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Video shows elephant charging at man who took his 2-year-old daughter into habitat at San Diego Zoo

Dad arrested after taking child into elephant cage
Dad arrested after taking child into elephant enclosure 00:18

A father has been arrested on suspicion of child endangerment after he carried his 2-year-old daughter into the elephant habitat at the San Diego Zoo to take a photograph with the animals. The man bypassed multiple barriers and "purposely and illegally trespassed" into a habitat for Asian and African elephants Friday afternoon, zoo spokesman Andrew James said.

CBS affiliate KFMB-TV obtained video that showed a man dropping the child as they flee the enclosure as a trumpeting elephant charged at them. The man picked up the toddler and was able to get her out safely.

25-year-old father carries his toddler daughter into elephant enclosure at San Diego Zoo by CBS 8 San Diego on YouTube

Police said the 25-year-old man wanted to take a photo with the African bull elephant. James said the elephants were not harmed.

San Diego County jail records show Jose Manuel Navarrete was being held on $100,000 bail for investigation of child endangerment. He was set to be arraigned on March 30.

It wasn't immediately known if he had a lawyer who would speak on his behalf.

Witness Lori Ortale told KSWB-TV she heard a woman yelling "Jose, stop" before a man jumped the fence and through the elephant enclosure.

"These guys right away were saying, 'That elephant is going to charge,' and it did," Ortale said.

"We told him to get out and he turned around and he saw it thankfully just in time," said Jake Ortale, who also witnessed the incident. "He runs, throws his baby through the gate and it's seconds from hitting him. He jumps through the gate, falls on the ground and then it roared."

"The baby starts crying and people were just mad at this guy," he said.

After Navarrete's arrest, the child went home with her mother, police said.

"It's an extremely dangerous situation, and no one in their right mind should ever think about doing this," said Catherine Doyle, the director of science, research and advocacy with PAWS, the Performing Animal Welfare Society.

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