Rebuttal to Animals 24-7 Article
source: http://www.animals24-7.org/2015/04/20/big-cat-rescue-remembering-every-large-exotic-cat
Animals 24-7: "TAMPA, Florida––Visitors to Big Cat Rescue will see almost every species of cat whom anyone has ever raised in captivity."
Rebuttal: Not true. Although Carole once had a private collection of 17 different species many of those cats have now died.
Animals 24-7: "The cats are without exception kept in exemplary conditions, displaying the relaxed ferocity in repose that most cats take as a birthright."
Rebuttal: Exemplary conditions? Rusted wire pens and dens that flood in heavy rains?
Rebuttal: Not true. Although Carole once had a private collection of 17 different species many of those cats have now died.
Animals 24-7: "The cats are without exception kept in exemplary conditions, displaying the relaxed ferocity in repose that most cats take as a birthright."
Rebuttal: Exemplary conditions? Rusted wire pens and dens that flood in heavy rains?
Animals 24-7: "But visitors will see no “Wall of Shame,” not even for breeders, traveling exhibitors, and proprietors of roadside zoos misidentified as “sanctuaries.”
Mainstream media accounts and the online rumor mill make frequent mention of the “Wall of Shame” purportedly maintained by Big Cat Rescue founder Carole Baskin and her husband Howard Baskin, who directs the Big Cat Rescue legal affairs. Yet that wall does not exist."
Rebuttal: Although Carole once had an actual 'wall of shame' listed on her website it has since been replaced by a separate website called 911animalabuse.com, which Carole has at times refused to admit is hers. It is said to be administrated by an out-of-state Baskin supporter by the name of LaWanna. On this website Carole posts the name, location, phone number, and email address of people she doesn’t like. Just search Linda Sue. She is on that website even though she is a rabbit advocate who only speaks out against BCR’s live feeds. Carole can deny it is 'her' site but it is the reason she was ousted from the BBB...inappropriate response to complaints filed against her... people who complained were labeled 'abusers' and added to her site.
Animals 24-7: "There is, however, a Memorial Wall, displaying the name, image, and a brief summary of biographical facts about each and every cat who has come to Big Cat Rescue for a last few months or years of peace.
Carole Baskin can recite by heart the cats’ stories, much as she tells the stories of the 100-odd still living cats at Big Cat Rescue, checking the inventory on her cell phone to confirm their vital statistics."
Rebuttal: As for Carole reciting the stories of the cats living at BCR, she should be very good at this, since she made most of those stories up.
Geriatric cats
Animals 24-7: "The Big Cat Rescue cats are, as well as the largest number at any sanctuary, the largest assembly of geriatric large and exotic cats anywhere. Twenty-nine cats are more than 20 years old."
Rebuttal: In the early days of BCR it was Carole's practice to replace one cat with another when the cat died or was sold, so there is no way to know the correct age of some of these cats.
Animals 24-7: "The serval Arizona, 26, is the oldest serval on record, now three years older than the previous record holder. A second Big Cat Rescue serval, Bongo, 24, has also broken the record."
Rebuttal: Actually, there have been numerous servals by the name of Arizona as we have already proven. Arizona was bought for $2,000 and later sold and replaced with a younger cat. The male Nairobi was bought for $1,000 and was then sold and replaced by a female serval given the same name and made-up story. Bongo was purchased at a WWAA auction for $1,500.
Animals 24-7: "The Big Cat Rescue tiger Flavio, who died at 25, and the bobcat Indian Summer, who died at 23, are believed to have been the oldest of their species––but another Big Cat Rescue bobcat, Pretender, has reached 23, and yet another, Angie, is 22."
Rebuttal: Wasn't Flavio a tiger Ringling Bros. paid Carole to board? Indian Summer was used for breeding and produced a litter in 1997. Indian Summer is the mother of Catera. Pretender was a bobcat purchased for $350.
Slinking through the grass
Animals 24-7: "Carole Baskin tears up at the statistical reminder that the Memorial Wall will soon be getting longer."
Rebuttal: I wonder if she tears up as she throws live domestic rabbits into pens to be tortured and killed by her cats?
Animals 24-7: "The Big Cat Rescue Memorial Wall might be compared in concept to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall in Washington D.C., designed by Maya Lin as a combination of trench and slab, but visually it is nothing the same.
Viewed as most visitors see it, from below, the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall is composed of severe straight lines and is imposing in height. The Big Cat Rescue Memorial Wall is low enough to sit on, meandering in gentle curves through flowering trees––somewhat like a cat, big or small, slinking through grass or bushes.
The Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall, though recessed into a low hillside, dominates the landscape behind the Lincoln Memorial. A casual visitor could entirely miss the Big Cat Rescue Memorial Wall. Even seeing it, a visitor might miss the significance of it.
The Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall is stark and shocking, reminding Americans of some of our nation’s most tragic and prolonged mistakes. The Big Cat Rescue Memorial Wall unpretentiously evokes only the memories of those who knew the cats, big and small, to whom it pays tribute."
Rebuttal: Find out more information about the memorial wall HERE.
Those who should be ashamed
Animals 24-7: "Only in the minds of those who have something involving big cats to be ashamed of is the Big Cat Rescue Memorial Wall truly a “Wall of Shame.”
Unfortunately, most of the cats in those people’s custody are unlikely to ever come to Big Cat Rescue."
Rebuttal: As explained above, the wall of shame refers to her 911animal abuse site, but it is Carole who should be ashamed that many of the cats memorialized at BCR were bought, bred or born there.
Animals 24-7: "Among those people are a galaxy of the most notorious exotic cat breeders and exhibitors around the U.S.––like Tiger Truck Stop owner Michael Sandlin, of Grosse Tete, Louisiana, who has for 28 years exhibited tigers at a gas station and has fought in court and the Louisiana statehouse against efforts to close his facility, beginning with the passage of a 1996 Iberville Parish ordinance against keeping “wild, exotic, and vicious animals.”
At least 13 tigers have occupied Sandlin’s cages over the years. He had four in 2003, but sent three to the Tiger Haven sanctuary in Tennessee after being cited for violations of the federal animal welfare act."
Rebuttal: As you should be well aware of by now, there are 2 sides to every story. BCR has had more than it's share of violations. A volunteer received 451 stitches after she was attacked by a leopard. BCR received numerous violations and injuries when they used to allow people to rent a cabin with their cats. When this scheme failed she simply converted her 148 private collection of cats to "rescues" and made up stories about them. Do keep in mind, there are 2 sides to every story.
Animals 24-7: "That left a single tiger, named Tony, who remained at the Tiger Truck Stop despite state legislation passed in 2006. The law was eventually upheld, against Sandlin’s challenge, by the Louisiana First Court of Appeals and Louisiana Supreme Court, but was undercut after Sandlin won an exemption from the legislature in June 2014.
