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  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_008.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_012.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_017.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_024.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_025.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_041.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_009.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_011.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_013.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_018.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_022.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_014.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_015.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_016.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_023.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_029.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_031.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_030.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_027.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_035.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_034.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_033.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_039.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_036.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_043.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_042.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_040.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_010.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_019.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_021.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_020.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_032.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_028.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_026.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_038.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_037.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_044.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: This may look like a scene from the jungles of Africa but these stunning images were taken in a Fort Lauderdale airport carpark. These vervet monkeys, native to southern Africa, have been living happily in South Florida for over 70 years after they escaped from a research facility in the 1940s. Bizarrely, the adorable creatures are regularly seen swinging into the Park 'N Fly, which is a discount parking lot on the outskirts of Fort Lauderdale airport. Each morning, the brazen mammals clamber from the cover of the surrounding mangroves to seek out food from bemused and curious tourists. These incredible snaps captured a group of 10-12 monkeys enjoying the parking lot, which is used by thousands of holidaymakers every year. The troop is made up of two senior males called Mikey and Spike, six females, a number of juvenile monkeys and infants. In one set of images, a young infant can be seen clinging to the belly of his mother and poking his head out between her legs while another snap shows the adorable youngster feeding on his mother's milk. Other pictures capture the brooding intensity of the alpha males as they keep a watchful eye over their pack, while video footage captured the tender moment a female appears to give one of the males a kiss on the lips. Amazingly, at one point, a group of shocked tourists can be seen arriving back from a trip to discover the group of monkeys climbing all over their car. The vervet monkeys are believed to have escaped from the Anthropoid Ape Research Foundation, which was set up by Leila Roosevelt in 1944. The facility, which was situated in Dania Beach, off the US1, imported primates from across the globe to be used in medical research. It also doubled up as a tourist attraction allowing visitors to meet the animals. It is believed a group of 12 vervet monkeys then managed to escape after observing how to undo the lock on their cages. The animals fled into the thick mangrove forests of Westlake Park which stretches acro
    MEGA315069_001.jpg
  • June 15, 2018 - Agartala, Tripura, India - A member of rescue team carries an infant baby from the boat as villagers flee the flood waters after a heavy downpour in Baldakhal village, on the outskirts of Agartala the capital of northeastern state of Tripura, India. National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) personnel are rescuing people, children from different places and bringing them in safe places. (Credit Image: © Abhisek Saha/SOPA Images via ZUMA Wire)
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  • July 21, 2019 - Newborn Hand Holding Adult Finger (Credit Image: © Ron Nickel/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
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  • September 18, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 5 years boy in a swimming goggles jumping into swimming pool (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160918_zap_n281_016.jpg
  • September 18, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 5 years boy in a swimming goggles learning to swim underwater in the pool (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160918_zap_n281_014.jpg
  • September 18, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 5 years boy in a swimming goggles learning to swim underwater in the pool (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160918_zap_n281_012.jpg
  • September 18, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 5 years boy in a swimming goggles learning to swim underwater in the pool (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160918_zap_n281_011.jpg
  • September 18, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 5 years boy in a swimming goggles learning to swim underwater in the pool and looking on a floating lemon (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160918_zap_n281_006.jpg
  • September 18, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 5 years boy in a swimming goggles jumping into swimming pool (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160918_zap_n281_005.jpg
  • September 18, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 5 years boy in a swimming goggles jumping into swimming pool (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160918_zap_n281_003.jpg
  • September 18, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 5 years boy in a swimming goggles learning to swim underwater in the pool (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160918_zap_n281_002.jpg
  • September 18, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 5 years boy in a swimming goggles learning to swim underwater in the pool (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160918_zap_n281_015.jpg
  • September 18, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 5 years boy in a swimming goggles learning to swim underwater in the pool (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160918_zap_n281_013.jpg
  • September 18, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 5 years boy in a swimming goggles learning to swim underwater in the pool (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160918_zap_n281_010.jpg
  • September 18, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 5 years boy in a swimming goggles learning to swim underwater in the pool (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160918_zap_n281_008.jpg
  • September 18, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 5 years boy in a swimming goggles learning to swim underwater in the pool (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160918_zap_n281_007.jpg
  • September 18, 2016 - Odessa, Ukraine - 5 years boy in a swimming goggles learning to swim underwater in the pool (Credit Image: © Andrey Nekrasov/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
    20160918_zap_n281_004.jpg
  • Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt with their children Shiloh, Zahara, Pax and Maddox go to Kidville, on 84th Street in New York City, NY, USA on September 30, 2007. Kidville is one of the city's major activities centers for young children focused on infants through 5 year-olds. Photo by Charles Guerin/ABACAPRESS.COM  Pitt-Jolie Shiloh Jolie Pitt Shiloh Jolie-Pitt Shiloh Pitt Jolie Shiloh Pitt Shiloh Jolie Shiloh Jolie-Pitt Shiloh Nouvel Jolie Pitt Shiloh Nouvel Pitt-Jolie Shiloh Nouvel Pitt Jolie Shiloh Nouvel Pitt Shiloh Nouvel Jolie Shiloh Nouvel Paparazzi Pictures Planque Stake Out Seule Seul Seuls Seules Alone New York City New York USA United States of America Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika Etats-Unis Etats Unis  | 133056_01 New York City Unitd
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  • Tamara Smart arrives at WE Day UK at the SSE Arena in Wembley, London. Picture dated: Wednesday March 6, 2019. WE Day UK is a local initiative to encourage young people to take part in positive social change. Photo credit should read: Isabel Infantes / EMPICS Entertainment.
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  • Tamara Smart arrives at WE Day UK at the SSE Arena in Wembley, London. Picture dated: Wednesday March 6, 2019. WE Day UK is a local initiative to encourage young people to take part in positive social change. Photo credit should read: Isabel Infantes / EMPICS Entertainment.
    41665036.jpg
  • A young conservative delegate listens to Prime Minister Theresa May's speech during the final day of the Conservative party conference at the International Convention Centre, ICC, Birmingham. Wednesday October 5, 2016. Photo credit should read: Isabel Infantes / EMPICS Entertainment.
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  • A young conservative delegate listens to Prime Minister Theresa May's speech during the final day of the Conservative party conference at the International Convention Centre, ICC, Birmingham. Wednesday October 5, 2016. Photo credit should read: Isabel Infantes / EMPICS Entertainment.
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