Nosey's Life

From Captivity to Sanctuary!

Nosey's Life

1982: Birth

According to the North American Regional Studbook for the African Elephant, Nosey was born sometime in 1982 in the African nation of Zimbabwe. It is likely that her home was Hwange National Park, the country’s largest wildlife preserve.

1984: Capture

Around 1984, Nosey was wild-caught and transferred on a 22-hour, high-altitude Boeing 707 flight to the United States by eccentric millionaire, Arthur Jones of JumboLair in Ocala, Florida. The capture was reportedly a rescue effort to save 63 baby elephants from a government issued culling and was featured on an episode of ABCs 20/20 called, The Flying Elephants. Jones’ plan to create a “true American herd” was abandoned within a few years. Nosey was one of around 40 elephants sold to circuses or zoos, while 10 elephants died between 1984 and 1987 from transport stress, wounds, and disease.

1986: Transfer

Elephants are designed to push — not to pull or carry — and most of their strength is in their neck, trunk and head. The specific structure of their spines allows them to support their own weight “down below” but NOT weight on their backs. With the saddle, Nosey regularly carries well over 300 pounds, which puts a tremendous amount of stress on her delicate spine. The saddle also can cause chafing and pressure sores, and the thin blanket does little to ease the pain.

1988: The Liebels

Elephants like Nosey who are hauled around the country to give rides or perform have it bad. They are chained when not working, and when giving rides they are forced to move extremely slowly and take small steps around the ring for human safety. This unnatural gait can worsen foot and joint problems. They are rarely allowed to walk freely, are often fed poor diets, and are constantly subjected to circus music and noise. In the U.S., elephants who give rides are usually solitary, with no elephant companions.

1988—2017: Citations

Hugo Liebel was cited for violating the Animal Welfare Act numerous times over the decades on multiple accounts, including but not limited to:

  • failure to allow access to records and property
  • failure to provide enclosure of sufficient strength to contain elephants
  • feeding moldy hay
  • withholding food from the elephant for training purposes
  • sharp pieces of metal exposed in the elephant trailer
  • noticeable hyperkeratosis on the ears
  • failure to provide an elephant with shelter from the sunlight
  • inadequate food supplies
  • giving elephant rides to the public despite the fact that the circus’ state permit had expired
  • open bags of feed used for the elephant on the floor of the trailer adjacent to a bag of feed that had been chewed open by vermin
  • tethering Nosey in such a manner than she could move only a few feet from side to side
  • chaining Nosey by two feet so tightly that she could not lie down on her side or make any forward or backward movement
  • failure to handle elephants in a manner that would protect the public and the animals
  • an elephant transport trailer in disrepair without adequate ventilation
  • no written records of veterinary examination and evaluation of the elephants’ skin
  • an elephant suffering from an untreated skin condition
  • failure to have their elephant handlers tested for tuberculosis
  • sharp pieces of glass used during an act in the show ring that could have easily injured the elephants’ feet
  • not providing the minimum space to an elephant housed in a trailer
  • transporting an elephant and a steer in the same trailer at risk to the steer’s sharp horns
  • failure to provide an adequate barrier between the animals and the public
  • splintered wood on the inside of the door of the elephant transport trailer
  • repetitive failure to give veterinary care to an elephant who had a buildup of oil, dirt, and dead skin clogging the skin pores on [the animal’s] body
  • failure to supply permanent housing for Nosey when not on the road
  • stereotypic behavior of Nosey
  • failure to maintain the elephant barn which had protruding nails and metal rods
  • leaving the elephant unattended or under the control of a child during the public exhibition
  • improper foot care leading to an overgrown toenail, and weight loss in Nosey.

In 2011, the United States Department of Agriculture brought 33 formal charges against Nosey’s owner, which could have resulted in her confiscation. Instead, in a settlement agreement reached in 2013, Liebel has assessed a civil penalty of $7,500 and ordered to stop violating the AWA. Despite this agreement, Liebel has been cited at least four additional times for failing to protect Nosey or other animals in his care as well as the public with whom they come in contact.

Nosey, Present Day and Future: Sanctuary!

After working in the circus for three decades, Nosey was spotted in November, 2017, standing in her own waste, chained, beside the road in Lawrence County, Alabama. Some quick-witted  advocates contacted Administrators of Save Nosey Now to ask for guidance. Subsequently, Nosey was seized by an Animal Control Officer in that County. She was immediately transferred to The Elephant Sanctuary in Tennessee where she was medically and psychologically evaluated and where she can be an independent elephant. A bench trial for her custody was held where a very conscientious Assistant District Attorney took on her abusive owners. Evidence of the cruelty she had endured her whole life was presented. After several weeks of careful deliberation, the Judge ordered Nosey to the custody of the Animal Control Officer who made the decision to keep Nosey at the Sanctuary. Nosey’s former abusers were charged with animal cruelty, but they did appeal the Judge’s order. In December 2020, The Elephant Sanctuary in Tennessee was awarded permanent custody of Nosey by the court in Alabama. Nosey has EARNED her retirement in a true elephant sanctuary, where she is now living in peace. No more rides, no more performances, no more bull hooks!