Based on information received from the Louisiana Department of Wildlife & Fisheries, Carole Baskin anticipated in 2009 that Tony would be surrendered to Big Cat Rescue. She drove a truck to Grosse Tete only to discover that Sandlin had elected to continue his legal battle. Tony is still at the Tiger Truck Stop, and Baskin is still frustrated about it."
Rebuttal: Of course she was frustrated. She raised money for Tony's "rescue" but wasn’t able to exploit Tony for even more money. Tony’s plight is well known which means more publicity which in turn means more money for Carole.
Mainstream media accounts and the online rumor mill make frequent mention of the “Wall of Shame” purportedly maintained by Big Cat Rescue founder Carole Baskin and her husband Howard Baskin, who directs the Big Cat Rescue legal affairs. Yet that wall does not exist."
Rebuttal: Although Carole once had an actual 'wall of shame' listed on her website it has since been replaced by a separate website called 911animalabuse.com, which Carole has at times refused to admit is hers. It is said to be administrated by an out-of-state Baskin supporter by the name of LaWanna. On this website Carole posts the name, location, phone number, and email address of people she doesn’t like. Just search Linda Sue. She is on that website even though she is a rabbit advocate who only speaks out against BCR’s live feeds. Carole can deny it is 'her' site but it is the reason she was ousted from the BBB...inappropriate response to complaints filed against her... people who complained were labeled 'abusers' and added to her site.
Animals 24-7: "There is, however, a Memorial Wall, displaying the name, image, and a brief summary of biographical facts about each and every cat who has come to Big Cat Rescue for a last few months or years of peace.
Carole Baskin can recite by heart the cats’ stories, much as she tells the stories of the 100-odd still living cats at Big Cat Rescue, checking the inventory on her cell phone to confirm their vital statistics."
Rebuttal: As for Carole reciting the stories of the cats living at BCR, she should be very good at this, since she made most of those stories up.
Geriatric cats
Animals 24-7: "The Big Cat Rescue cats are, as well as the largest number at any sanctuary, the largest assembly of geriatric large and exotic cats anywhere. Twenty-nine cats are more than 20 years old."
Rebuttal: In the early days of BCR it was Carole's practice to replace one cat with another when the cat died or was sold, so there is no way to know the correct age of some of these cats.
Animals 24-7: "The serval Arizona, 26, is the oldest serval on record, now three years older than the previous record holder. A second Big Cat Rescue serval, Bongo, 24, has also broken the record."
Rebuttal: Actually, there have been numerous servals by the name of Arizona as we have already proven. Arizona was bought for $2,000 and later sold and replaced with a younger cat. The male Nairobi was bought for $1,000 and was then sold and replaced by a female serval given the same name and made-up story. Bongo was purchased at a WWAA auction for $1,500.
Animals 24-7: "The Big Cat Rescue tiger Flavio, who died at 25, and the bobcat Indian Summer, who died at 23, are believed to have been the oldest of their species––but another Big Cat Rescue bobcat, Pretender, has reached 23, and yet another, Angie, is 22."
Rebuttal: Wasn't Flavio a tiger Ringling Bros. paid Carole to board? Indian Summer was used for breeding and produced a litter in 1997. Indian Summer is the mother of Catera. Pretender was a bobcat purchased for $350.
Slinking through the grass
Animals 24-7: "Carole Baskin tears up at the statistical reminder that the Memorial Wall will soon be getting longer."
Rebuttal: I wonder if she tears up as she throws live domestic rabbits into pens to be tortured and killed by her cats?
Animals 24-7: "The Big Cat Rescue Memorial Wall might be compared in concept to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall in Washington D.C., designed by Maya Lin as a combination of trench and slab, but visually it is nothing the same.
Viewed as most visitors see it, from below, the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall is composed of severe straight lines and is imposing in height. The Big Cat Rescue Memorial Wall is low enough to sit on, meandering in gentle curves through flowering trees––somewhat like a cat, big or small, slinking through grass or bushes.
The Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall, though recessed into a low hillside, dominates the landscape behind the Lincoln Memorial. A casual visitor could entirely miss the Big Cat Rescue Memorial Wall. Even seeing it, a visitor might miss the significance of it.
The Vietnam Veterans Memorial Wall is stark and shocking, reminding Americans of some of our nation’s most tragic and prolonged mistakes. The Big Cat Rescue Memorial Wall unpretentiously evokes only the memories of those who knew the cats, big and small, to whom it pays tribute."
Rebuttal: Find out more information about the memorial wall HERE.
Those who should be ashamed
Animals 24-7: "Only in the minds of those who have something involving big cats to be ashamed of is the Big Cat Rescue Memorial Wall truly a “Wall of Shame.”
Unfortunately, most of the cats in those people’s custody are unlikely to ever come to Big Cat Rescue."
Rebuttal: As explained above, the wall of shame refers to her 911animal abuse site, but it is Carole who should be ashamed that many of the cats memorialized at BCR were bought, bred or born there.
Animals 24-7: "Among those people are a galaxy of the most notorious exotic cat breeders and exhibitors around the U.S.––like Tiger Truck Stop owner Michael Sandlin, of Grosse Tete, Louisiana, who has for 28 years exhibited tigers at a gas station and has fought in court and the Louisiana statehouse against efforts to close his facility, beginning with the passage of a 1996 Iberville Parish ordinance against keeping “wild, exotic, and vicious animals.”
At least 13 tigers have occupied Sandlin’s cages over the years. He had four in 2003, but sent three to the Tiger Haven sanctuary in Tennessee after being cited for violations of the federal animal welfare act."
Rebuttal: As you should be well aware of by now, there are 2 sides to every story. BCR has had more than it's share of violations. A volunteer received 451 stitches after she was attacked by a leopard. BCR received numerous violations and injuries when they used to allow people to rent a cabin with their cats. When this scheme failed she simply converted her 148 private collection of cats to "rescues" and made up stories about them. Do keep in mind, there are 2 sides to every story.
Animals 24-7: "That left a single tiger, named Tony, who remained at the Tiger Truck Stop despite state legislation passed in 2006. The law was eventually upheld, against Sandlin’s challenge, by the Louisiana First Court of Appeals and Louisiana Supreme Court, but was undercut after Sandlin won an exemption from the legislature in June 2014.
Based on information received from the Louisiana Department of Wildlife & Fisheries, Carole Baskin anticipated in 2009 that Tony would be surrendered to Big Cat Rescue. She drove a truck to Grosse Tete only to discover that Sandlin had elected to continue his legal battle. Tony is still at the Tiger Truck Stop, and Baskin is still frustrated about it."
Rebuttal: Of course she was frustrated. She raised money for Tony's "rescue" but wasn’t able to exploit Tony for even more money. Tony’s plight is well known which means more publicity which in turn means more money for Carole.
