Zoo
officials in Cleveland are considering pushing for child endangerment
charges against the parents of a 2-year-old boy who fell into a cheetah
exhibit.
The boy suffered leg
injuries after dropping 10-12 feet into the Cleveland Metropark Zoo's
cheetah exhibit on Saturday afternoon.
Kuhar says the child's parents quickly
went into the exhibit after the fall happened and that the cheetahs made
no attempt to interact with the child or his parents.
The
Cleveland Fire Department said that the mother was holding two children
when the 2-year-old fell inside but that the boy was already out of the
pit when fire crews arrived.
Cleveland Metroparks -- which manages the
city's parks, golf courses and zoo -- has reportedly served a summons
and plans to push for child endangerment charges against the parents.
The
child and his parents have not been identified. The boy was transported
to a local hospital for observation and is said to be in stable
condition.
The zoo's cheetahs are in an outdoor exhibit attached to the primate, cat and aquatics building. The zoo's website says they are fed a canine diet along with weekly bones and horse meat, chicken and rabbit.
Cheetahs
are considered to be the world's fastest land animal and are
recognizable by the round black dots on their fur. Unlike other cats,
the cheetahs claws are always out and do not fully retract.
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