Area Vet Receives Threats After Capturing Runaway Monkey
Don Woodman of the Animal Hospital of Northwood can’t explain why people believe the vet is trying to harm the creature known as Tampa Bay's mystery monkey.
When the news broke Wednesday that the rhesus macaque monkey on the lam in Pinellas County for more than two years had been caught, many people breathed a sigh of relief.
But a local veterinarian who played an important role in capturing the runaway rhesus, says not everyone was thrilled.
Don Woodman, owner of the Animal Hospital of Northwood in Safety Harbor, says he has received threatening and prank phone calls since the news of the monkey’s capture became public.
“We’ve been getting prank calls and threats, people saying vets are evil and asking why we wouldn’t let the monkey remain free,” Woodman told Patch on Thursday.
“That’s the nature of people, to think he should be free. But I don’t understand why people think vets are going to hurt these creatures.”
Woodman says the capture of the monkey, nicknamed “Cornelius," was the end result of a long process that began almost three years ago.
He and trapper Vernon Yates of Seminole had been trying to capture the macaque without harming it. After the monkey bit a St. Petersburg woman earlier this month, Yates and Woodman began tracking him in her yard.
Woodman says it took three attempts to bring Cornelius down; the first dart missed him, the second dart didn’t have enough medication in it, but the third dart had the right dose. After a short chase, he finally fell and was captured.
“Theoretically it should have been easy, but out in the field, it’s not,” Woodman said.
The monkey spent a few hours at the animal hospital, where blood was drawn for tests to determine what kind of diseases it may be carrying, its blood cell count and condition of its vital organs.
From there the macaque was transferred to Yates’ facility, Wildlife Rescue and Rehabilitation in Seminole, where it will be quarantined for 30 days while they attempt to find him a proper home.
Woodman wants to reassure people that the creature will absolutely not be put down unless the tests determine it is carrying a serious disease, and it will not be given to a facility that wants to use it for publicity purposes.
"We hope to have a number of facilities that wish to give it a good home."
Woodman also says that he is not doing any of this for money or notoriety. He's paying for the blood tests and lab work himself.
“I thank God we did catch him. If he stayed loose, he would have hurt somebody else, possibly a child, and there would have been an outcry to euthanize him. We did this so he wouldn't be euthanized."
If you've been following this story, we want to know: What do you think should happen to the runaway rhesus? Is life at a Florida animal sanctuary the right move, and can he readjust and flourish there? Does he belong in a zoo, or back out in the wild somewhere?
Post a comment below and join the conversation.
Donna Morris
12:26 pm on Saturday, October 27, 2012
Thanks Doc for doing the monkey and the community a huge favor. this animal needs to be placed in an environmental habitat that is good for him, not in suburbia.
Kimber Marnen
2:01 pm on Saturday, October 27, 2012
I think a Florida animal sanctuary would be best. Returning him to his "natural habitat" is not a familiar place to him. He wouldn't know what to eat or what to be be afraid of-he has only learned the predators here. I also think that, while they would take good care of him, a zoo would be too confining.