On February 16th, Travis, a 200-pound primate lost control and attacked a woman. The huge ape went wild at his long time owner's home and mauled the face of 55-year -old Charla Nash. Sandy Herold, who had Travis since the age of 3, unsuccessfully tried stopping him with a shovel before she had to stab him with a knife to get him off of Nash. Travis then escaped and it wasn't until cops arrived that he was eventually shot to death when he attempted to open the car door of the patrol vehicle. After ripping off the mirror of the car, Travis was repeatedly shot by an officer before returning inside his home where he died.
The 15-year old chimp attacked Charla Nash so badly that she was mistaken by a cop for a male. She suffered severe hand and facial injuries and was taken to the Stamford Hospital. This was not the first time Travis escaped either. In 2003, Travis got away from Herold and was stopped by cops later on. He was caught playing in an intersection where cops then had to sedate him in order to capture him and put an end to the traffic gridlock. He was also known around his neighborhood because there were times Herold admitted to Travis' taking off with her car and going on joy rides. Here is a video of a woman describing an earlier time when Travis had attacked her previous to this incident, but she was not able to get authorities to take notice and see Travis for the threat he was...the video also features the 911 call from Herold:
Sandy Herold, 70, who lost her husband 5 years prior to this incident and her daughter to a car crash, raised Travis as a human and essentially as her own son: He was fed steak, lobster tails, took his own baths, ate at the table and drank wine from a stemmed glass. He also brushed his teeth using a Water Pik, according to the Stamford Advocate. In addition to this, he was a television Pro, appearing on commercials for Old Navy and Coca Cola.
There is speculation that Travis may have been set off due to Nash's change of hairstyle that day, making her unrecognizable to the chimp and therefore a threat. However, the interesting part of the story is that Herold had given Travis, Xanax, an anti-anxiety drug in tea earlier Monday and it was not prescribed for him. "In humans, Xanax can cause memory loss, lack of coordination, reduced sex drive and other side effects. It can also lead to aggression in people who were unstable to begin with" said Dr. Emil Coccaro, chief of psychiatry at the University of Chicago Medical Center. She also said that Xanax could have possibly made Travis worse if human studies are any indication. source
Travis was also said to have had Lyme disease, a tick-borne illness with flu-like symptoms that could have also played a part in his lash out at Charla Nash.
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Given all the information disclosed about this situation, do you feel that animals like Chimps can be pets, socialized into normal everyday human activities? Was this story an anomaly or was this more about bestiality than anything else? Let me know your thoughts...
The lady is absolutely nuts! She probably did have sex with that animal given her age and that she is a widow. She should definitely be prosecuted and held responsible for Travis' actions because no chimp should be raised in a household. Wild animals like that belong in the zoo where you can go visit him and leave him behind bars to prevent incidents like the one you describe. If given the chance again im sure Herold would house another wild animal and raise it as her child/companion. SMH! (Shaking my head)
ReplyDeleteI personally think that this lady should go to jail. If she was forewarned about the chimp and didn't take heed the warning then she is accountable for the harm done by her pet. If a dog harmed someone or another animal then the owner would be immediately responsible. Why is this not the same situation. Bottom line any sane person knows that a chimp isn't a house hold pet. Also how can she apologize for what this woman will go through for the rest of her life?
ReplyDeleteThe biggest issue is that this woman (and others who own undomesticated pets in general) fail to realize that Travis, despite how much he seemed to "love to comb" his owner's hair and share the same bed, is NOT a pet. It's only when we see this 'When Animals Attack' scenario happening with people who own these untamed animals, (sometimes illegally I might add), that people come to their senses. The owners, buying to fill some emotion void, not caring or realizing that they're essentially ripping a chimp/tiger/bear/etc from their natural habitat bringing on devastating consequences for the animal just so they can dress them up in diapers and other cute baby clothes. This story reminded me of a documentary I saw a couple months ago about women who either had adult children or were infertile and owned Spider Monkeys...sad, just sad.
ReplyDeleteKimmy and Rosebudz20 both make valid points. Herold is definitely accountable for the actions of this undomesticated animal she took into her home. It is never justifiable to have a wild animal taken from their natural environment and raised under human conditions for sake of personal fulfillment. I also saw the Spider Monkey documentary and indeed, these type of instances are always cause for alarm and disbelief. Cmon crazy people stop taking in animals that belong caged and adopt if you feel you want to raise a child!
ReplyDeleteIn answer to your question I don't believe that animals such as these can be domesticated. A couple of weeks before this tragedy occurred, I was discussing something quite similar with him. He mentioned a story about a woman who'd lived amongst primates for approximately ten years only to one day be viciously murdered by the chief of the pack. So I don't believe that the travis tragedy only occurred because of its owners actions. Although there are many things about primates that we understand there are many things that we have yet to. Until we bridge that gap we must prohibit the domesticating of animals that prove to be sporadically, and randomly life threatening.
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