Advocates want pop-drinking, cigarette-smoking chimp moved to sanctuary
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According to animal welfare advocates, it's no life for a chimpanzee. For years, Candy the chimp has lived alone at an amusement park in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
Carter Dillard is a lawyer for the Animal Legal Defense Fund. He tells As It Happens host Carol Off:
"She lives in solitary confinement in a barren cage where she is taunted by visitors who throw her lit cigarettes and she's given Coca-Cola to drink."
According to a lawyer for the amusement park, there was an attempt to move Candy to a zoo, but she was not able to adjust to the new life.
Dillard disputes that claim. "We have experts that are going to testify otherwise," he says.
The group has filed a lawsuit under a new federal rule that requires chimps in captivity to be afforded the same protections given to wild chimps.
"It's simply trying to improve her conditions and treat her as a member of an endangered population that deserves autonomy," says Dillard.