MICCOSUKEE TRIBE INDIAN RESERVATION, Fla. (AP) — A suspected thief disappeared into an alligator-infested lake as he fled police only to turn up dead the next day with gator teeth marks on his upper torso, authorities said Tuesday.
It wasn’t immediately clear how the man died, but an 9-foot-3-inch long alligator may have been responsible.
The reptile has been killed and is being stored in a cooler awaiting a coroner’s examination for human hair or skin, said Brian Wood, owner of All American Gator Products, which is storing the gator for now. It will then be incinerated or buried, he said.
The man was allegedly burglarizing a vehicle in a resort parking lot Thursday and ran when police arrived, said Dexter Lehtinen, one of the Miccosukee tribe’s police legal advisors. His name was not released.
The man’s body was recovered Friday by tribal police divers from the lake at the Miccosukee Resort and Convention Center west of Miami. A sign there warns people: “Danger Live Alligators.”
Another man was also arrested. The tribe, which is not obligated to follow Florida’s open records laws, declined to release his name. Without a name, the Miami-Dade state attorney’s office was unable to comment on whether the man has been charged.
It wasn’t immediately clear how the man died, but an 9-foot-3-inch long alligator may have been responsible.
The reptile has been killed and is being stored in a cooler awaiting a coroner’s examination for human hair or skin, said Brian Wood, owner of All American Gator Products, which is storing the gator for now. It will then be incinerated or buried, he said.
The man was allegedly burglarizing a vehicle in a resort parking lot Thursday and ran when police arrived, said Dexter Lehtinen, one of the Miccosukee tribe’s police legal advisors. His name was not released.
The man’s body was recovered Friday by tribal police divers from the lake at the Miccosukee Resort and Convention Center west of Miami. A sign there warns people: “Danger Live Alligators.”
Another man was also arrested. The tribe, which is not obligated to follow Florida’s open records laws, declined to release his name. Without a name, the Miami-Dade state attorney’s office was unable to comment on whether the man has been charged.
I feel bad for the alligator. Lunch showed up in his swamp and the gator gets killed just to see if maybe he took a bite? Who cares?
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