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Zoo spokesman Angus Carroll blamed the drop in attendance on allegations by People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals that led to the charges against owner Michael Hackenberger after video surfaced that appeared to show him hitting a tiger named Uno with a whip during a training session.

“We feel this is a tragic example of being tried in the public court before being tried in the real court,” an emotional Carroll told reporters at the zoo on Thursday.

PETA released the footage in December after sending a member undercover to work at the zoo. The organization released the footage publicly, and the story made headlines worldwide.

“The untrue allegations made by PETA in regards to a tiger incident have created a climate in which the zoo can no longer operate,” Carroll wrote in a statement. “People are staying away because they believe PETA’s allegations.”

In April, the Ontario Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals charged Hackenberger with four counts of causing an animal distress and one of failing to comply with the prescribed standards of animal care, all under the authority of the provincial OSPCA Act.

Hackenberger has denied the allegations and is expected to fight the charges. Carroll said the zoo, which was established in 1919 and claims to be the oldest private zoo in North America, supports Hackenberger and believes he is innocent.

Meanwhile, PETA is “celebrating” news of the zoo’s demise.

“It’s closing around a hundred years too late for the hundreds of animals that suffered there,” said PETA spokeswoman Brittany Peet.