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Two developers are looking at plans for the county-owned Miami Seaquarium site as the marine park’s owner deals with bankruptcy proceedings.
The Dolphin Company, which owns Miami Seaquarium, has filed for bankruptcy. It's just the latest in a string of legal battles for the embattled South Florida attraction.
The head of The Dolphin Company, the Mexican parent company of the troubled Miami Seaquarium, stridently denied media reports in the country that it is filing for bankruptcy — but did say it is beginning “a process to restructure its financial liabilities.”
As Local 10 News investigated a tip Friday that federal inspectors showed up at the Miami Seaquarium, the arrival of two county workers revealed yet another problem for the troubled facility.
A high-stakes legal battle between Miami-Dade County and The Dolphin Company, operators of Miami Seaquarium, took a turn Wednesday morning when a civil judge denied the county’s motion for immediate eviction over a late rent payment.
One day after Miami-Dade County sued the operators of the Miami Seaquarium seeking its eviction from county-owned property on Virginia Key, an attorney representing the marine park excoriated county officials for trying to force it off the site.
A little more than two months after sending a notice to the owners of the troubled Miami Seaquarium, Miami-Dade County filed a lawsuit Tuesday seeking MS Leisure Company’s eviction from the Virginia Key property.
Documents obtained by Local 10 News on Tuesday reveal a May affidavit from a Zoo Miami veterinarian testifying to “animals in distress” and a host of other issues at the marine park.
The Miami Seaquarium has filed a federal lawsuit against Miami-Dade County.