Brent Kandra’s mother asks governor to ban exotic animal ownership
COLUMBUS — The mother of an Elyria man who was fatally mauled by a bear has thrown her support behind an exotic pet ban being written in the state.
Deirdre Herbert says in a letter dated Saturday to Gov. Ted Strickland that keeping wild animals as pets is a “prescription for more tragedies.” The Humane Society of the United States, which is pushing for the ban, posted her letter on its website.
Twenty-four-year-old Brent Kandra died after an Aug. 19 attack as he fed the bear owned by another man at a suburban Cleveland animal facility.
Herbert urges Strickland to closely examine whether current owners of dangerous pets — such as bears, lions, tigers, chimpanzees and big snakes — should be able to keep the animals after the ban takes effect.
Read tomorrow’s Chronicle for more on this story.
Herbert’s letter:
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