
Gulf World Marine Park in crisis: Dolphins relocated amid scandal and bankruptcy fallout
Five dolphin deaths in less than a year, scathing inspection reports, public outcry, and footage released of green water with algae in the dolphin tanks led political leaders and government officials to work swiftly in getting the dolphins out of the park. A chaotic bankruptcy on behalf of the park's owners at The Dolphin Company, operated in Cancun, Mexico, led to delays with the relocation.
Animal advocates and government officials partly won, with four of the dolphins being moved to a facility not owned by The Dolphin Company, the Clearwater Marine Aquarium in Clearwater, Florida. The remaining seven were moved to facilities owned by the company, with four going to Marineland Dolphin Adventure near St. Augustine and three going to Dolphin Connection in Duck Key.
Marineland had three non-critical compliance issues relating to its facility in its April 2025 report, but another report from May doesn't show any noncompliant items.
U.S. Rep. Neal Dunn previously told WJHG that his office was not happy when it learned that Marineland was owned by the same company, so they tried to pump the brakes, leading to further delays.
Animal advocates were also unhappy with the move. Activist group TideBreakers released footage of Marineland, claiming that the facilities are inadequate and the conditions are poor.
"When the 13 dolphins at Marineland aren't working, they're kept in filthy, cramped, concrete tanks with no protection from the Florida sun," the activists wrote in a Facebook post. "Swimming in circles all day, waiting for their turn to entertain tourists, just a few feet away from the ocean. Some in complete isolation."
Theme park earnings: New report finds Disneyland, Disney World contribute $67B to US economy
There's a petition floating around asking Congress to confiscate the company's dolphins. Organizers also are demanding oversight from regulatory agencies.
The Dolphin Company is under a criminal investigation in the state of Florida amid its drawn-out bankruptcy proceedings in Delaware that reportedly included an armed takeover of its Cancun headquarters. New management acknowledged in a press release that Gulf World had been neglected over the years.
It was revealed in a bankruptcy proceeding recording that the fifth dolphin to die, Samira, was showing signs of distress nearly a month prior to her death. Communication hurdles that could be tied to the bankruptcy were said to have led to her not getting care that could've been provided by Riveron, the restructuring company working on the bankruptcy case.
The Key Biscayne Independent reported that the former CEO of The Dolphin Company, Eduardo Albor, was found to be in contempt of court on June 5. The judge said that Albor was interfering with the new management of the company.
'We lost a dolphin, and I don't want my delay to create that situation again,' the judge said at a June 2 hearing, according to the Independent. 'Samira, to the extent we could have saved her because of communication, it's on all of us."
The reporting notes that the new management asked to hire a firm to split up the subsidiary companies running the parks and start the auction process. Debtors had apparently done an initial review and put the various parks and properties into "going concern" and "real estate" categories.
Gulf World was no longer categorized as a "going concern," and they would find an alternative use for the property, according to the Independent.
First Coast News reported that State Attorney Larry Basford had told them the dolphins are better off in Marineland, which is under new management because of the bankruptcy proceedings. Basford told them that part of the bankruptcy process is disposing of assets, and the dolphins were assets.
Basford told the news station that The Dolphin Company didn't have money to maintain Gulf World or conduct needed repairs.
A June 16 release from the company says that the relocated dolphins are eating, attentive, and acclimating well to their new homes. The park remains closed until further notice.
