LAS VEGAS, Nevada -
LAS VEGAS (AP) - Two
chimpanzees escaped a Las Vegas backyard and rampaged through a
neighborhood Thursday, pounding on cars and jumping into at least one
vehicle before police killed one primate and tranquilized the other,
authorities said.
No people were hurt, but
police said they had no choice but to kill after the agitated animals
escaped their enclosure about 10 a.m. and started running through yards
and opening car doors in a neighborhood of horse pens, palm trees and
tile-roofed, landscaped homes.
Neighborhood resident David
Plunkett said he saw the male chimpanzee jump on top of a police car -
with its lights on and an officer inside - before the animal jumped to
the ground and headed into a vacant lot.
"We tried to establish a
perimeter until the experts arrived," said Officer Marcus Martin, a Las
Vegas police spokesman. "But at least for the first animal, they
couldn't get there in time."
The Las Vegas chimps were
on the loose for about 30 minutes with police trying to corral them
before a male primate believed to weigh more than 150 pounds was shot
and killed. The other chimp, a female, was shot with a tranquilizer dart
but continued to roam the area for several more minutes before she was
hit with a second dart.
She succumbed in neighbor Tony Paolone's three-acre backyard. Martin said she was returned to her cage shortly after noon.
"They got out, and the
police did what they had to do," said Paolone, a paving company worker
who was at work during the commotion and was prevented for a time from
returning to his house while police investigated afterward.
Paolone, who keeps 12
horses on his property, said he knew the chimps lived behind a home on
his street for several years. He said he never saw them loose and he
never felt threatened.
Clark County spokesman Dan
Kulin said the owner had proper permits to keep the animals on the
property in unincorporated county territory outside Las Vegas city
limits, as well as a license from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Martin said police were
called at 10:13 a.m. and officers saw the two chimps ambling through the
neighborhood, pounding on cars and climbing at one point into the
driver side of an empty black sport utility vehicle and then out the
passenger side. A trainer offered the animals food and tried to lure
them back into captivity.
Police warned residents
through Twitter not to leave their vehicles or homes and to avoid the
area where the "dangerous" primates were roaming free. Martin said at
least one police car was dented by the animals pounding on it.
A woman called 911 saying a
large chimpanzee was on top of her car, Martin said. She told
dispatchers she had her windows rolled up and doors locked.
Plunkett, 36, said he was
alerted to the commotion by the sound of a helicopter. He estimated the
animals to be about 4 feet tall. Adult chimps can be as tall as 5½ feet
when standing upright.
Martin said police officers
tried to corral the animals to await animal control officials, but the
male chimp turned toward the gathering crowd. A veteran officer with a
shotgun killed it a little before 10:45 a.m. The officer's name wasn't
immediately made public.
Plunkett said he heard
three shots. Helicopter video showed the animal lying face down in the
middle of a road, surrounded by animal control trucks and police cars.
"We have an exotic animals
policy. It's to treat them as humanely as we can," Martin said. "But
immediately you recall the woman who has no face because of a chimp. The
officer knew they were dangerous animals and he was the last line of
defense with citizens behind him."
Martin referred to a 2009
attack on a woman who was permanently blinded and when her nose, lips,
eyelids and hands were mauled by a chimp before police killed the animal
outside a home in Stamford, Conn.
Two adult chimpanzees also
attacked a U.S. student last month after he entered their enclosure at a
primate sanctuary in South Africa.