Man Ticketed After Catching Gator That Was Threatening Children

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Drizzt

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Man Ticketed After Catching Gator That Was Threatening Children

POSTED: 5:47 p.m. EDT June 23, 2003

LAKE COUNTY, Fla. -- A Lake County man says all he wanted to do was help, but all he got was a ticket for his trouble. The man lassoed a gator to keep the reptile away from a woman and her children.

Michael McCormick's $180 ticket has been reduced to a simple warning. Initially, the folks with the Florida Wildlife Commission cited McCormick for roping an alligator he saw leaving a pond headed toward a woman walking down the street with children.

"So I turned to the gator and kept his attention toward me," says McCormick.

He says he's certain what would have happened if he had not put himself between the 5 or 6 foot gator and the family. "Considering the size of the small children, I honestly think he was coming after them.

McCormick had just wrapped up his day at work at Caskey's Mowers. As a mechanic, he knew how good he was with a wrench. The gator taught him how handy he is with a rope.

"We had a pretty good tugging match going," he explains.

McCormick held the reptile penned against a fence until help arrived. But to his surprise, when deputies showed up, it wasn't the gator that was in trouble. Wildlife officials issued him $180 ticket for illegally possessing an alligator.

"I could understand it if I had been out here beating on the alligator or I had gone into the lake, but considering the circumstances I think it was kind of silly to do that," says McCormick.

He took the ticket with no questions and one thought in mind: 12-year-old Brian Griffin.

"My daughter knew him and, you know, all of that went into play when I seen the gator and especially when I seen him move out," explains McCormick. "You can't put a price on a person's life and you can't stop it and rewind it and say hey let's try this again."

And for that reason, McComick says he would do the exact same thing all over again, even if he had to pay the fine. McCormick says, before the folks with the Wildlife Commission decided to let him off the hook, he had tons of people offering to pay his ticket for him, but he refused them all. He says he planned to fight the citation because he didn't feel he had done anything wrong.

http://www.wftv.com/news/2288708/detail.html

You were just HOPING it was from The Onion....
 
The envoros claimed that alligators were endangered so they convinced the government to protect them; and now they have bred themselves up to being a royal nuisance and you still have to leave them alone. Until they drag the grandchild of a politician into a pond they will be able to continue to be a nuisance to everyone else.
 
Is it just me, or our the idiots in local gov'ment getting even more idiotic. This one ranks up there with the ticket they gave a century-old New York City coffee shop for making the air smell like... coffee.
 
What if the alligator ate some missing chads? Could you catch it then?

Which caliber for gator? If you were attacked by an alligator and a bear, which one should you shoot first?

Who cares, just kill them all and be rid of the stupid critters. I cannot believe this stupidity. Who's running the asylum down yonder anywho?
 
I agree, we should kill all the liberal functionaries in the government. :D

None of this is the gator's fault. I blame the idiots who issued a ticket!
 
A local reporter told me that the wildlife offcials have rescinded the ticket ...

I wanted to help pay for the stupid ticket.
 
The ticket was stupid, but then again so was the guy's contention that he was trying to save the lives of the woman and kids. A simple yell at the family or drive down to tell them a gator was about would have been enough. While valient, his actions put himself in undue danger. Contrary to his statements, nobody was actually at risk until he engaged the animal. That is not to say that the gator's travels would not have crossed the paths of other humans, only that at the time he was roped, no one was actually in danger and the perceived danger could have been alleviated via simple verbal warnings if the gator got that far.
 
Just to give everyone a little more info on gators

Q: How fast do crocodilians run?
A: The maximum speed is around 11 mph. Bursts at these speeds are used primarily for catching prey, and escaping predators.

Q: Are alligators and crocodiles dangerous to humans?
A: Yes, large alligators can be dangerous, particularly those that have been fed by people. Feeding alligators and other wild animals is not only illegal, but causes them to lose their fear of humans. They become bold, aggressive and come to expect more food, which can be dangerous to people and ultimately to the animals. A mother crocodilian protecting her nest or young is very dangerous. In the United States from 1948 to 1995, there were 236 attacks on humans by alligators, 8 of which were fatal. Each year, there are thousands of attacks and hundreds of fatalities from Nile Crocodiles in Africa, and Indopacific Crocodiles in Asia and Australia.

St Augustine Alligator Farm

We report, you decide.
 
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