As for what happens now, Rep. Dunn had previously said once the dolphins were taken care of, they would move on to help the other animals in the facility.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


USA Today
4 hours ago
- USA Today
Thousands join effort to find treasures in the mud after Texas floods
The deadly flooding of the Guadalupe River swept away priceless belongings, but volunteers have helped reunite families with their possessions. The items range from the everyday to the extraordinary. Pieces of jewelry and children's toys. Blankets and photographs, fine china, trophies and plaques. Keychains and stuffed animals. Clothes and dolls. A church pew. A canoe. Some were found miles from home after being carried away by the Guadalupe River flood. They're the remnants of homes, cars, cabins, trailers and campsites. They're also pieces of people's lives, family heirlooms that in some cases hold generations of memories. But thanks to volunteers and social media sleuths, families are being reunited with their possessions after the river flooded on July 4, killing at least 135 people. A Facebook group is connecting people who have found things along the river with flood victims searching for pieces of their lives. Several new items are added each day, even weeks after the flood. Some items have been cleaned of the mud and dirt that soiled them. Others won't ever look the same after being washed away, buried and submerged, reemerging days or weeks later. Here are some of their stories. 'The lady picking up personal effects' Dondi Voigt Persyn of Boerne, Texas, wanted to help in the flood's immediate aftermath. So she joined other volunteers in the recovery along the Guadalupe River. The first days were "overwhelming," she said. "There were still children missing, people missing. "I decided, let's let the professionals do their job, so I started collecting trash and personal effects. By the end of the day, I was the lady picking up people's personal effects." But the volume of debris was so great, and Persyn knew many of the items she and fellow volunteers found meant something to people who had already lost so much. Along with some friends, she now administers Found on the Guadalupe River, a Facebook group with more than 47,000 members who share photos, information and tips about items found during cleanup and recovery. The group grew "exponentially" within days, she said. "It was shocking how organized and effective we were able to be in such a short time," she said. Fellow administrator DeAnna Kaye Lindsay and Persyn "have been friends for 40 years, and our experience in life prepared us for this moment," said Persyn, who added she has volunteered in various capacities and for a variety of organizations throughout her adult life. "Being grandmothers, we wanted to handle everything the way we would for our own children and grandchildren," she said. So their "heart-driven" mission includes working with families and local agencies to verify ownership and make sure recovered items go to the rightful owners. A timeline: Hour by hour, how deadly flooding struck Texas Hill Country She recalled returning a life vest to a man who saw a photo of it on the Facebook group. "He just needed one thing," she said. "It was a connection to the past, his life before." A retired teacher lost her trailer and everything in it, but she and her grandson were both able to get to safety. Persyn talked about returning some of her jewelry: "I know these are things, but she talked about how 'This was a time when my grandkids played,' and 'I remember this from when we all went to the beach.'" Helping her bring back those memories, Persyn said, "was really heartwarming." "There's also been a lot of behind-the scenes reunions with people who'd lost loved ones," she said, and she's keeping those stories to herself, out of respect and deference to their losses. "I will keep those close to my heart." A family's heirlooms returned The Deupree family has been on the receiving end of the Found on the Guadalupe River group's kindness. Taylor Deupree lives in Houston and much of her extended family is in Dallas. But to all the Deuprees, home is their grandmother Penny's house in Hunt, Texas, near the Guadalupe River, just 2 miles from Camp Mystic. It's been a family gathering place for decades, said Deupree, and Penny Deupree is the family matriarch who keeps "scrapbooks upon scrapbooks" of Deupree family lore, her granddaughter said. Penny Deupree was among nine family members rescued from the home's roof as floodwaters raged around them. The house was heavily damaged, Taylor Deupree said, but the garage, which held many of the family's keepsakes, was destroyed. Among the items that have been found and returned to the family: photographs, heirloom silver pieces and mementos from lost family members, including a pocket watch from Dr. Tague Chisholm, a pioneer in the field of pediatric surgery, and a painted portrait of Frances Hodgson Burnett, who wrote "The Secret Garden." The people contributing to the Found on the Guadalupe River group and the way the community has stepped up to help people, even after so much loss, are "the real silver linings," Deupree said. An errant oar and how 'hope floats' Andrew Diggs was among those who responded as part of a joint search and rescue team with TEXSAR and Heroes for Humanity to help find people who vanished in the flood. While he was searching, he came across an old wooden paddle with markings that gave him pause: the year 1962, Greek letters. "It was a 1-of-1 piece of memorabilia lost in the chaos," he wrote in a social media post he titled "Hope Floats: It was never about the paddle." "At first, it was just an artifact," he wrote. "A personal item amid the wreckage. But the more I looked at it, the more it felt like a message. Someone, somewhere, loved this thing enough to hold onto it for 60 years. That meant something. And after everything that had already been taken by the flood, I knew I couldn't let this be one more thing lost to time. I made it my mission to return it." That mission, and the Facebook group, led him to Tom Schulze, who had given it to his wife when they went to a University of Texas Sigma Nu formal in 1962. It had been hanging in his daughter's house − more than 3 miles from where it was found − but the house was heavily damaged in the flood. Diggs shared a text message with USA TODAY from Schulze expressing his gratitude to Diggs and a vow that "we will never clean it up and (will) do something to preserve it as a reminder of that night of infamy." "When we reunited Tom with the paddle, he called it a 'bright spot in a time of immense loss and suffering,'" Diggs wrote. "To him, it wasn't just wood and paint. It was family. History. Resilience." Diggs told USA TODAY he had never been very sentimental about material things; he was "a minimalist" who believed "memories live in your heart." That has changed, though: When he heard "the stories behind the paddle, and the web of stories from those stories, I realized it's a physical thing that can remind you of so many good times. I've seen so many small things that I previously would have deemed insignificant, but now I can see what they mean to people." Family photos from a home called 'Kerplunk' Mille Kerr's family called their vacation home of more than 50 years "Kerplunk." On July 4, they lost the home, even though it seemed safe, high off the ground and set back from the river. "We are mourning the loss of the special gathering place built by my grandparents, but we're also counting our lucky stars because a large group of family members who were at the property during the flood escaped just in the nick of time while so many others suffered unimaginable loss," Kerr wrote in an email to USA TODAY. An aunt saw several family photos posted on the Found on the Guadalupe page, including one with Kerr's mother and grandmother at a wedding at Kerplunk. "I have many mixed emotions about the fact that we are going to be reunited with undamaged photographs while others await the bodies of missing loved ones," she wrote. "I'm so proud of the community for coming together to mourn this tragedy − and find whatever goodness is left."


