Man arrested after death of monkey at Idaho zoo
Topics: From the Wires, News
This booking photo provided by Boise Police Department shows Michael J. Watkins on Monday, Nov. 19, 2012. Police in Idaho say Watkins, 22, is facing felony burglary and grand theft charges after the death of a monkey at the Boise zoo. The patas monkey was found dead of blunt force trauma to the head and neck early Saturday morning, shortly after a zoo security guard frightened away two male intruders. (AP Photo/Boise Police Department)(Credit: AP)BOISE, Idaho (AP) — Police have identified one of two men who they believe broke into an Idaho zoo the night a monkey was found dead there of blunt-force trauma, but questions remain about how and why the animal was killed.
Michael J. Watkins, 22, of Weiser was arrested Monday in Washington County on felony burglary and grand theft charges.
A tip from a citizen led police to Watkins after identifying a hat found in the monkey’s enclosure at Zoo Boise as similar to one Watkins was wearing Saturday, Boise Police Chief Michael Masterson said. That’s when a security guard at the zoo frightened away two intruders and found the patas monkey dead of blunt-force injuries to the head and neck.
In addition, Watkins sought care at a hospital for injuries to his upper torso sometime after the incident, and the story he gave to hospital staff “did not seem to mesh up with the injuries,” Masterson said at a news conference Monday evening.
The monkey’s death has left zoo workers shocked and devastated, zoo director Steve Burns said. The Crime Stoppers organization offered an award of up to $1,000 for information leading to the culprits’ arrest.
Investigators had not had a chance to question Watkins extensively and have not revealed whether they think the zoo break-in was a prank that turned violent or something done with more sinister intent. But the police department and community are “angered and outraged over this senseless crime,” Masterson said.
“The loss of this patas monkey has touched many lives, including our officers and investigators,” he said.
The zoo doesn’t have surveillance video. Instead, security guards patrol the grounds whenever the zoo is closed.
It was a guard who discovered the crime, Burns said, coming across two men early Saturday — one inside the zoo and one outside the perimeter fence near the primate exhibit. Both men fled, with one running into the interior of the zoo.
Investigators believe Watkins is the man who was seen inside the fence.
Burns and police were searching the grounds when Burns heard a groan and found the injured monkey outside of its exhibit, near the fence surrounding the zoo. They were able to get the animal into a crate and to the zoo’s animal hospital, but the monkey died just a few minutes later of blunt force trauma to the head and neck.
An inventory showed none of the other animals was missing or harmed.




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