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David Stanley Ford

Circus elephant won’t forget nighttime collision with SUV
Circus elephant won’t forget collision with SUV

BY the associated press    Comments Comment on this article3
Published: November 6, 2009

ENID — A runaway elephant hit by a sport utility vehicle Wednesday night blended in with the roadway and couldn’t be seen until the last second, the driver said Thursday.


Circus workers prepare to load an elephant onto a tractor-trailer Wednesday night to return it to the Garfield County Fairgrounds in Enid. Photo by Billy Hefton, Enid News & Eagle/AP

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"Didn’t have time to hit the brakes,” driver Bill Carpenter said Thursday. "At the very last second I said ‘elephant!’”

Carpenter, 68, said he swerved his sport utility vehicle and ended up sideswiping the 29-year-old female Asian elephant on U.S. 81 in Enid.

"So help me Hannah, had I hit that elephant, not swerved, it would have knocked it off its legs, and it would have landed right on top of us,” he said. "We’d have been history.”

The couple, who own a wheat farm, were not injured. But the 8-foot, 4,500-pound elephant, identified as Kamba by the animal protection group In Defense of Animals, was being examined Thursday for a broken tusk and a leg wound. A local veterinarian said the elephant appeared to have escaped major injury.

"I thought, ‘This can’t be happening,’” Carpenter said. "Out here you could hit a deer or a cow, but this can’t be happening. The good Lord was with us.”

The elephant’s tusk punched through the side of the SUV, tearing up sheet metal, he said.

After the vehicle sideswiped the elephant, Carpenter’s wife, Deena, flagged down some people and used their cell phone to call police.

"The dispatcher didn’t believe her,” Carpenter said.

Enid veterinarian Dwight Olson said the elephant was hiding in some bushes just off the highway when he arrived shortly after the accident. Handlers from the circus were able to calm her down, and Olson cleaned the leg wound and gave her some painkiller. The elephant was taken Thursday to the veterinary school at Oklahoma State University in Stillwater for a follow-up exam.

"I don’t believe there’s a broken bone, but I don’t have an X-ray room big enough to examine it,” Olson said.

The elephant had escaped from the Family Fun Circus at the Garfield County Fairgrounds earlier Wednesday after something spooked her while she was being loaded into a truck with another elephant, Olson said.

A booking agent for the circus, Rachael Bellman, said she was unaware of the incident, and a telephone message left with circus officials wasn’t immediately returned.

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David Stanley Ford





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Send those elephants back home. They don't need to be here anyway. I couldn't imagine being pulled from my home and then put in front of thousands of people to be paraded around and treated badly. They need to be in the wild.
Sunshine, okc - Nov 6, 2009 at 12:54 pm
They didn't report it because it's happened before and the owner of the elephant is facing federal charges for lack of care and liability for the previous incidents. Elephants face terrible conditions in circuses, it's no wonder they snap. Here is the article about the history of this elephant and her owner:
http://www.idanews.org/ida-breaking-news/elephants/elephant-in-oklahoma-suv-collision-has-history-of-spookingbreaking-loose/
Debbie, Oklahoma City - Nov 6, 2009 at 10:11 am
Glad the couple in the SUV were not injured and it sounds like the poor elephant will recover. Please investigate the circus and find out if they reported the escape ASAP so officials could help find the lost animal. This endangered the public as well as the elephant. The article says the escape happened "earlier" Wednesday. How much earlier ? The circus should have reported this incident to police as soon as the elephant was out of their control.
Betsy, Denver - Nov 6, 2009 at 8:46 am

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