National Post (National Edition)

Gator blamed after woman disappears while walking dogs

Reptile captured and killed by Florida officials

- KElli KEnnEdy

DAVIE , FLA . • Authoritie­s captured and killed an alligator that they believe fatally attacked a woman while she was out walking her dogs near a Florida lake Friday.

Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservati­on Commission officials said in a statement that a necropsy confirmed the gator bit the woman and they believe she is dead. They did not provide any other details or identify the victim, but said multiple units are out searching for her body.

A witness told authoritie­s he saw the woman walking two dogs and then noticed the dogs alone, barking near the water. One of the dogs had a fresh injury, a gash on its side, said Davie Police Detective Viviana Gallinal.

The witness called police when he couldn’t find the woman, Gallinal said. Earlier reports indicated the witness reported seeing the gator drag the woman into the water.

Jim Borrelli, a friend of the woman, said she and her husband have walked their dogs in the park previously. The couple did not live in the neighbourh­ood but he said she liked to find different places to walk the dogs. Residents said they often saw her walking her dogs in the area.

Borrelli said the woman’s husband, who is out of town and trying to fly home, sent him to the park to get more informatio­n after being contacted by Davie Police. Borrelli said he was also asked to break the news to the couple’s son, who is in his 20s and lives in New York.

A man who identified himself as the woman’s brother and several other family friends gathered at the scene., where the missing woman was described as a great friend.

Alligators are opportunis­tic feeders that will eat what is readily available and easily overpowere­d. Feeding wild alligators is illegal because they could lose their fear of humans.

Fatal attacks on humans remain rare, however. According to the wildlife commission, the likelihood of a Florida resident being seriously injured during an unprovoked alligator incident in Florida is roughly only one in 3.2 million.

From 1948 to 2017, the commission has documented 401 people bitten by alligators, including 24 fatalities. The most recent death occurred in 2016, when a 2-year-old boy playing near the water’s edge at a Walt Disney World resort was killed.

The park where the woman disappeare­d Friday is near the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino, a major Miami-area tourist and entertainm­ent attraction.

“Any body of water in Florida, you’ve got to know at some point or another there’s an alligator,” said Heather Porrata, who lives nearby.

Sharon Estupinan said a park ranger warned her to walk her dogs farther away from the water’s edge after she saw a three-metre gator in the pond three days ago.

“I was afraid,” she said. “Every time I walked the dogs during the day, I was like, ‘Oh, my God, I’ve gotta keep away from there.’ ”

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