Miami Herald
18 hours ago
- Miami Herald
Confused dog waited ‘by the door' after her owner died. Then came good news
A dog in mourning for her beloved owner now has a new family she can give her love to in Ohio. When Tilly, a brown and white Chihuahua mix with expressive eyes, lost her owner, a want of understanding took over that no one could explain to her. 'When Tilly's owner passed away, the family told us he loved his dogs more than anything in the world. We believed them the second we met his dogs,' the Brown County Humane Society Dog Shelter in Georgetown said in a July 31 Facebook post. 'Tilly was sweet, loyal, confused, and still waiting by the door. She's the one with the soulful eyes and the 'I've seen things' expression that comes from being the responsible sibling in a house.' Luckily for Tilly, there was another family out there for her, one that will help her through the grieving process and renew feelings of love and protection again. 'Today, we got to send her home,' the shelter continued. 'Not only did she find a new family who adores her, she also gained two tiny, opinionated fur siblings—who seem thrilled to have a new big sister (and someone to blame things on). 'Tilly's person would be proud.' People in the comment section were thrilled the shelter was able to find the pup the perfect home. 'So happy for Tilly,' one person said. 'This makes my heart so happy,' another noted. 'Big, cheesy grins on Tilly and her new Mom and Dad... The other two look a bit skeptical but I know they'll all have fun together soon,' someone chimed in. For more information on other adoptable pets, visit the shelter's website. Georgetown is about a 40-mile drive southeast from Cincinnati.


Miami Herald
21 hours ago
- Miami Herald
House for sale in Missouri is a massive time capsule on the inside. Check it out
The interior of a home on the real estate market in Bolivar, Missouri, for $379,995 has people on the internet a tad flummoxed. 'Here's your chance to own a true one-of-a-kind home in the desirable Prairie Heights subdivision,' the listing on Zillow describes. 'This stunning all-brick, 5-bedroom, 4.5-bathroom estate sits on an expansive double lot and offers over 6,500 sq. ft. of living space — a perfect blend of retro charm and modern opportunity.' And retro it is. Just take a peek at the interior. The home — built in 1974 — has mustard yellow walls, dark wood paneling, arched windows, interior sliding glass doors into other rooms, A LOT of cabinets, an indoor swimming pool with carpeting surrounding it, red carpeting on the stairs, maybe a ghost or nine, SHAG CARPETING, and so much more. The photos even show renderings on what it would look like if an extra from 'That 70's Show' put their furniture inside. 'Built on a slab -- peace of mind with no basement surprises. Whether you're looking to preserve its mid-century style or transform it into a modern masterpiece, this property is being sold AS-IS at an unbeatable value,' the listing says. The house was even featured on Zillow Gone Wild, a Facebook page that highlights unique homes listed all over the country. And people… well, people thought it was, in a word, 'neato.' Mostly. 'I can smell the musty carpet and dusty linoleum,' one person observed. 'Just needs a little repair and restoration and this instantly becomes the ideal property for any buyer looking to unleash their inner serial killer of yesteryear,' someone joked. 'I can smell this house. It's smells of potpourri, eucalyptus and Winston's,' another said. 'I love retro so I'd move in a heartbeat. I'd be removing the carpet from the bathrooms pretty quick though,' someone commented. Bolivar is about a 135-mile drive southeast from Kansas City.