CLEVELAND, Ohio -- When a state wildlife officer shot a caiman Monday evening, a Cleveland police dispatcher, a Metroparks dispatcher and a state wildlife officer all knew the Cleveland Metroparks Zoo was willing to take the caiman.Read more....
The Metroparks ranger dispatcher had arranged for the caiman to go to the zoo Tuesday morning, but as he tried to explain the plan to a Cleveland police dispatcher, she interrupted, telling him "not to worry about it, she would instruct her officers to put the alligator down."
Then she hung up, according to the park dispatcher's written report.
The conversation occurred after a police dispatcher had contacted a Division of Wildlife official, who then called the Metroparks dispatcher to see if the zoo would take the reptile.
The parks dispatcher called zoo veterinarian Tony Lesh at home. Lesh said the reptile could be kept overnight in a "dog crate, secure garage or a trunk of a car, if no other option was available; then keep the car out of direct sunlight."
The parks dispatcher then called the wildlife official, "Bartczak," back and told him the zoo would take the caiman. Bartczak asked the dispatcher to call him back with the details because he was busy with a boater emergency.
Apparently because Wildlife Officer Bartczak was busy, Wildlife Officer Hollie Fluharty met at Edgewater Park with the Cleveland police officers who had the 2-foot caiman, with its mouth taped shut, on the back seat of their police car.
The officer told Fluharty "that there were several failed attempts to find a home for the caiman," including the zoo, so "the animal was given to Fluharty to be dispatched," wildlife spokeswoman Jamey Graham said during an interview Tuesday.
"Fluharty had no reason to doubt the officers," so she shot it in the head with a .22-caliber rifle, Graham said.
Friday, July 2, 2010
Zoo accepts caiman but police decide to destroy it.
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