
Terri Irwin and the couple's eight-year-old daughter Bindi will be in the United States when the show is broadcast, where the youngster is kicking off her U.S show business career and promoting her own upcoming Discovery kids wildlife series, "Bindi, The Jungle Girl." "We're very proud that Steve's last documentary is going to air and that's his last footage with wildlife," said his widow. "There's standard protocols for examining certain evidence and that's no longer necessary," she told "Access Hollywood."Īsked whether she kept the video returned to her, she said, "Oh no, all footage has been destroyed."īut while the video of his death has been destroyed, footage from the rest of the shoot will make its debut in a one-off special on The Discovery Channel and Animal Planet on January 21 with a two-hour showing of "Ocean's Deadliest." This video was handed to his widow, Terri Irwin, who told TV's "Access Hollywood" in an interview being aired on Thursday and Friday this week that she had now destroyed this footage.

The incident was captured by the documentary crew of "Ocean's Deadliest," the Discovery wildlife special Irwin was filming at the time of his death.

Related readings: Irwin's father: I lost my best mate Croc hunter's daughter gets own TV show Wife: Footage of Irwin's death will never air Crocodile Hunter Irwin remembered Irwin, 44, died on September 4 last year after a stingray's serrated barb pierced his heart while he was filming under water off Australia's coast.Īustralian authorities last week said that they had completed an investigation into Irwin's death and, to ensure it is never made public, destroyed all but one copy of a tape showing Irwin's death. New York - The only video of Australian "Crocodile Hunter" Steve Irwin's fatal encounter with a stingray has been destroyed, according to his widow. Australian Steve Irwin, famous for his TV show 'The Crocodile Hunter,' holds his month-old son, Robert, in front of a 13-foot crocodile in an image from television during a croc feeding, Friday Jan 2, 2004, at his Australian Zoo reptile park in Brisbane, Australia.
