Lolita, a killer whale, performing at the Miami Seaquarium.
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BELOVED orca Lolita, who was known for her mind-blowing tricks and decades spent in captivity, died just weeks after she was due to be freed.

Jim Irsay, a millionaire and owner of a football club, collaborated with activists to liberate the whale plagued by sadness and reunite her with her aging mother in the Pacific Ocean after 50 years at the Miami Seaquarium.

Lolita, a killer whale, performing at the Miami Seaquarium.
Lolita, the killer whale and the star attraction at Miami Seaquarium for 44 yearsCredit: Getty
Lolita, a captive orca, with a trainer.
Trainer Marcia Hinton pets LolitaCredit: AP
Protestors holding signs advocating for Lolita the whale's release.
Campaigners spent years trying to secure Lolita’s release from the parkCredit: Getty

The killer whale, known as Tokitae by those advocating for her release, was a major attraction in Florida, drawing tourists from across the nation.

She was taken from her mother aged four and used as the aquarium’s star attraction for decades before falling ill.

Advocates have persistently pushed for her freedom from the Seaquarium, who consistently refuted any claims of mistreatment, maintaining that she received excellent care.

In 2023, the park and campaigners formed an unlikely alliance to reunite the lonely orca with the waters of the Pacific Northwest, where her mother was believed to still roam.

All this with the financial backing of football club, Indianapolis Colts, owner Jim Irsay.

Just weeks before she was due to be released, Lolita died of kidney disease at 57-years-old.

Her death sparked widespread outrage, with CEO at Humane World for Animals calling Tokitae the “embodiment of the wrongs done to her species”.

She said: “Through the years Tokitae became the very embodiment of the wrongs done to her species and other sentient wild animals used in aquariums, circuses and other performing acts.

“In that sense, her life has had greater meaning. She helped shift the public’s moral perspective, bringing into fruition a new ideal in which wild animals are left undisturbed and protected in their natural habitats.

“But to say that it’s a shame that her life had to be sacrificed for us to learn such a lesson would be a gross understatement.”

Lolita killer whale in captivity

Park officials began to train Tokitae for release after a plan was made to take her back home to Washington state, but the orca began showing extreme signs of discomfort.

Medical teams aggressively treated her ailments, which appeared to be pneumonia, until she finally succumbed to a renal condition.

It followed a damning federal report in 2021 that accused the park of serious marine mammal violations and resulted into new ownership.

What really killed Lolita?

Campaigners had for decades claimed that she was far too big for the miniature tank that she lived in – which was only 20ft deep and just 35ft wide.

Animal rights group PETA has said that Lolita’s life there had been “a living nightmare” and begged for her not to suffer the fate of her partner, Hugo, who died from hitting his head repeatedly against the tank walls.

Toki was one of six calves that were rounded up and sold by fishermen to marine parks in 1970.

Most of the calves died within the first year of being in captivity, but Toki defied expectations and lived on while working a busy daily schedule.

She performed tricks three times a day for audiences and lived in an 80-foot long and 35-foot wide tank, which was the smallest of its kind in the US.

Just 10 years after Toki arrived at the aquarium, her companion Hugo died of an aneurysm that was caused by repeated head trauma, earning her the title of the world’s loneliest whale.

Million dollar backing

While animal rights activists rallied support for her release, other environmental experts felt doubtful that she could live successfully in the wild after her life at the aquarium.

A National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration spokesman said after the move was announced that she could have posed a risk to existing populations in Washington waters.

“If she is healthy enough to be transported, the issue is her skill set,” said Miami-Dade Commissioner Raquel Regalado, who advocated for improvements at Miami Seaquarium.

“She doesn’t know how to catch or hunt. We’re not really sure if she can communicate with other whales because she’s been alone.”

Her move was estimated to have cost $20million, and was going to be funded by Irsay.

“I know Lolita wants to get to free waters. I don’t care what anyone says,” Irsay said before her death.

“She’s lived this long to have this opportunity. And my only mission is to help this whale get free.”

Heartbreaking story of killer whale Kiska who lived ‘tortured existence’ in captivity & lost 5 babies before dying alone

KILLER whale Kiska – dubbed the world’s loneliest whale – died age 47 after living a “tortured existence” in captivity for decades.

Tragic Kiska was captured in the North Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Iceland in 1979 when she was just two-years-old.

She died at MarineLand in Canada in March this year after outliving her five babies.

Kiska was first taken to an aquarium in Iceland where she lived with four other young orcas, including Keiko – who starred in Free Willy.

Shortly afterwards, Kiska was sold, along with Keiko, to MarineLand.

She spent the last 12 years of her life completely alone in a tiny tank, and heartbreaking footage showed her shaking and smashing her head against the wall.

Animal rights group PETA described Kiska as the “world’s loneliest orca” whose life was marked by “tragedy after tragedy” after all five of her calves died before they were seven years old.

Kiska became MarineLand’s last orca in 2011.

Animal activist and whistleblower Phil Demers said Kiska’s life is “best described as a living nightmare”.

Phil became a whistleblower and went to the media to expose what he claimed was wrongdoing by MarineLand a decade ago.

“I know she wants to go home and I know she has the fire within her and the determination… this is an incredible story,” he said.

Irsay made the announcement on his twitter stating: “Dinner before today’s Lolita press conference in Miami Beach! Key players in the massive plan to finally FREE this 8000 lb killer whale, Lolita!!…Stay tuned as this dream unfolds in real time.”

The complex operation was going to involve flying the 2268kg whale 3000 miles to Washington state, where she would be taught how to live in the wild again in an ocean sanctuary.

This would have entailed teaching her to catch fish and build up her muscles for swimming before being released in Puget Sound, an estuary off the coast of Washington, where she was captured back in 1970.

However, some campaigners feared that after so long spent in captivity she may no longer be equipped to survive in the wild.

“She’s persevered the difficulties that we humans forced on her. She lived through her capture and the death of family members and living in this small tank for so many years,” Pritam Singh, the founder of the advocacy group Friends of Lolita, told The Times.

Miami Seaquarium confirmed in a statement after Lolita’s death she died of a “multiple chronic conditions including renal disease and pneumonia” after an autopsy.

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