Vancouver Island man fights to keep pet tiger - Action News
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British Columbia

Vancouver Island man fights to keep pet tiger

A Victoria-area resident says he'll fight in court to keep his new pet tiger after the local municipal council passed a law banning exotic animals.

A Victoria-area resident says he'll fight in court to keep his new pet tiger after the local municipal council passed a law banning exotic animals.

David Bennett, a resident of Highlands, announced in August that he intended to bringa two-year-old tiger to live in a special enclosure on his southern Vancouver Island property.

Suzie the tiger is a two-year-old 150-kilogram Siberian-Bengal cross. ((CBC))

The local council responded by scrambling to pass a bylaw that bans exotic animals.

Bennett ignored the ban and brought the 150 kilogram tiger to the Highlands early in September.

The municipal council responded by holding a special in-camera meeting late Monday afternoon.

Highland Mayor Mark Cardinal said the council has decided to seek an injunction to move Suzie out of the Highlands.

Now Bennett plans to fight the injunction application in court.

Bennett said he adopted Suzie in August when her future was looking grim. For personal reasons her previous owner was no longer able to keep her.

David Bennett watches Suzie the Tiger inside her new pen. ((CBC))

The tiger was bred in captivity by people in the Vancouver film industry, but because she's a Siberian-Bengal cross, she doesn't qualify for most zoo programs.

With limited options, it came down to selling her for her coat and meat, or bringing her to the $15,000 pen Bennett built for her on his Millstream Road property, he said.

"Nobody seemed to want her unless they could take her apart and sell pieces of her," said Bennett on Monday.

Now, he says, Suzie is just another member of the family. "When she sees my light go on at 6:30 in the morning to make coffee, she comes straight to the fence and starts calling for me," said Bennett.

While Suzie's fate will likely be decided by the courts, in the meantime Bennett said he is getting advice on caring forhis young petfrom expertsat a Colorado sanctuary, who have inspected the enclosure and found it secure and large enough for the animal.

In May 2007a pet Siberian tiger kept on a property near 100 Mile Housekilled a woman who wasoutside its enclosure petting it.