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What Happened To 'Joe Exotic' From Netflix's 'Tiger King' And Where Is He Now?

"The Big Cat people are backstabbing pieces of sh*t," a man says at the start of Netflixs new true crime documentary series Tiger King: Murder, Mayhem, and Madness . True as that may or may not be, few of them end up in jail. And while Tiger King highlights many people in the Big Cat community, the true story of Joe Exotic is arguably the wildest of them all.

What Happened To 'Joe Exotic' From 'Tiger King'?

After growing up on a farm in Kansas, Joe (whose real name is Joseph Maldonado-Passage) moved to Florida for physical rehabilitation after a car accident and there discovered his love of big catsnotably tigers and lionsand other exotic animals. As an adult, he opened the Greater Wynnewood Exotic Animal Park in Wynnewood, Oklahoma (also referred to as the G.W. Zoo in Tiger King), with what he claimed to be "the largest tiger collection in America."

Because Joe Exotic bred tiger cubs and allowed zoo guests to pay for cub petting experiences, he soon gained some criticsmost notably Carole Baskin , owner of Big Cat Rescue in Tampa. Their years-long feud involved copyright infringement lawsuits, salacious murder and animal abuse allegations, and charges of arson. Eventually, it all came to head in an attempted murder-for-hire plot that definitely didn't go as planned.

Here's everything you need to know about what's happened to Joe Exotic since Tiger King:

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Yes, Joe is alive and has been sentenced to 22 years in prison for attempting to pay a hitman (who was actually an undercover FBI agent) $10,000 to murder animal rights activist Carole Baskin in November 2017, as well as for killing five tiger cubs. Joe was found guilty of two counts of murder-for-hire, eight counts of violating the Lacey Act for falsifying wildlife records, and nine counts of violating the Endangered Species Act, according to the New York Times .

Despite his prison sentence, Joe claimed he was not guilty in a press statement shared in a Facebook post on January 22, 2020. "I still maintain my innocence and looking [sic] forward in the upcoming days to my attorneys filing my Appeal and moving on to the next step in this Nightmare," he wrote. "At some point the U.S. Attorneys office and Agents involved will have to answer to the fact that they participated in Perjury to obtain this conviction."

For his part, Timothy J. Downing, the United States attorney for the Western District of Oklahoma, said in a statement about the verdict, "We are thankful for the Courts thoughtful consideration of the gravity of this murder-for-hire scheme, as well as the defendants egregious wildlife crimes in imposing a 22-year sentence."

A 2011 undercover investigation by the Humane Society found that tigers were beaten and whipped during training at the Greater Wynnewood Exotic Animal Park. (An investigator worked there as an animal caretaker for four months, per the organization's report.) Visitors were also bitten and scratched by the cubs that were too old to be around humans, the report stated, and baby tigers that had not even opened their eyes yet were passed around to visitors, which caused the animals trauma.

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"The Humane Society of the United States has known for a long time about the horrific business that this man was running," Kitty Block, the chief executive of the Humane Society, told the New York Times in an email at the time of Joe's sentencing. "Having investigated and campaigned against his operation for years, it is a comfort to us to know that a man who caused all of that suffering and cruelty has been charged for his crimes."

Well, everyone knew he had exotic animals, of course. If his moniker didnt give it away, he also bought billboards all along I-35 between Dallas and Oklahoma City to advertise Greater Wynnewood Exotic Animal Park. The signs for the zoo show Joe snuggled up next to a tiger, with Joe sporting a mullet and an unbuttoned, loud-patterned shirt.

If that werent enough, the zoos gift shop sold Joe Exotic-branded products, including skin care, T-shirts, underwear, condoms, and lubeall products Joe proudly shows off to the producers of Tiger King.

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Later, Joe opened a pizza restaurant called Zooters and a bar down the road from the zoo, according to Texas Monthly , called Safari Bar. His shows, Joe Exotic TV and Joe Gone Wild, brought in millions of views, and he was even featured in shows on CNN, BBC, and CBS This Morning, according to the publication. In other words, Joes image was everywhere.

He became so well known that he ran for U.S. President as an Independent in 2016, per the New York Times, and for governor of Oklahoma in 2018, local news station Fox 25 reported.

A campaign video for his 2016 presidential run features him walking around a big cat enclosure, saying, "I am not wearing a suit. I am gay. Ive had two boyfriends for most of my life... I am broke as sh*t. I have a judgement against me from a b*tch down there in Florida... And this is all paid for by the committee of Joe Exotic for America."

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Joe obviously did not win either election.

You can stream all of Tiger King on Netflix on March 20th.

For starters, not everyone agreed with Joes exotic zoo practices. Over a thousand miles away, animal activist Baskin operated Big Cat Rescue , an animal sanctuary based in Tampa, Florida. As Tiger King shows, they disagreed about almost every animal rights issue despite having similar jobs, especially the ethics around breeding big cats and letting visitors pet cubsboth of which were essential to Joes business.

The "judgment against me" that Joe mentions in his campaign video refers to a $1 million civil lawsuit that Baskin filed against himand wonfor copyright infringement. Baskin's suit was in addition to her efforts to pass the Big Cat Public Safety Act an act that would, if successful, would have forced Joe to shut down his business.

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After he lost the governor race, Joe became increasingly paranoid. "You could always read Joe. He didnt have a poker face," Joshua Dial, Joes former campaign manager, said in the Tiger King docuseries. "We knew something was going on. He was already a paranoid personbut the paranoia was not unfounded." As is shown in the documentary, Joe finding a microphone and antennae on the gift shop roof was just one of the many things that increased his anxiety.

A lot of Joe's paranoia also stemmed from the fact that he was was going brokefast. For one, just feeding the animals was expensive. Tiger King shows how even giving the tigers mostly expired meat that Walmart donated still cost $3,000 per tiger, per year. That's not counting all the other costs associated with caring for exotic creatures. Running for office didn't help Joe's financial situation, either. Jeff Lowea man who bought the G.W. Exotic Animal Parkaccuses Joe of embezzling money from the park to fund his political campaigns.

Joe's paranoia (mixed with his financial desperation) eventually led to Joe allegedly paying $10,000 for a hitman to kill Baskin, the Associated Press reported. Because of Joe's financial straits, Tiger King mentions that he bartered over the price. Joe agreed to pay half the money upfront, and the other half after Baskin's death.

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There was just one problem: That hitman was an undercover FBI agent. He recorded Joe saying, "Just like follow her into a mall parking lot and just cap her and drive off," which was played during his trial.

There is a possibility that Joe's conviction was a setup on the part of Jeff Lowe. Tiger King casts doubt on whether money was actually exchanged between Joe and the "hitman," or if Joe just talked about killing Baskin. There is a theory that Lowe, as well as his friends, might have orchestrated the trial as a way to protect themselves from being punished for their own crimes.

However, Baskin is still convinced of Joe's guilt. "Because of his constant threats to kill me, I have found myself seeing every bystander as a potential threat," Baskin wrote in a statement regarding Joe's prison sentence in January 2020 on the Big Cat Rescue website. "...My daughter, my husband, my mother, my staff, and volunteers have all been in peril because of his obsession with seeing me dead."

As far as anyone knows, Joe is still in jail today.

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