Missing monkeys: Two tamarins disappear from Dallas Zoo in latest suspicious incident

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Dallas Zoo Missing Animals
This photo provided by the Dallas Zoo shows an emperor tamarin that lives at the zoo. (Dallas Zoo via AP)

Missing monkeys: Two tamarins disappear from Dallas Zoo in latest suspicious incident

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Two tamarin monkeys disappeared from the Dallas Zoo on Monday, becoming the latest victims in a string of suspicious activity at the zoo this month.

The zoo claimed it believed the emperor tamarin monkeys were stolen rather than escaped after it found that the habitat was “clearly intentionally compromised.”

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“Emperor tamarin monkeys would likely stay close to home — the Zoo searched near their habitat and across Zoo grounds and did not locate them,” the zoo said in a statement Monday.

The matter has been referred to the Dallas Police Department, which supported the zoo’s suspicion of sabotage in its preliminary investigation, claiming it “believed the animals were intentionally taken from the enclosure,” according to CNN.

A picture of an interested person sought by the police was released on Tuesday, but the person was not identified as a suspect.

https://twitter.com/DallasPD/status/1620464705985970177

Monday’s disappearance marked the fourth suspicious event at the zoo this month after a clouded leopard named Nova escaped her enclosure on Jan. 13. Nova’s enclosure was also intentionally cut, Dallas Police said. She was found later that day near her habitat.

Another incident found the enclosure of the zoo’s langur monkeys was also cut, but none of the monkeys escaped their habitat. At the time, police claimed they were not sure the incidents were related, despite the similarities.

The third incident included the death of a vulture. The vulture was discovered dead in its habitat with an unusual wound and injuries that indicated the death was not from natural causes, zoo President and CEO Gregg Hudson said in a news conference last week.

https://twitter.com/DallasZoo/status/1617924019499433991

The zoo has since expanded its security camera coverage, more than doubled its overnight security presence, increased its amount of overnight staff, and limited the abilities of some animals to go outside overnight in response to the incidents.

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Dallas Police said it is collaborating with the United States Fish and Wildlife on its investigations into the suspicious activities. The zoo is currently closed through Wednesday due to inclement weather.

The Washington Examiner reached out to the Dallas Zoo for comment.

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