1,500 letters of warning
Animals 24-7: "Another Carole Baskin nemesis, exotic cat breeder/collector Catherine Twiss, had 85 big cats when her Mississippi and Arkansas facilities were raided in April and May 1996. Tracing Twiss’ history, the late Don Elroy of the Tennessee Network for Animals found the USDA had cited Twiss in at least four states over the preceding five years for allegedly selling big cats without permits. Big Cat Rescue did receive some of the Twiss cats, and still has some of the survivors.
Carole and Howard Baskin have over the years urged the Florida Fish & Wildlife Conservation Commission and the USDA Animal & Plant Health Inspection Service to revoke the permits of at least 70 large and exotic cat keepers, breeders, and exhibitors for alleged egregious violations of health and safety laws."
Rebuttal: Eliminating the competition would mean more money for Carole. She calls herself a sanctuary but she charges for day tours, night tours, feeding tours, keepers tours, VIP tours, parties, wedding, and other social and political events.
Animals 24-7: "In 2007 the Baskins even sent warning letters to 1,500 neighbors of questionable large and exotic cat facilities elsewhere in Florida, earning the lasting enmity of some, like Vernon Yates of Wildlife Rescue & Rehabilitation in Clearwater, who similarly decry wildlife exploitation, but themselves engage in off-site exhibition and handling big cats on camera."
Rebuttal: Carole harassed the neighbors of other facilities who exhibit exotics telling them they were living next door to dangerous wild animals that could escape. When these facilities complained she put them on her 911animalabuse website which caused her to be ousted from the Better Business Bureau. The animosity between Veron Yates and BCR started not because of the 'notification letter' but due to 2 of BCR’s illegally purchased leopards being confiscated by the FWC and sent to Vernon.
Animals 24-7: "One of the more notorious Florida facilities, Dade City’s Wild Things, became a PETA cause celebré after Good Morning America story in October 2012 broadcast video that Carole Baskin described online as “a tiny six-week-old tiger cub named Tony screaming in misery as he was forced to swim with guests and then a reporter in a swimming pool.”
Baskin had already been denouncing Dade City’s Wild Things for years at www.TigerCubAbuse2.com, and still is."
Rebuttal: PETA went against Big Cat Rescue too and still doesn’t agree with them exploiting their cats to the public or skinning them when they die.
Animals 24-7: "In one instance, in 2008, Baskin prevailed upon the Florida Fish & Wildlife Conservation Commission and the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s office to close an entity calling itself Rescue: Big Cat Organization, which claimed to have operated sanctuaries in Pennsylvania, North Carolina, and Florida since 1985.
The Rescue: Big Cat Organization web site listed 18 staff and presented stories and photos about many purportedly rescued big cats.
But many of the photos were stolen from the Big Cat Rescue web site, as Baskin documented to the authorities. Moreover, the whole operation appeared to have been fabricated in cyberspace by one Heather Southworth, 26, who was arrested after an eight-month investigation for allegedly unlawfully soliciting funds."
Rebuttal: Baskin unlawfully solicits funds every time she takes donations for cats she portrays as rescues that were actually bought or born there.
Animals 24-7: "Baskin recalls the Southworth case as one of her least stressful, since no large or exotic cats were actually suffering as result of it, except indirectly through the diversions of donated funds."
Rebuttal: Carole is known for diverting her opponents traffic to her own website even today resorting to stealing a competitors name and registering it as her own domain.
Clashing with clergy
Animals 24-7: "The Baskins have also clashed often with clergy who use big cats as props either to boost sermon attendance or make evangelical points, depending on one’s perspective.
In 2010, for instance, pastor Troy Gramling of the Flamingo Road Church in Cooper City, Florida displayed “a chained, adult male 500-pound lion on the pulpit in a small transport cage,” Carole Baskin recounted, who “for the length of the sermon paced, moving and rocking the cage back and forth, as the pastor quoted scripture and referred to the lion as a symbol for the devil himself. There were no barricades between the transport cage and the congregation, only a man sitting next to the cage,” namely alligator wrestler and traveling wildlife exhibitor Jeremy Possman, of Predators Unlimited."
Rebuttal: Carole Baskin is known for getting her supporters to harass and cyber bully businesses and even churches for doing nothing illegal.
Animals 24-7: "Two years later Carole Baskin identified as her “Most Shocking Incident of Big Cat Exploitation” of the month the display of a lion, a white tiger, and several other exotic animals by the Reverend Jim Lavender at the Discovery United Methodist Church in Richmond, Virginia.
Later in 2012, Carole Baskin wrote, “Believe it or not, Pope Benedict XVI was photographed petting a lion cub in Vatican City when a circus came to town for a papal performance. The photo of the cub that appeared in the National Post clearly showed the cub’s nose was badly scarred and missing fur.”"
Rebuttal: Hmmm… I wonder what’s worse. The displaying of those big cats or Carole Baskin pimping out her cats to sleep unsupervised with paying guests?
“Joe Exotic”
Animals 24-7: "Carole and Howard Baskin may have conflicted most with Oklahoma wildlife exhibitor Joe Schreibvogel, doing business as Entertainment Group. Inc., G.W. Exotic Memorial Animal Foundation, GW Park, and GW Zoo, among around thirty names in all.
U.S. District Court Judge Mary Stenson Scriven in February 2013 ruled that Schreibvogel had since 2010 infringed on copyrights and trademarks belonging to Big Cat Rescue, by using photos belonging to Big Cat Rescue and a logo similar to that of Big Cat Rescue to promote his shows under the name “Big Cat Rescue Entertainment.”
Scriven at the same time dismissed counterclaims filed by Schreibvogel, and awarded Big Cat Rescue damages of $653,000 plus $300,000 for legal expenses."
Rebuttal: Who payed the legal expenses? BCR donors?
Animals 24-7: "Big Cat Rescue has yet to collect.
“After we won the judgment,” recalls Howard Baskin, “we offered Joe generous terms to put an end to the expensive legal proceedings. We offered to let him pay his debt to us over 30 years, like a mortgage, to create reasonable, manageable monthly payments. The conditions were that he had to stop breeding, taking animals offsite for display, and public contact with the animals. He claimed that he could not afford the payments. But for many months since then, he has been paying legal fees that very likely exceed the amount of the monthly payments we suggested.”
Big Cat Rescue now holds liens against a variety of property involved in Schreibvogel’s operations."
Rebuttal: Since they have "yet to collect" doesn't that mean they did in fact use money donated for the care of their cats to pay off lawyers and court costs?
Accreditation issues
Animals 24-7: "While Big Cat Rescue offers guided visitor access, for an admission fee somewhat higher than that charged by major zoos, it is not a zoo, and the Baskins, like most operators for facilities called sanctuaries, insist on the difference."
Rebuttal: What’s the difference? They both exhibit their animals for money and BCR is more tourist attraction and roadside zoo than a sanctuary. True sanctuaries have NO commercial activities such as tours, weddings, parties, etc.
