pet. "People are a bit concerned I guess, people were not aware this animal was being kept in the community and now it's on the loose," said
Jean-Guy Whiteduck, a former chief of the Kitigan Zibi reserve north of Ottawa.

"Everybody's concerned including the people of Maniwaki right next to us," Whiteduck said. "We don't know what this animal will do eventually when it gets hungry.
That's the fear."

The male lion, which stands about four feet tall while on all fours, was last spotted beside Highway 105, near Maniwaki. Boomer's mane is starting to grow out now,
police said. The animal arrived in Maniwaki two days ago, purchased by a resident of the nearby reserve, Kitigan Zibi police chief Gordon McGregor said.

The owner, identified by police as Stanley Dumas Whiteduck, is helping authorities track the animal after he reported it missing to police on Tuesday night. "It apparently
didn't like its accommodations so it broke free from its enclosure or pen," McGregor said. "We haven't had much word from it since."

The lion's presence in the aboriginal community came as a surprise to everyone. "It's an unusual thing to have a lion," Whiteduck said. "In our community, people are
scattered kilometres apart from each other, so a person's living in the bush and nobody knew he was keeping the animal."

The police were equally unaware that Boomer had come to live in the community. "At 8 a.m. (Wednesday) I was advised of a lion in the community and I thought to
myself, 'What else could go wrong today,"' McGregor said. "I was stunned."

McGregor said police are going door to door with flyers and are asking residents to stay vigilant, keep out of the woods and watch their children closely. "Apparently the
lion is domesticated but there is some concern that its animal instincts might kick in at some point," McGregor said.

Police say they don't want to hurt the animal. Boomer's owner insists the animal is playful and used to humans. Schools and daycare centres have been advised of the
lion's presence in the area. Police have provided extra protection.

The search party of 15 people includes police, provincial wildlife officials and a police helicopter flown in from Montreal. Police declined to say whether Stanley Dumas
Whiteduck could face legal repercussions for keeping a large beast as his pet. "He's helping with the search," said Melanie Larouche, a spokeswoman for Quebec
provincial police. "For now, we're focusing on the search."

An official at Quebec's Natural Resources Department said an owner would need a permit to keep such an animal at home. "We have issued no lion permits in the area,"
said regional spokeswoman Catherine Rooney.


 
At least we have the lion's name.  That should help. We should split up.  We can cover more ground that way.
 
If we call out the Army to search for it, with we get a "LEO" bar for the dom ops medal people want?
 
« Reply #12 on: Today at 22:34:24 » Quote 

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If we call out the Army to search for it, with we get a "LEO" bar for the dom ops medal people want?


You only get the "LEO" bar if you are using the Leopard tank when said 'Boomer' is found!!  Over.
 
They captured him. 

Article Link

Police capture runaway African lion in Quebec
Updated Thu. May. 1 2008 7:03 AM ET

CTV.ca News Staff

A runaway African lion has been captured after Quebec authorities carried out a frantic search for the animal.

The animal, dubbed "Boomer" by his owner, disappeared Tuesday night from its pen on a native reserve near Maniwaki.

The six-month-old lion, which the owner says is domesticated, was caught by police officers at 12:45 a.m. on Thursday after a woman reported seeing it walking along Highway 105.

The 70-kilogram cat, which stands about four feet tall, was described as terrified and weak by police who managed to lure it into a cage.

More on article link.

I feel sorry for the poor thing and he should be sent to a zoo.  :(





 
On the radio this morning they were saying that the lion was approx 2 yrs old - and weighed approx 150 lbs (seems light).  Owner had the cat for a total of two days - no indication of where he had bought the darned thing - but am certain that winning him in a poker game isn,t out of the question.

A hefty fine is envisaged - as there are laws for Amerindians and all others against having exotic pets.
 
geo said:
A hefty fine is envisaged - as there are laws for Amerindians and all others against having exotic pets.

I hope the owner get fined enough to pay for the reeducation and reintroduction of Boomer in his native wilderness.
I'm still not sure what laws apply here as the owner is living in a local reserve, but I'm sure you know more then me.
 
Note to self:  Shut the friggin' gate BEFORE you let little Boomer out and Boomer does NOT come back when called. 

Sometimes ya gotta wonder what some people are thinking.
And it also makes you wonder where they got it from.
Hopefully, there is severe repercussions for the people who lost him and whom ever sold him to them.
Stupidiots!
 
Heard in the news tonight that Boomer's going to Grandby's Zoo.

Good for him, they'll treat him right there.
 
He's a cutie now, but it's better for everyone around him that he will be in a secure area ...

160_boomer_lion_080501.jpg


Fugitive feline captured, heading to Quebec zoo

A runaway African lion will be heading to a Quebec zoo after being captured early Thursday by police who carried out a frantic search for the animal.
The lion cub, dubbed "Boomer" by his caregiver, will have a home in Granby zoo, near Montreal.
...
"Boomer" is reportedly a Barbary lion -- a rare species that exists only in captivity. CTV Ottawa learned that before the lion came into Whiteduck's care,
it had been living with a family since it was three days old in Cobden, a small community in the Township of Whitewater Region of the Ottawa Valley.

When a child in the family reportedly spoke about the lion in school, officials with Child Protective Services were alerted. CTV Ottawa learned the family
was told by officials that keeping the lion was unacceptable and posed a danger to the children.

That's when Whiteduck, a friend in Maniwaki, was contacted. He was asked to "lion sit" for the family until they could find an appropriate home for "Boomer."
A friend of the family in Cobden told CTV Ottawa their intention was never to keep the young lion -- which they claim was abandoned by its mother -- and that
they were simply giving it a temporary home.

Boomer to be quarantined

Officials from Quebec's Wildlife Department gave Boomer to the Granby zoo on Thursday. Alain Fafard, the Granby zoo's director of animal care, told a news
conference that the friendly cat was likely hand-fed as a cub. But he said it will likely be quarantined at the zoo for 30 to 40 days so veterinarians can evaluate
its health.
 
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