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TX: Anyone Missing an 11-Foot Python?

EricWI Mar 24, 2011 04:57 PM

Reticulated python found outside Lewisville apartment

Someone in Lewisville lost their pet. It's brown, has sharp teeth, is 11 feet long and has no legs.

Lewisville Animal Services received a call about a reticulated python Tuesday evening. The reptile was found in the breezeway of an apartment complex in the 300 block of East Southwest Parkway.

"We don't see too many pythons roaming the streets of Lewisville," said Laura Wise, director of Lewisville Animal Services.

The Lewisville facility doesn't have a big enough tank to hold to a python. The center also doesn't keep the proper food on hand to feed the serpent.

"These types of pythons will eat chickens and rabbits," Wise said.

She said they would also eat rats and mice.

The snake will be moved to the Living Materials Center in Plano on Wednesday to live a comfortable life on display.

Wise said a permit is needed to own the snake in the city of Lewisville, and a license is required by the state of Texas.

So far, no one has come forward to claim the animal, and no one is on record in Lewisville as having a permit for that particular snake.
www.nbcdfw.com/news/local/Anyone-Missing-an-11-Foot-Python-118551544.html

Replies (2)

varanid Mar 24, 2011 11:34 PM

I wonder how easy it is to find out you need a permit? Cities, and to a lesser extent states, sometimes do a piss-poor job of making that stuff obvious and well known.
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We wouldn't have 6 and a half billion people if you had to be beautiful to get laid.
1.3 African House Snakes
3.2 reticulated pythons
1 corn snake
4.3 Florida Kings
2 speckled kings
1.2 ball pythons
1 Argentine boa
1 Texas Rat Snake
1 checkered garter snake

EricWI Mar 29, 2011 12:47 PM

The scientific name for a reticulated python is Python reticulatus, but if you ask Lewisville police, it's Houdini.

Earlier this week, Lewisville police and animal control officers were called to an apartment when a resident frantically called 911 after spotting an 11-foot snake outside.

Three people rounded up the snake and secured it in a cage at the Lewisville animal shelter.

Or so they thought.

On Thursday morning, the python was nowhere to be found.

"When it went missing, we didn't know where it was, and your first thought is, 'Did someone
steal it? What happened to it? Did someone break in and take it away?'" Capt. Jay Powell said. "Looking at the building, there wasn't any sign of forced entry."

On Friday, investigators looked for more clues in the serpent caper at the shelter.

"One of those investigators had been an employee at a pet store, so he had some
working knowledge on those types of critters," Powell said. "Doing a little investigating and a little digging around themselves, they found an area where some insulation was where it normally wouldn't be."

The Lewisville officer/pet detective saw a small hole in a cinder block wall. He followed the hole up into the ceiling. After snooping around a few minutes, he foiled the python's great escape.

"The investigator with the pet store experience took care of the business end, while he hauled it down for the other investigators to take care of the back end of it," Powell said.

The python is now in a proper holding tank at the Plano Living Materials Center.

The officers are still getting over their jitters.
www.nbcdfw.com/news/weird/Giant-Snake-Pulls-a-Houdini-118690779.html

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