Animals 24-7: "Big Cat Rescue is accredited by the Global Federation of Animal Sanctuaries, formed in 2007 with support from several national animal advocacy organizations. The Association of Sanctuaries and the American Sanctuary Association, founded in 1992 and 1998, respectively, also enjoy strong credibility among animal care professionals."
Rebuttal: Carole desperately wanted to be accredited as a zoo by AZA but was turned down twice, in part for refusing to give up physical contact with her cats. She continued allowing public contact with her cats (declawed for this purpose) until 2004, even though she claimed to be a sanctuary since 1993.
Carole could not be accredited by TAOS or ASA because of her commercial activity so she helped form her own accrediting organization. Before GFAS she claimed accreditation as a sanctuary by TAOS, The Association of Sanctuaries but they also would not accredit her because of her commercial activity. They did create a special 'rescue' designation just for her after it is said that she donated her troop of lemurs to one of the board members.
Animals 24-7: "But many quasi-sanctuarians, while similarly insisting that they are not running zoos, operate under the umbrella of the Zoo Association of America, formed by merging several other entities in 2005. In Ohio and Arkansas the Zoo Association of America has recently won equal standing with the AZA as a legally accepted accreditation body.
The Zoo Association of America differs philosophically from the sanctuary accreditation associations in allowing a variety of practices which amount to using animals to raise revenue, rather than ensuring that they are not economically exploited. At the same time, the Zoo Association of America differs philosophically from the American Zoo Association in allowing unrestricted breeding."
Rebuttal: BCR exploits their cats for money all year round by exhibiting them for multiple tours and events. From 2004-2014 BCR made over $21-million while only a small percentage went to animal care. Where did the rest of the money go?
Animals 24-7: "There are no shortage of critics of the corrosive effects of the rise of the Zoo Association of America on animal care standards, especially within the American Zoo Association, but few of those critics are more outspoken than Carole and Howard Baskin."
“Gold standard”
Animals 24-7: "“The AZA has always been the gold standard for zoos,” they blogged in September 2013, “but has been challenged by the lack of public understanding of the meaning of accreditation. Much time and money has been spent on branding so that zoo-goers know if they are supporting a good zoo or a bad zoo. There has never been a serious threat to that branding until the ZAA began heralding themselves as an accrediting body.
“No zoo that meets the standards of AZA associates itself with ZAA,” the Baskins emphasized. “The AZA only recommends breeding of exotic cats based upon their genetics, which are managed by the Species Survival Plans. These SSPs are managed by experts for each species of animal. Matings are suggested based upon providing the most genetic diversity and healthy specimens. This is why the AZA does not condone breeding white tigers, white lions or other inbred animals. The AZA does not promote big cats as pets and does not allow the public to handle their big cats, nor do they pimp out the cubs for photo and handling sessions,” all of which are common practices among ZAA members."
Rebuttal: Carole Baskin doesn’t even support AZA accredited zoos. In fact she wants all zoos to close down including AZA accredited zoos. It’s all listed in their 20 year plan.
Again, Carole wanted to be accredited by the AZA but they denied her because she didn't meet their standards.
“Worst possible message”
Animals 24-7: "The Baskins tends to be most incensed by people who not only breed large and exotic cats, for whom there are no suitable homes, but make money by exhibiting the cubs. Until the cubs exceed 40 pounds, under the federal Animal Welfare Act regulations, or 25 pounds under various states’ stricter regulations, they may be legally included in hands-on petting and photo attractions.
“These images abound all over the Internet and they send the worst possible message,” Carole Baskin says. “The message that people get, when they see someone from celebrities like Siegfried and Roy to backyard zoo patrons touching big cats and their cubs, is that doing so somehow makes you ‘special.’"
Rebuttal: The same way Carole insisted it was special and even necessary to conserving the species. Carole says, "For people who are not very bright it is an irresistible invitation to hand over their money, or their lives, to have the bragging rights to say that they touched the wild." So Carole took advantage of people who were "not very bright" from 1992 until 2004 when she finally was forced to stop allowing the public to interact with her cats.
Animals 24-7: "If it is the only thing in their life that makes them ‘special,’ they will defend their actions and those who enabled their actions, until [and unless] they grow up and discover that it only made them part of the abusive problem that plagues big cats in captivity.”"
Rebuttal: Read Carole's arrogant description of people who own exotic animals.
Animals 24-7: "Meanwhile, “As long as people will pay or volunteer their time to handle big cats and their cubs, the exploiters who profit from it will continue to breed more and more of these charismatic cubs to fill that demand.”"
Rebuttal: Says Carole Baskin as her husband Howard pays to hold a tiger cub.
No contact, period
Animals 24-7: "Big Cat Rescue has a large volunteer corps, more than 80 people at any given time, who make behavioral enrichment toys for the cats, manage the gift shop, organize fundraising events, and do a wide variety of other chores around the grounds.
But no one at Big Cat Rescue, including Carole and Howard Baskin themselves, has routine physical contact with the resident cats, or enters the cages. Cleaning and feeding are done with equipment that avoids the risk of contact.
If a Big Cat Rescue cat must undergo a veterinary examination or procedure, the cat is sedated before anyone enters the cage."
Rebuttal: Carole Baskin has posted pictures on Facebook that show BCR staff handling some cats unsedated. Carole was all for exotic pet ownership and hands on contact with her cats and only "evolved" her way of thinking after people were getting injured. It was then that she decided she could make more money as a sanctuary.
- Handling Unsedated Bobcat
- Carole's Daughter Handing Unsedated Bobcat
- Carole's Daughter Handling Unsedated Bobcat On Leash
In this video you will see someone working for BCR petting a Caracal named Crackle.
Sightlines
Animals 24-7: "Big Cat Rescue frequently hosts photographers, both from news media and for paid commercial photo shoots. Many of the Big Cat Rescue cat enclosures have been designed to enable photographers to capture images suitable for calendars, postcards, t-shirts, and other uses in which the animals appear to be in the wild, without actually putting anyone in proximity to an animal."
Rebuttal: Below are pictures taken at BCR. One would have to use a telephoto or zoom lens to remove the cages from their shots.
Animals 24-7: "Much more attention, though, has been put into giving the resident large and exotic cats at least a semblance of life in the wild. Few of the cats spend all of their time in just one cage. Rather, cages are linked by corridors to other cages, set at angles to each other, offering the resident animals a variety of views, including views of other animals. Most of the cages include trees, or whole copses of trees. Most of the sightlines offer varied backgrounds, within which shifting shadows, vegetation moving in the breeze, other cats in distant cages, and workers on the access paths may present stimulating motion.
Instead of just one place to climb and hide, most of the Big Cat Rescue cats have several. Many share their cages with one or more compatible companions––all sterilized, to preclude any possibility of breeding.
