LILLE, France — A French couple kept Louise, a playful black panther, in an apartment in northern France, triggering panic when she was spotted roaming nearby rooftops.
The pair were handed suspended jail sentences on Thursday for illegally keeping a wild animal, despite protesting that they saw Louise as their baby.
The ruling follows a September 2019 incident when the months-old feline was seen roaming a rooftop in Armentieres after slipping out of the couple's window.
Authorities recaptured the panther, which weighed between 25 to 30 kilograms (66 pounds) by sedating her with anesthetic darts after she entered a home.
French couple kept panther that roamed nearby rooftops
No injuries were reported during the animal's time on the loose.
The court in the northern city of Lille condemned the 41-year-old man in the couple to 18 months in jail, which was suspended, and a 10,000 euro (,000) fine.
He was also barred from keeping animals for five years.
The woman, also 41, received a four-month suspended sentence and a two-year animal possession ban.
Keeping Louise was "tantamount to species trafficking," argued Graziella Dode, a lawyer for an animal rights group that joined the case as a civil party.
Xavier Bacquet, representing another foundation, called the crime mistreatment, arguing that the animal's "physiological needs" could not be met in captivity.
The owner told French daily La Voix du Nord in 2019 that he no longer saw it as a panther.
"She was like a big, affectionate baby who just wanted to be cuddled," he said., This news data comes from:http://ycf-ri-irxy-yo.erlvyiwan.com
He told the court that he'd bought the animal for 2,500 euros from a travelling community.
Prosecutors told the court he'd already been convicted in other cases for theft, violence, and drug dealing, as well for illegally keeping a pet monkey.
After its recapture, the panther was taken to the Maubeuge Zoo, from where it was briefly stolen a few days later.
The feline, renamed Akilla, now lives at the Stichting Leeuw big cat sanctuary in the Netherlands, where one of its caretakers Wendy Karsten said it is doing well.

"It has a lot of fun, is playful and interacts well with the neighbouring panther through the fence," Karsten told Agence France-Presse.
- 'Perfect storm': UK fishermen reel from octopus invasion
- DPWH issues show cause order over ghost flood control project in Bulacan
- Comelec at 85: Garcia vows reforms
- US strike marks shift to military action against drug cartels
- Zelenskyy says Russia trying to 'wriggle out' of peace talks
- Passenger with fake Overseas Employment Certificate barred from leaving
- Japanese volunteers to PH 'bedrock' of bilateral relations, says envoy
- Protesters storm Discaya compound, Sotto calls for calm
- Heavy rain causes flooding, landslides and 8 deaths in Vietnam and Thailand
- North Korea's Kim in China ahead of massive military parade