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Elephants Billy and Tina are not the first giant mammals trucked out of L.A. overnight. Meet Orky and Corky

Elephants Billy and Tina are not the first giant mammals trucked out of L.A. overnight. Meet Orky and Corky

The middle-aged couple was nowhere to be found.
Billy, 40, wasn't hanging out by the waterfall. Tina, 59, wasn't in the barn.
On Tuesday morning, animal rights activists — who, for years, have fought for the two aging Asian elephants to be removed from the Los Angeles Zoo — were stunned to find the pachyderms' enclosure empty.
'We don't know where the elephants are!' the animal rights advocacy Social Compassion in Legislation wrote on Instagram.
The L.A. Zoo, which is owned and operated by the City of Los Angeles, said Wednesday that the elephants were loaded into separate ventilated shipping containers for a 22-hour ride to a zoo in Tulsa, Okla.
'Transports like these,' the L.A. Zoo wrote on a website detailing the move, 'occur at night taking into consideration optimal temperatures, traffic conditions, and the safety of people in the zoo during loading.'
The transfer to the Tulsa Zoo — announced last month — prompted weeks of protest from activists who wanted Billy and Tina to be taken to a sanctuary, not another zoo. Even Cher got involved.
'Billy and Tina have served their time in confinement,' Cher wrote in support of a lawsuit filed this month against the L.A. Zoo's director. 'They deserve the chance to live out their lives in peace and dignity.' Tuesday, the day the elephants were moved, was Cher's 79th birthday.
The secretive truck ride took place despite a motion by L.A. City Councilman Bob Blumenfield, who requested the move be paused until the zoo gave a report detailing options for moving Billy and Tina to a sanctuary.
In a statement to The Times on Wednesday afternoon, Blumenfield said he was 'disappointed and frustrated' by the move and the lack of transparency surrounding it, calling the ordeal a 'sad reflection on the government of Los Angeles.'
For years, advocates expressed anguish over Billy's repetitive head bobbing. L.A. Zoo officials called it a harmless habit. But various animal experts, including veterinarians, said it was a sign of stress, trauma and boredom.
Over the last two years, the zoo — citing age-related health problems — has euthanized two female Asian elephants: Jewel, who died at age 61 in 2023, and Shaunzi, who died last year at 53.
That left just Billy and Tina, who lived in a 6.5-acre habitat.
To be in good standing with the Assn. of Zoos and Aquariums — an accrediting body whose board is led by Denise Verret, chief executive of the L.A. Zoo — facilities must maintain herds of at least three elephants because they are social creatures.
At the Tulsa Zoo, Billy and Tina will be joined in a 17-acre enclosure by five other Asian elephants.
In 1987, Marineland of the Pacific, a theme park on the Palos Verdes Peninsula, trucked two killer whales, Corky and Orky, to SeaWorld in San Diego in the middle of the night under police escort.
Orky, who weighed 14,000 pounds, was put onto a special stretcher. Corky, who had shared a tank with him for nearly 18 years, tried and failed to throw her 8,000-pound body onto the stretcher with him.
'As the crane lifted her mate hundreds of feet in the air, above the bleachers and into a tank aboard a flatbed truck,' The Times reported then, 'the sounds of her desperation filled the hollow tank.'
The theme park closed a few weeks later. Orky died the next year. Corky, now 60, remains at SeaWorld.
Joanie says, 'San Francisco, followed by Anaheim.'Lynne says, 'Cayucos! Cool beach town in Central California!'
Email us at essentialcalifornia@latimes.com, and your response might appear in the newsletter this week.
Today's great photo was taken by staff photographer Christina House of the Descanso Gardens.
Hailey Branson-Potts, staff reporterKevinisha Walker, multiplatform editorAndrew Campa, Sunday writerKarim Doumar, head of newsletters
How can we make this newsletter more useful? Send comments to essentialcalifornia@latimes.com. Check our top stories, topics and the latest articles on latimes.com.

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