The bigger animals with larger space needs, especially tigers, take turns sharing a large open exercise area, larger than a football field, with a pond. Those who get along well with each other may share the open area for several days."
Rebuttal: Did you know BCR received a warning after housing leopards in a topless enclosure? They even tried to cover up their blunder by feigning ignorance.
Buffers
Animals 24-7: "At 67 acres, Big Cat Rescue is about the same size as many American Zoo Association-accredited zoos, including the well-regarded Lowry Park Zoo in Tampa, which is either 56 or 63 acres, depending on which published figure one accepts."
Rebuttal: How much of the 67 acres is actually used for housing the cats? Notice how there is a big brown lake that takes up much of their land. There is also a parking lot that takes up space.
Instead of just one place to climb and hide, most of the Big Cat Rescue cats have several. Many share their cages with one or more compatible companions––all sterilized, to preclude any possibility of breeding.
The bigger animals with larger space needs, especially tigers, take turns sharing a large open exercise area, larger than a football field, with a pond. Those who get along well with each other may share the open area for several days."
Rebuttal: Did you know BCR received a warning after housing leopards in a topless enclosure? They even tried to cover up their blunder by feigning ignorance.
Buffers
Animals 24-7: "At 67 acres, Big Cat Rescue is about the same size as many American Zoo Association-accredited zoos, including the well-regarded Lowry Park Zoo in Tampa, which is either 56 or 63 acres, depending on which published figure one accepts."
Rebuttal: How much of the 67 acres is actually used for housing the cats? Notice how there is a big brown lake that takes up much of their land. There is also a parking lot that takes up space.
Animals 24-7: "Though the Lowry Park Zoo makes relatively efficient use of space, Big Cat Rescue appears to use a much higher percentage of the available land for animal housing.
Big Cat Rescue does not have the largest amount of land of any sanctuary in the U.S. that houses large and exotic cats, but appears to have the most land actually occupied by the cats. Buffers against encroachment include several tracts of undeveloped property and the Florida 589 elevated four-lane highway."
Rebuttal: Like we already pointed out, a lot of their land is taken up by the lake and parking lot not the cats.
“Wildlife on Easy Street”
Animals 24-7: "Encroachment was not a worry when Big Cat Rescue opened in November 1992 as an intended breeding compound on 40 acres at the end of Easy Street, a dirt lane apparently named for a long-ago real estate development that never came into existence.
The original name of Big Cat Rescue was “Wildlife on Easy Street,” but Carole Baskin changed it soon after rededicated the facility as a sanctuary, upon realizing that the phrase “on Easy Street,” while catchy, might give potential donors the mistaken idea that the facility does not need money."
Rebuttal: She changed the name to escape the reputation she had earned after many complained of her selling sick cubs and customers were being injured in her bed and breakfast scheme. She decided then to convert her cats to 'rescues' and call herself a rescue/sanctuary. How can a facility claim to be a sanctuary when all of their cats were bought and born at their facility?
Animals 24-7: "Carole Baskin, then Carole Lewis, had already enjoyed some success as a breeder of Himalayan show cats when earlier in 1992 she acquired her first bobcat, Windsong, at an auction."
Rebuttal: She did not 'acquire' she purchased Windsong for $780, called her a 'rescue', then bred her and sold her kittens. Carole had already been buying cats to set up her breeding operation in 1992....BEFORE she claims she rescued 56 bobcat kittens.
Animals 24-7: "Learning that another 56 bobcats were soon to be killed and skinned at a Minnesota fur farm, Carole and her second husband, Don Lewis, bought the lot."
Rebuttal: They only bought the kittens, most of them were sold and the rest made pets of and later used for breeding. They left the older cats, about to be killed for their fur, there to die. A true rescue would have taken the adults, but they couldn't sell them as easily.
Animals 24-7: "Initially they intended to breed the bobcats in a misguided attempt to help conserve the species, but within the year they learned the realities of the large and exotic cat trade, and turned instead to rescuing."
Rebuttal: Within a year? They bred cats until 2001! They did not 'intend' to...they DID, for 9 years!
Animals 24-7: "Windsong, who lived to 19 years old, became the Big Cat Rescue emblematic animal. By 1996 Don Lewis, many years Carole’s elder, wanted to relocate to Costa Rica. Their relationship faltered.
Rebuttal: Don Lewis mysteriously disappeared after filing for an order of protection against Carole. She threatened to kill him.
Animals 24-7: "In August 1997 Lewis’ van was found at a local airport, but Lewis himself was never seen again. He was declared dead in 2002. Carole Baskin inherited most of his $6 million estate. But she had already built Big Cat Rescue into a nationally noted sanctuary of considerable size, with an annual budget of more than $400,000 and net assets of more than $1 million."
Rebuttal: Don Lewis filed for an order of protection against Carole two months before he vanished. Don said she threatened to kill him and hid his gun. Carole is suspected of forging Don’s signature on a will and power of attorney drawn up by her because a supposed witness to the signing of those documents later admitted to detectives that she never saw Don sign but perjured herself in court out of fear of Carole.
Listening
Animals 24-7: "Carole Baskin had also come to rethink her initial operation presumptions and philosophy, as she expressed in a January 2004 essay to fellow sanctuarians and animal advocates entitled “It is not their fault for not listening.”
Opened the essay, “If the public is not getting our message, it is not their fault for not listening. It is ours, for inadequately or inappropriately communicating.
“Animal rescue facilities such as mine cannot handle the number of creatures in need of sanctuary when public ignorance fuels the market for an endless supply of cute and cuddly cubs,” Carole Baskin continued."
Rebuttal: Carole claims she turns down hundreds of cats a year but she had to desperately search for one to rescue when she had a chance to be on TV.
Animals 24-7: "“While every animal we rescue is a sentient creature, deserving of our efforts, we are doing a great disservice to the hordes of animals we cannot afford to take in if we do not devote substantial time to public education."
Rebuttal: She only truly began rescuing cats after being exposed by Bay News 9.
“Up to my elbows in cat food”
Animals 24-7: "“Seven years ago,” Carole Baskin recalled, “while up to my elbows in cat food, at the end of a long day of medicating and cage-cleaning for more than 100 wild and exotic cats, the director of a large, well-funded charity chided me for my misappropriation of time. He said I should clean myself up and address large groups of people who could help me in my mission."
Rebuttal: Carole has always used volunteers...hundreds of them....to care for the cats. She spends her time putting out fires when people call her out for lying to the public for donations and trying to pass laws to keep anyone from doing what she does...exploit her cats for money
Animals 24-7: “At the time I could not imagine how the daily chores would get done if I spent my time talking to people, but little by little, I forced myself to find time at night for letter-writing and to compose articles, a web site, and training manuals, and books to reach people I did not have time for during precious daylight hours."
