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Ikea monkey won't be returned to owner

The Ikea monkey will not be returned to its owner, Yasmin Nakhuda, and will remain in an animal sanctuary, an Ontario judge has ruled.

The Japanese macaque named Darwin became an internet sensation after he was filmed and photographed running around the parking lot of an Ikea store in north Toronto in December.

The animal had escaped from a car parked in the lot wearing a stylish shearling coat and diapers.

Toronto animal services seized the monkey and sent him to the Story Book Primate Sanctuary in Sunderland, Ont., 100 kilometres northeast of Toronto, setting off a legal battle with Nakhuda and the sanctuary over custody of Darwin.

Justice Mary Vallee ruled Friday the monkey is a wild animal and not a domestic pet. This was a key legal point in the case, as the law deems the owner of a wild animal as the party that possess it.

The judge rejected Nakhuda's argument that Toronto animal services staff duped her and acted illegally by seizing Darwin, a Japanese snow macaque.

"Concerns about illegally imported monkey disease were good reasons to detain the monkey," Vallee said in her ruling.

In the judge's ruling, which is posted at the bottom of this story, the judge also ruled that Nakhuda purchased Darwin for $5,000 from an exotic animal dealer, knowing that it was illegal. She also lied by telling members of the animal was a gift.

"Ms. Nakhuda maintaining that the monkey was a gift shows that she was prepared to embellish the facts to improve her legal position," the judge wrote. "This undermines her credibility."

The judge's decision, which is posted below, also lays bare the circumstances of how Nakhuda, a real estate lawyer, came to own Darwin.

She approached an exotic pets dealer, named in the judge's decision only by his first name Ayaz, expressing interest in owning a monkey. He offered the macaque to her on a trial basis for free. Nakhuda soon had trouble controlling Darwin, who was prone to biting, screaming and would thrash around wildly when his diaper was changed.

In a bid to help, Ayaz came to Nakhuda house and "taught Ms. Nakhuda to have a very firm hand with the monkey," according to the judge's decision.

"He grabbed the monkey hard by the throat and hit him in the side of the head. After this the monkey complied with having his diaper changed. Ms. Nakhuda was not comfortable with using this amount of physical force on the monkey."

Nakhuda tried to return Darwin to the dealer, but when the animal clung to her, she changed her mind, felt an obligation to keep him, and paid the dealer $5,000.

"Ms. Nakhuda requested a receipt but Ayaz told her that he doesn't provide receipts or papers," the judge's decision reads. "Ms. Nakhuda understood she had purchased an 'illegal' animal."

When the story broke, Nakhuda went to Ayaz for help. Citing the intense media attention, he refused and advised her to walk away, promising to refund the $5,000.