Dentist who killed Cecil the lion returns to work

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Original image replaced with Mashable logo
Original image has been replaced. Credit: Mashable

MINNEAPOLIS — The American dentist at the center of an international uproar over the killing of a beloved lion in Zimbabwe returned to his clinic in suburban Minneapolis Tuesday after weeks out of the public eye.

Walter Palmer entered the clinic in Bloomington at about 7 a.m. without a word to media gathered outside. As he walked from his vehicle, a staff member met him on the sidewalk, grabbed his arm and parted a throng of reporters to rush the dentist to the front door.

Original image replaced with Mashable logo
Original image has been replaced. Credit: Mashable

JUST IN: 1st shots of #WalterPalmer returning to dental practice in Bloomington after killing #CecilTheLion @KSTP pic.twitter.com/KeWK28wx5a— Alan Hoglund (@alanhoglund) September 8, 2015

Employees also escorted patients inside. Police blocked off an area around the clinic and were working to minimize potential traffic congestion in case of a big protest turnout.

Get used to this scene. Live trucks & squad cars outside River Bluff Dental as #WalterPalmer returns. #CecilTheLion pic.twitter.com/dRlCXdVH0T— Paul Blume (@PaulBlume_FOX9) September 7, 2015

Only a handful of protesters were on hand around sunrise.

Protestors at #WalterPalmer office where he returned today. #CecilTheLion @MyFOX9 pic.twitter.com/cTBdMIYPxi— Dawn Stevens (@DawnStevensFox9) September 8, 2015

Cathy Pierce, wearing a shirt with Cecil's photo, yelled "Extradite Palmer" as the dentist was whisked inside the Bloomington clinic.

Activists who were here when #WalterPalmer showed up for work say they will still be here when he leaves. pic.twitter.com/Mt2i6U6VMT— Melissa Colorado (@melissacolorado) September 8, 2015

Here's what Palmer's office looks like today: media, protestors, private security. #CecilTheLion pic.twitter.com/yGNDroRFdO— bouaxiong (@bouaKARE) September 8, 2015

It's been a month since Zimbabwean officials announced that police would process paperwork to extradite Palmer for participating in the hunt, but as of Monday, a police spokeswoman in Harare, Zimbabwe's capital, said there were no new developments in the case.

An attorney acting on Palmer's behalf told AP that he offered to make Palmer available to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to talk about the case several weeks ago, but he hasn't heard back.

Stephanie Michaelis, a woman who lives near the clinic, came over to argue with protesters, telling them to leave Palmer alone. She said the uproar over Cecil's death was overblown and that people should be more concerned about abortions and threats to human life.

In an interview Sunday with The Associated Press, Palmer disputed some accounts of the hunt and repeated that he believed he acted legally and was stunned to find out his hunting party had killed one of Zimbabwe's most treasured animals.

Cecil was a fixture in the vast Hwange National Park and had been fitted with a GPS collar as part of Oxford University lion research. After Palmer was named in late July as the hunter who killed Cecil, his Bloomington clinic and Eden Prairie home became protest sites, and a vacation property he owns in Florida was vandalized. Palmer was vilified across social media, with some posts suggesting violence against him.

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