Rebuttal: Carole "trained" her cats to walk on leashes. She put a harness on one of her cougar cubs and left it until he swallowed the buckle trying to chew it off after it embedded in his skin. She even wrote books guiding people how to raise exotic cats as pets. Carole sold both books and tapes telling people how to care for the exotic cats she sold them as housepets.
Animals 24-7: “The results inspired me to become more effective. I noticed that people pay more attention to leaders who are attractive, articulate, and well groomed. I was none of those things."
Rebuttal: Carole dropped out of school at 15 to run away with an older man.
Animals 24-7:" Recognizing that the messenger speaks louder than the message, I lost 60 pounds and threw away all of my stretch pants and t-shirts. I invested in signature clothing that people remember and associate with our exotic cats.
“Being shy and resultantly anti social, I had to learn how to engage others convincingly. I read every relevant book I could get my hands on, attended every motivational lecture I could afford, and tried to learn from observing others.
“I still do all of this because I learned that it works.”"
“Hurricane Howard”
Animals 24-7: "Within the year Carole had married Howard Baskin, described by St. Petersburg Times staff writer Leonora LaPeter Anton in 2007 as “a semiretired banker with an MBA from Harvard Business School and a law degree,” who “brought a corporate mind-set to Big Cat Rescue,” helping to double receipts from the annual Big Cat Rescue Fur Ball in just his first year of involvement."
Rebuttal: Here's another article written by the same writer that wrote the piece on Howard. We find it quite odd that at around the same time Howard Baskin showed up the true stories of the cats began to suddenly disappear.
Animals 24-7: "But Carole Baskin had already demonstrated a considerable knack for building the business side of Big Cat Rescue––and for coping with emergencies, including four hurricanes in six weeks in August and September 2004. “The last hurricane took out our main computer,” Carole blogged, “so I am writing on a battery powered laptop. My vision of our parking area is obscured by a tree that has fallen on our E-center,” used for education, entertainment, and special events.”
Rebuttal: The "E-center" is not the only place where people can party at Big Cat Rescue. They have a party room where you can get your groove on with the skulls and pelts of BCR's deceased cats adorned in a display case in the room.
Animals 24-7: "Having given the Big Cat Rescue generator to another beleaguered sanctuary after the first of the four hurricanes, Carole continued, “We bought another and intended to buy two more, so that there would be one for each of our freezers and one for one of our wells. We discovered that the size of generator that we could afford could not handle even our smallest freezer.”"
Rebuttal: Perfect example of Carole "coping with emergencies".
“Ivan the Terrible”
Animals 24-7: "Worse, “During Hurricane Ivan,” the last of the series, “several trees fell into our open-top cages, including one that fell against the wall of our three-acre cage. The wall held, but the tree created a ramp that could have become an escape route.
“Another tree fell in the servals’ open yard. The good news is that the servals were moved earlier in the week. The bad news is that the tree crashed down across the wall of the empty cage and smashed into the top of Lola’s enclosure. Lola is a fully clawed black leopard who doesn’t like people,” Carole Baskin elaborated. “Fortunately, thanks to last year’s Fur Ball, Lola was among the cats who got a concrete bunker under a hill of earth.
“Cody and Missouri, the mountain lions, had a tree fall on their roof… Consider the heroism involved in blocking the escape hatch on a cage that contains two frightened cougars with your own body,” a practice Big Cat Rescue normally would not tolerate, “while fastening a patch of cage wire in place, in blinding rain and gusts of wind.”
Most of the animals at Big Cat Rescue took cover during the hurricanes, but the tigers apparently just thought it was monsoon season. “The tigers typically will choose to lie out in the open and watch the flying debris,” Carole noted.
(Big Cat Rescue made a video about preparing a sanctuary for a hurricane: BIG CAT RESCUE – Hurricane preparation!!! .)"
Rebuttal: Carole has simple wire cages held together by hog rings. If BCR takes a direct hit from a hurricane the animals will most likely be roaming around the mall and neighborhoods surrounding BCR. To this day BCR, built on a dump, floods every time it rains, leaving the cats with dens filled with water and walking in mud. Even with their multimillions in donations from duped supporters they have never corrected the problem.
Law enforcement
Animals 24-7: "While Howard Baskin brought some financial acumen to Big Cat Rescue, his most visible contribution appears to be legal and political savvy, helping Carole to turn the corner from mostly rescuing to mostly taking the offensive against the uses and breeding of large and exotic cats that have made the rescuing necessary.
The 2003 federal Captive Wildlife Safety Act, also known as the Shambala Act, had already been pushed through Congress through the efforts of actress and Shambala sanctuary founder Tippi Hedren.
The Baskins have taken a pro-active approach to enforcing it, not waiting for the USDA Animal & Plant Health Inspection Service to discover violations on their own. Instead, the Baskins initiate investigations of their own all over the U.S., and ensure that USDA-APHIS receives entire dossiers about cases warranting prosecution, not just random tips."
Rebuttal: This is another way Baskin spends her time to avoid actually caring for her cats....causing problems for other facilities. It's quite humorous that they go after other facilities when they themselves fail to obey the laws at times. Remember the whole housing leopards in a roofless cage?
Animals 24-7: "Within five years of the passage of the Captive Wildlife Safety Act, the Baskins blogged in 2008, the new law and improved enforcement had “caused such a dramatic decrease in the number of unwanted big cats that we are on the brink of no more abused and unwanted big cats.”"
Rebuttal: The 'problem' was never as big as Carole made it out to be. She once had to search for a cat to rescue at the same time claiming to turn down hundreds a year.
Animals 24-7: "That declaration was premature. Big Cat Rescue is still receiving abused and unwanted big cats, while the breeding and exhibition industry has rallied to try to preserve their industry and way of life."
Rebuttal: Carole began with 148 cats of her own private collection. At the time of this writing she has about 85 cats left. The drop in the number of cats leaves room for 63 empty cages. Why does she not rescue more big cats instead of spending money on the salaries for her family?
Animals 24-7: "Carole Baskin’s daughter Jamie Veronica, who grew up at Big Cat Rescue and married volunteer veterinarian Justin Boorstein, might be seen as the second generation of sanctuary leadership. But the Baskins hope that the need for rescue work will be substantially diminished by the time the youngest Big Cat Rescue animals are the ages that the oldest have reached now, and that additions to the Memorial Wall will become steadily fewer."
No shortage of mission
Animals 24-7: "The Big Cat Rescue will not run out of mission. Other nations are also coping with large and exotic cats proliferating and being misused in private hands. Jamie Veronica and Boorstein in 2013 visited Spain to help Stichting AAP, a 37-year-old Dutch sanctuary, to add big cat facilities to a AAP Primadonus, a 400-acre subsidiary in Spain."
