 Forty years after hunters lassoed a young killer whale off Whidbey  Island and sold it to a Florida theme park, whale advocates are turning  to an unusual tactic to try to force the orca's release: the Endangered  Species Act.
Forty years after hunters lassoed a young killer whale off Whidbey  Island and sold it to a Florida theme park, whale advocates are turning  to an unusual tactic to try to force the orca's release: the Endangered  Species Act.  In a move legal experts said could have significant implications for other zoos and aquariums, animal-rights activists recently sued the federal government, arguing that the law may require Lolita, the killer whale who still performs at the Miami Seaquarium, be reunited with pod members in the Northwest because Puget Sound's southern resident orcas were listed as endangered in 2005.
Read more in The Seattle Times...
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