A4 The BulleTin • Friday, June 25, 2021 Owner of attacking chimp credits Portland protesters deputy with saving daughter’s life sue feds over injuries WALL OF MOMS BY PHIL WRIGHT East Oregonian PENDLETON — Tamara Brogoitti’s voice on the 911 call is clear and direct. “My pet chimpanzee has at- tacked my daughter,” Brogoitti told a dispatcher. “She’s bleed- ing profusely. And the animal has to be shot.” The attack occurred Sunday morning, June 20, at Brogoitti’s home and ranch, across from the entrance to the Umatilla County Sheriff’s Office. Bro- goitti, 68, spoke about the at- tack and death of Buck publicly for the first time on Tuesday. “There are no … he was my son,” she said. “What I do want to do; I want to thank the Umatilla County Sheriff’s Of- fice.” In particular, she thanked the deputy who had to pull the trigger. “He sent Buck to heaven and saved my daughter,” she said. “It was a horrible thing that happened. For the rest of my life, I will thank that man for what he did.” She said the deputy acted with professionalism in a crisis. “My daughter was losing blood, and emergency person- nel needed to get to her,” she said. “There were no options.” The body cam video the sheriff’s office released Tuesday of the shooting shows Buck from a distance in an enclosed patio. Brogoitti is out of view, hiding in a basement with her daughter, but her voice is evi- dent and she directs the deputy to shoot the ape. The deputy fired once, hit- ting Buck in the head, killing the 200-pound chimpanzee. “There was no pain,” Bro- goitti, said. “My beautiful son folded forward and was with God. There wasn’t a twitch. ... He just went to be with God. It was horrible, but it had to happen.” Brogoitti said she was at her daughter’s side at St. Anthony the 911 call Brogoitti made af- ter the attack took place and she was able to get into the basement with her daughter. Ward explained most of the 911 recording includes pauses with little information while emergency help arrived. Buck Brogoitti Animal Rescue/Contributed This photo from 2015 shows Buck, the adult male chimpanzee Tamara Brogoitti cared for at her ranch near Pendleton. On Sunday, a Umatilla County sheriff’s deputy shot and killed the primate after it attacked Brogoitti’s adult daughter. People For The Ethical Treatment Of Animals in April warned the state Brogoitti allowed the ape to roam her prop- erty and therefore violated her permit to keep Buck. Hospital, Pendleton. She did not get into what provoked the at- tack, but said her daughter, 50, suffered bites on her thighs and buttocks. The plan was for her daughter to leave the hospital Wednesday and live for a while at Brogoitti’s home, where she will undergo physical therapy. Brogoitti also complimented the medics who rushed her daughter to the hospital, and thanked the hospital staff for its “unbelievably wonderful” treatment of her daughter. Sheriff’s office flags residence Brogoitti also did not get into details about how she and her late husband, John Bro- goitti, acquired Buck as a baby 17 years ago, only to specify it was not to exploit the animal for financial gain. Buck, she said, never appeared on a TV show, for example. Umatilla County Sheriff’s Lt. Sterrin Ward said the sher- iff’s office is treating this as it would any other animal attack, referring its report to the coun- ty’s public health department and the district attorney’s of- fice. The sheriff’s office on June 21 released two audio clips of PETA warns state Buck also pinged the radar of the nationwide nonprofit People for the Ethical Treat- ment of Animals. Brittany Peet, the PETA Foundation’s deputy general counsel for Captive Animal Law Enforcement, is- sued this statement on Monday about the attack: “PETA warned state author- ities that Tamara Brogoitti had created a ticking time bomb by engaging in direct contact with a dangerous ape, and now, he is dead and a woman has been mauled because of Brogoitti’s refusal to follow experts’ ad- vice and transfer Buck to an accredited sanctuary. Since long before the chimpanzee Travis ripped a woman’s face off in 2009, it has been clear that attacks are inevitable so long as people continue to treat chimpanzees like Chi- huahuas.” Oregon banned possession of exotic animals in 2010, with two exceptions: • If the U.S. Department of Agriculture licensed the owner of the animal. • If the owner has a valid Or- egon exotic animal permit ob- tained prior to 2010. Brogoitti fell into the sec- ond category. But according to PETA, Brogoitti was violating state laws and rules and the terms of her permit for keep- ing Buck. PETA on April 16 sent a let- ter and complaint about Bro- goitti to Isaak Stapleton, direc- tor of Food Safety and Animal Health, the agency under the Oregon Department of Agri- culture that issues permits for exotic animals. BY CATALINA GAITÁN The Oregonian A Wall of Moms partici- pant and a 17-year-old girl sued the federal government Wednesday for injuries they suffered during racial justice protests last summer, joining a growing group of people al- leging excessive force by fed- eral officers. Kristen Jessie-Uyanik, 42, and Lillian “Beck” West, 17, are named as plaintiffs in the lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in Portland. They are seeking unspecified compen- satory and punitive damages. Jessie-Uyanik’s voice qua- vered as she described the night of July 25. She was standing outside the federal courthouse, link- ing arms with the Wall of Moms and wearing safety goggles and a helmet, she said at a news conference with other injured protesters. Without warning, a fed- eral agent aimed a gun at her head and shot her between the eyes just before 11 p.m., she said. She collapsed into the arms of the women standing beside her, blood streaming into her eyes, she said. “I truly thought I was go- ing to die and that I would never see my three young children again,” Jessie-Uyanik said. She was taken by ambu- lance to a local hospital where she received seven stitches. The wound on her forehead has since healed, but the scar is a daily reminder of getting shot, she said. Nathaniel West spoke on behalf of his daughter, Beck, and said the two were stand- ing beside a fence around the Justice Center downtown also on July 25. They were wear- ing gas masks, safety goggles, helmets and heavy clothing, he said. Catalina Gaitán/The Oregonian Protesters spoke at a press con- ference Wednesday alongside enlarged images of the injuries they sustained while demon- strating in downtown Portland in July 2020. West said they hadn’t heard any warnings to disperse when a federal agent lobbed a grenade over the fence toward them shortly after 11 p.m. The grenade exploded next to his daughter’s head, “shredding her left eardrum (and) melting and bruis- ing the skin on her face and neck,” West said. When they arrived home, they found small rubber pellets melted and embedded into the safety gear around her face. His daughter had eardrum replacement surgery in May but will likely never fully re- gain her hearing, he said. Attorneys who have pre- viously represented the U.S. Department of Homeland Security did not respond to requests for comment. Nathaniel West also is one of four protesters who filed a class-action lawsuit in August against the federal govern- ment alleging excessive force against peaceful demonstra- tors. The suit claims the Trump administration deployed fed- eral agents unlawfully and that the officers escalated tensions by using a variety of crowd-control tactics against nonviolent protesters, includ- ing tear gas and flash-bang grenades. LAST CALL FOR PHOTOS! We want your historic photos for our upcoming Hello Bend! pictorial history book. We’re looking for group photos from the 1950s to 2000s such as class reunions or work crews in Central Oregon. We will scan your photos and hand them back to you at the event. For details, email: gobrien@bendbulletin.com Bring in your photos for a chance to win a FREE copy of the Hello Bend! pictorial history book! SCANNING SESSIONS June 24-25 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., or by appointment until July 16. email: gobrien@bendbulletin.com or call 541-383-0341