Rebuttal: The whole "will not run out of mission" thing kind goes against their claim of wanting to put themselves out of business. Could they possibly want to stay in the business for as long as possible to rake in the big bucks since the public is willing to pay large amounts to a sad story such as an 'abused' big cat? After all, they did take home a staggering $21-million in a short time frame. Also one has got to be wondering if BCR use donated money meant for their cats to pay for the trip?
Animals 24-7: "As similar needs are recognized and facilities developed elsewhere, Big Cat Rescue hopes to further share expertise. Meanwhile, there are still several thousand large and exotic cats in inappropriate facilities in the U.S., who may never have places at Big Cat Rescue or on the Memorial Wall, but whom the Baskins never forget."
Rebuttal: Carole should add all the live rabbits and chickens she had thrown into her cats cages to her memorial wall. Why are their lives less valuable than the lives of exotic cats? Maybe because she can't make any money off of rabbits and chickens? The cats at Big Cat Rescue are exploited in death as well. When one dies she asks the public to purchase memorial plaques.
Big Cat Rescue does not have the largest amount of land of any sanctuary in the U.S. that houses large and exotic cats, but appears to have the most land actually occupied by the cats. Buffers against encroachment include several tracts of undeveloped property and the Florida 589 elevated four-lane highway."
Rebuttal: Like we already pointed out, a lot of their land is taken up by the lake and parking lot not the cats.
“Wildlife on Easy Street”
Animals 24-7: "Encroachment was not a worry when Big Cat Rescue opened in November 1992 as an intended breeding compound on 40 acres at the end of Easy Street, a dirt lane apparently named for a long-ago real estate development that never came into existence.
The original name of Big Cat Rescue was “Wildlife on Easy Street,” but Carole Baskin changed it soon after rededicated the facility as a sanctuary, upon realizing that the phrase “on Easy Street,” while catchy, might give potential donors the mistaken idea that the facility does not need money."
Rebuttal: She changed the name to escape the reputation she had earned after many complained of her selling sick cubs and customers were being injured in her bed and breakfast scheme. She decided then to convert her cats to 'rescues' and call herself a rescue/sanctuary. How can a facility claim to be a sanctuary when all of their cats were bought and born at their facility?
Animals 24-7: "Carole Baskin, then Carole Lewis, had already enjoyed some success as a breeder of Himalayan show cats when earlier in 1992 she acquired her first bobcat, Windsong, at an auction."
Rebuttal: She did not 'acquire' she purchased Windsong for $780, called her a 'rescue', then bred her and sold her kittens. Carole had already been buying cats to set up her breeding operation in 1992....BEFORE she claims she rescued 56 bobcat kittens.
Animals 24-7: "Learning that another 56 bobcats were soon to be killed and skinned at a Minnesota fur farm, Carole and her second husband, Don Lewis, bought the lot."
Rebuttal: They only bought the kittens, most of them were sold and the rest made pets of and later used for breeding. They left the older cats, about to be killed for their fur, there to die. A true rescue would have taken the adults, but they couldn't sell them as easily.
Animals 24-7: "Initially they intended to breed the bobcats in a misguided attempt to help conserve the species, but within the year they learned the realities of the large and exotic cat trade, and turned instead to rescuing."
Rebuttal: Within a year? They bred cats until 2001! They did not 'intend' to...they DID, for 9 years!
Animals 24-7: "Windsong, who lived to 19 years old, became the Big Cat Rescue emblematic animal. By 1996 Don Lewis, many years Carole’s elder, wanted to relocate to Costa Rica. Their relationship faltered.
Rebuttal: Don Lewis mysteriously disappeared after filing for an order of protection against Carole. She threatened to kill him.
Animals 24-7: "In August 1997 Lewis’ van was found at a local airport, but Lewis himself was never seen again. He was declared dead in 2002. Carole Baskin inherited most of his $6 million estate. But she had already built Big Cat Rescue into a nationally noted sanctuary of considerable size, with an annual budget of more than $400,000 and net assets of more than $1 million."
Rebuttal: Don Lewis filed for an order of protection against Carole two months before he vanished. Don said she threatened to kill him and hid his gun. Carole is suspected of forging Don’s signature on a will and power of attorney drawn up by her because a supposed witness to the signing of those documents later admitted to detectives that she never saw Don sign but perjured herself in court out of fear of Carole.
Listening
Animals 24-7: "Carole Baskin had also come to rethink her initial operation presumptions and philosophy, as she expressed in a January 2004 essay to fellow sanctuarians and animal advocates entitled “It is not their fault for not listening.”
Opened the essay, “If the public is not getting our message, it is not their fault for not listening. It is ours, for inadequately or inappropriately communicating.
“Animal rescue facilities such as mine cannot handle the number of creatures in need of sanctuary when public ignorance fuels the market for an endless supply of cute and cuddly cubs,” Carole Baskin continued."
Rebuttal: Carole claims she turns down hundreds of cats a year but she had to desperately search for one to rescue when she had a chance to be on TV.
Animals 24-7: "“While every animal we rescue is a sentient creature, deserving of our efforts, we are doing a great disservice to the hordes of animals we cannot afford to take in if we do not devote substantial time to public education."
Rebuttal: She only truly began rescuing cats after being exposed by Bay News 9.
“Up to my elbows in cat food”
Animals 24-7: "“Seven years ago,” Carole Baskin recalled, “while up to my elbows in cat food, at the end of a long day of medicating and cage-cleaning for more than 100 wild and exotic cats, the director of a large, well-funded charity chided me for my misappropriation of time. He said I should clean myself up and address large groups of people who could help me in my mission."
Rebuttal: Carole has always used volunteers...hundreds of them....to care for the cats. She spends her time putting out fires when people call her out for lying to the public for donations and trying to pass laws to keep anyone from doing what she does...exploit her cats for money
Animals 24-7: “At the time I could not imagine how the daily chores would get done if I spent my time talking to people, but little by little, I forced myself to find time at night for letter-writing and to compose articles, a web site, and training manuals, and books to reach people I did not have time for during precious daylight hours."
Rebuttal: Carole "trained" her cats to walk on leashes. She put a harness on one of her cougar cubs and left it until he swallowed the buckle trying to chew it off after it embedded in his skin. She even wrote books guiding people how to raise exotic cats as pets. Carole sold both books and tapes telling people how to care for the exotic cats she sold them as housepets.
Animals 24-7: “The results inspired me to become more effective. I noticed that people pay more attention to leaders who are attractive, articulate, and well groomed. I was none of those things."
Rebuttal: Carole dropped out of school at 15 to run away with an older man.
Animals 24-7:" Recognizing that the messenger speaks louder than the message, I lost 60 pounds and threw away all of my stretch pants and t-shirts. I invested in signature clothing that people remember and associate with our exotic cats.
“Being shy and resultantly anti social, I had to learn how to engage others convincingly. I read every relevant book I could get my hands on, attended every motivational lecture I could afford, and tried to learn from observing others.
