Thursday, April 2, 2020

Tiger King's Joe Exotic Transferred to Prison Medical Center Amid Fears of Coronavirus

Joseph “Joe Exotic” Maldonado-Passage has been transferred to the medical center of a Fort Worth, Texas, prison amid fears of the ongoing coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.

According to inmate records, Maldonado-Passage, 57, is currently being at Fort Worth FMC.

The medical center is operated by the Federal Bureau of Prisons.

Maldonado-Passage’s placement comes after his husband Dillon Passage shared on the SiriusXM Radio Andy show that the former Oklahoma zoo keeper had been placed “on a COVID-19 isolation” behind bars.

“We speak like three to five times every day, but since he’s been moved to this new facility, they are putting him on a COVID-19 isolation because of the previous jail he was at, there were cases,” Dillon said to Andy Cohen about Maldonado-Passage. “I’ve yet to speak to him since he moved.”

When Cohen asked if Joe “is in his own COVID-19 quarantine,” Dillon said that he was.

“From what I know, yes,” Dillon said. “From what he told me.”

RELATED: Tiger King’s Dillon Passage Says Husband Joe Exotic Is in Coronavirus Isolation in Jail

As of Thursday, there are now at least 234,483 confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, the most worldwide.

Tiger King: Murder, Mayhem and Madness examines the life and crimes of Joe, a former country musician, Oklahoma zookeeper, gun enthusiast and big-cat keeper. Joe owned an exotic animal park and boasted of having the largest number of big cats in America. He was found guilty in 2019 for paying a hitman $3,000 to kill Carole Baskin, a big cat conservationist whom he considered his rival.

Joe — who alleges in the Netflix series Baskin killed her 60-year-old husband, Jack “Don” Lewis, and disposed of his remains by feeding them to her tigers and lions — is now serving 22 years in prison for the attempted murder plot. (She flatly denies the accusation about her husband and has never been charged.)

He has also filed a federal lawsuit against various government agencies, as well as ex-business partner Jeff Lowe.

In his complaint, he is seeking $94 million in damages. According to the lawsuit obtained by PEOPLE, Joe claimed $73,840,000 is for loss of personal property; 18 years of research; and care of 200 generic tigers and cross-breeds for 365 days a year, at a boarding rate of $60/day per animal.

The additional $15 million is for false arrest, false imprisonment, selective enforcement and the death of his mother, Shirley.

The lawsuit, which was filed against the U.S. Department of Interior, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and government agents, accuses them of violating his civil rights.

In the documents, he also accused Lowe of filing false statements to federal agents. “He was the main person in this entrapment scheme to take my zoo for free,” Joe alleged. “Changed my medicine with illegal drugs, stole my animals under fraudulent reasons.”

Currently, Joe — who was also found guilty of killing tigers to make room for more big cats at his exotic animal park — is in in the Grady County Jail in Oklahoma.

Although Joe has been ordered to serve more than two decades behind bars, Dillon is remaining by his husband’s side.

RELATED: The Most Shocking Aspects of Joe Exotic Case from Netflix Docuseries Tiger King

“I do love Joe,” Dillon told Cohen on the Radio Andy show. “He’s been with my through my darkest times, and I’m not going to just dip out and abandon him when he needs me most.”

Despite his circumstances, Joe is loving the attention he’s received since the release o the Netflix docuseries.

Dillon also told Cohen, “He’s in jail, so he can’t necessarily watch it, but once the show dropped he was getting hundreds and hundreds of emails to his jail mail, and he was ecstatic.”

“It was a lot of good feedback ,and he likes attention, obviously. He calls himself ‘Joe Exotic the Tiger King,’” said Dillon, who confirmed that Joe is “100 percent” enjoying the spotlight.

As information about the coronavirus pandemic rapidly changes, PEOPLE is committed to providing the most recent data in our coverage. Some of the information in this story may have changed after publication. For the latest on COVID-19, readers are encouraged to use online resources from CDC, WHO, and local public health departments. To help provide doctors and nurses on the front lines with life-saving medical resources, donate to Direct Relief here.



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