Dentist Who Killed Cecil The Lion Returns To Work
MINNEAPOLIS (AP/WCCO) -- The Minnesota dentist who killed Cecil the lion returned to work Tuesday after weeks away, walking silently into his small dental practice, past swarming media and a handful of protesters calling for him to be sent to Zimbabwe to face trial.
Walter Palmer had largely retreated out of the public eye since he was identified as Cecil's Killer in July, offering little insight into the hunt that catapulted his name onto the world stage until a Sunday interview with The Associated Press in which he defended the kill as legal and announced his plan to return to work.
Some of the uproar bubbled up shortly after sunrise Tuesday as a security guard whisked Palmer inside the clinic, past reporters shouting questions and a protester repeatedly yelling "Extradite Palmer!" Palmer walked from a nearby street where police had blocked off traffic, meeting the guard in the parking lot of his Bloomington practice and rushing through a door covered in messages reading: "Justice for Cecil" and "May you never hunt again."
The small throng of protesters didn't match the furor in the days after Palmer was named as Cecil's killer during a July hunt in Zimbabwe's vast Hwange National Park, when hundreds gathered to hold vigils for the big cat with the black mane and forced River Bluff Dental to temporarily close. Just a few protesters were on site when he arrived.
The crowd grew to about 15 by midmorning, holding signs calling for an end to trophy hunting and chanting on a megaphone: "We will never falter! Prosecute Walter!"
Palmer left through a back door after four hours, only to return an hour later at noon -- this time wearing a dress shirt and tie, once again to the taunts of protestors.
Cathy Pierce said she drove more than an hour from her home in East Bethel to the Bloomington clinic to "fight for animals who can't fight for themselves."
She scoffed at Palmer's suggestion in his interview with the AP that protesters had unfairly targeted his employees and family, in some cases threatening violence.
"We're not picking on his staff or his family. We're picking on him," she said. "We want him to know that we're not going to forget."
While Palmer's guides on the hunt have either been charged or await charges for their involvement in Cecil's killing, the Zimbabwean government's pursuit of the dentist has cooled off amid fears it could hamper a hunting industry that is lucrative and important for the country.
Palmer hired local guides for the hunt and used an arrow to hit the lion, who authorities have said was lured from a protected wildlife preserve. Authorities say they then tracked the lion before shooting him.
It's been a month since Zimbabwean officials announced that police would process paperwork to extradite Palmer for participating in the hunt, but as of Monday, a police spokeswoman in Harare, the African country's capital, said there were no new developments in the case.
An attorney for Palmer told AP that he offered to make Palmer available to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to talk about the case several weeks ago, but he hasn't heard back.
"If some governmental agency or investigative unit would make a claim that he had violated some law, then we'd talk about it," said Joe Friedberg, a lawyer advising Palmer pro bono. "There haven't been any official allegations by anybody that he has done anything wrong."
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service said Tuesday it is still conducting an investigation into Palmer's actions to see if any U.S. laws might have been broken. WCCO reached out to the U.S. Department of Justice, but did not hear back.
Stephanie Michaelis, who lives near the clinic, walked over to argue with protesters, telling them to leave Palmer alone. She said the uproar over Cecil's death was overblown and that people should be more concerned about abortions and threats to human life.
Among the patients Tuesday was Thomas Dressel, who said his wife was a regular but it was his first visit as a patient. Dressel said he trusts Palmer's insistence that the hunt was legal and that he had no idea he was tracking a famous lion. Dressel also said that as a retired doctor, he wanted to support a fellow medical professional.
"I support his business. I'm sure that this has really hurt his practice," he said.
Bloomington Police Deputy Chief Mike Hartley said police would be there as long as media were gathered. He said police don't believe Palmer's safety is at risk.
Several protesters told WCCO they would not be back Wednesday, but some said they would. The protesters are not part of a single group, so it is unclear how long or how large future protests will be.
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