“I still do all of this because I learned that it works.”"
“Hurricane Howard”
Animals 24-7: "Within the year Carole had married Howard Baskin, described by St. Petersburg Times staff writer Leonora LaPeter Anton in 2007 as “a semiretired banker with an MBA from Harvard Business School and a law degree,” who “brought a corporate mind-set to Big Cat Rescue,” helping to double receipts from the annual Big Cat Rescue Fur Ball in just his first year of involvement."
Rebuttal: Here's another article written by the same writer that wrote the piece on Howard. We find it quite odd that at around the same time Howard Baskin showed up the true stories of the cats began to suddenly disappear.
Animals 24-7: "But Carole Baskin had already demonstrated a considerable knack for building the business side of Big Cat Rescue––and for coping with emergencies, including four hurricanes in six weeks in August and September 2004. “The last hurricane took out our main computer,” Carole blogged, “so I am writing on a battery powered laptop. My vision of our parking area is obscured by a tree that has fallen on our E-center,” used for education, entertainment, and special events.”
Rebuttal: The "E-center" is not the only place where people can party at Big Cat Rescue. They have a party room where you can get your groove on with the skulls and pelts of BCR's deceased cats adorned in a display case in the room.
Animals 24-7: "Having given the Big Cat Rescue generator to another beleaguered sanctuary after the first of the four hurricanes, Carole continued, “We bought another and intended to buy two more, so that there would be one for each of our freezers and one for one of our wells. We discovered that the size of generator that we could afford could not handle even our smallest freezer.”"
Rebuttal: Perfect example of Carole "coping with emergencies".
“Ivan the Terrible”
Animals 24-7: "Worse, “During Hurricane Ivan,” the last of the series, “several trees fell into our open-top cages, including one that fell against the wall of our three-acre cage. The wall held, but the tree created a ramp that could have become an escape route.
“Another tree fell in the servals’ open yard. The good news is that the servals were moved earlier in the week. The bad news is that the tree crashed down across the wall of the empty cage and smashed into the top of Lola’s enclosure. Lola is a fully clawed black leopard who doesn’t like people,” Carole Baskin elaborated. “Fortunately, thanks to last year’s Fur Ball, Lola was among the cats who got a concrete bunker under a hill of earth.
“Cody and Missouri, the mountain lions, had a tree fall on their roof… Consider the heroism involved in blocking the escape hatch on a cage that contains two frightened cougars with your own body,” a practice Big Cat Rescue normally would not tolerate, “while fastening a patch of cage wire in place, in blinding rain and gusts of wind.”
Most of the animals at Big Cat Rescue took cover during the hurricanes, but the tigers apparently just thought it was monsoon season. “The tigers typically will choose to lie out in the open and watch the flying debris,” Carole noted.
(Big Cat Rescue made a video about preparing a sanctuary for a hurricane: BIG CAT RESCUE – Hurricane preparation!!! .)"
Rebuttal: Carole has simple wire cages held together by hog rings. If BCR takes a direct hit from a hurricane the animals will most likely be roaming around the mall and neighborhoods surrounding BCR. To this day BCR, built on a dump, floods every time it rains, leaving the cats with dens filled with water and walking in mud. Even with their multimillions in donations from duped supporters they have never corrected the problem.
Law enforcement
Animals 24-7: "While Howard Baskin brought some financial acumen to Big Cat Rescue, his most visible contribution appears to be legal and political savvy, helping Carole to turn the corner from mostly rescuing to mostly taking the offensive against the uses and breeding of large and exotic cats that have made the rescuing necessary.
The 2003 federal Captive Wildlife Safety Act, also known as the Shambala Act, had already been pushed through Congress through the efforts of actress and Shambala sanctuary founder Tippi Hedren.
The Baskins have taken a pro-active approach to enforcing it, not waiting for the USDA Animal & Plant Health Inspection Service to discover violations on their own. Instead, the Baskins initiate investigations of their own all over the U.S., and ensure that USDA-APHIS receives entire dossiers about cases warranting prosecution, not just random tips."
Rebuttal: This is another way Baskin spends her time to avoid actually caring for her cats....causing problems for other facilities. It's quite humorous that they go after other facilities when they themselves fail to obey the laws at times. Remember the whole housing leopards in a roofless cage?
Animals 24-7: "Within five years of the passage of the Captive Wildlife Safety Act, the Baskins blogged in 2008, the new law and improved enforcement had “caused such a dramatic decrease in the number of unwanted big cats that we are on the brink of no more abused and unwanted big cats.”"
Rebuttal: The 'problem' was never as big as Carole made it out to be. She once had to search for a cat to rescue at the same time claiming to turn down hundreds a year.
Animals 24-7: "That declaration was premature. Big Cat Rescue is still receiving abused and unwanted big cats, while the breeding and exhibition industry has rallied to try to preserve their industry and way of life."
Rebuttal: Carole began with 148 cats of her own private collection. At the time of this writing she has about 85 cats left. The drop in the number of cats leaves room for 63 empty cages. Why does she not rescue more big cats instead of spending money on the salaries for her family?
Animals 24-7: "Carole Baskin’s daughter Jamie Veronica, who grew up at Big Cat Rescue and married volunteer veterinarian Justin Boorstein, might be seen as the second generation of sanctuary leadership. But the Baskins hope that the need for rescue work will be substantially diminished by the time the youngest Big Cat Rescue animals are the ages that the oldest have reached now, and that additions to the Memorial Wall will become steadily fewer."
No shortage of mission
Animals 24-7: "The Big Cat Rescue will not run out of mission. Other nations are also coping with large and exotic cats proliferating and being misused in private hands. Jamie Veronica and Boorstein in 2013 visited Spain to help Stichting AAP, a 37-year-old Dutch sanctuary, to add big cat facilities to a AAP Primadonus, a 400-acre subsidiary in Spain."
Rebuttal: The whole "will not run out of mission" thing kind goes against their claim of wanting to put themselves out of business. Could they possibly want to stay in the business for as long as possible to rake in the big bucks since the public is willing to pay large amounts to a sad story such as an 'abused' big cat? After all, they did take home a staggering $21-million in a short time frame. Also one has got to be wondering if BCR use donated money meant for their cats to pay for the trip?
Animals 24-7: "As similar needs are recognized and facilities developed elsewhere, Big Cat Rescue hopes to further share expertise. Meanwhile, there are still several thousand large and exotic cats in inappropriate facilities in the U.S., who may never have places at Big Cat Rescue or on the Memorial Wall, but whom the Baskins never forget."
Rebuttal: Carole should add all the live rabbits and chickens she had thrown into her cats cages to her memorial wall. Why are their lives less valuable than the lives of exotic cats? Maybe because she can't make any money off of rabbits and chickens? The cats at Big Cat Rescue are exploited in death as well. When one dies she asks the public to purchase memorial plaques.