Case Details

Injured alligator put in back seat of car
Port Charlotte, FL (US)

Date: Feb 23, 2003
Disposition: Alleged

Alleged Abuser: Leslie Strickland

Case ID: 857
Classification: Other
Animal: reptile
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Leslie Strickland said she had nothing but good intentions when she loaded a badly hurt 6-foot alligator into the back seat of her Honda Accord and took it home last weekend in Port Charlotte. The 49-year-old woman had hit the animal with her car Friday night and went back hoping to rescue it. Instead, she crashed her car when the gator started to thrash in the back seat, got arrested and spent the night in jail.

Strickland, who lives in Port Charlotte north of Fort Myers, was charged with possession of an alligator, a felony in Florida. Police also charged her with driving with a suspended license and walking away from the scene of the accident - leaving the injured alligator in the back seat of her Honda.

"I knew I was in trouble, and I panicked and I left," Strickland said. "I had a felony in the back seat, and I just didn't know what to do."

Strickland - listed in a police report as 5 feet, 7 inches and 170 pounds - said she didn't have much trouble grabbing the alligator around the middle and lifting it into her back seat Saturday afternoon. It only wriggled a little bit when she picked it up. She figured it was in shock and dying.

"He was very lethargic, and I was not afraid of him," she said. "I was careful to stay away from his jaws."

Strickland said she drove the gator home, wetted it down with hose and then tried unsuccessfully to reach somebody with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. After neighbors told her it was illegal to have the animal, she loaded it in the car again and drove off in search of a pond to release it.

That's when the alligator started to thrash its tail, she said. Distracted, she veered off the road and hit a mailbox. Witnesses told police she tried to drive off, but her car got stuck in the ditch. So she got out and walked away. Police arrested Strickland at her home nearby, adding a charge of resisting arrest after she struggled with officers who tried to handcuff her. She said she "freaked out" at the prospect of going to jail.

The game commission removed the alligator from the car and hauled it away. It died later. Game commission spokesman Gary Morse said Strickland took a huge risk, even though the animal was critically injured.

"A 6-foot alligator is perfectly capable of ripping your fingers off," Morse said. "It's extremely dangerous. The animal was perfectly capable of tearing up her car inside and out."

References

Florida Times-Union

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