Houston Chronicle

Pot user wasn’t blowing smoke about tiger; beast now at refuge

- By Nicole Hensley STAFF WRITER STAFF WRITER

A chubby tiger rescued from a ramshackle Houston home — all thanks to a pot-smoking 311 caller — was given a kingdom of his own at a North Texas wildlife refuge as law enforcemen­t spent Tuesday searching for its owner.

The apex predator whose unexpected discovery in an abandoned home Monday made internatio­nal headlines as he arrived at the Cleveland Amory Black Beauty Ranch, where he may continue to live among a menagerie of horses, reptiles, primates and bison on the 1,400-acre property.

The male cat rolled up to the Murchison ranch about 24 hours after a woman who requested anonymity from authoritie­s dialed the city’s 311 service with an animal welfare concern from a vacant home in the 9400 block of E. Avenue J in the Manchester neighborho­od, according to officials.

Houston police spokesman Kese Smith said the woman was at the vacant home in hopes of lighting up her marijuana stash. But

she and a pal realized they were not alone.

The woman found the exotic feline locked in a cage too small for a beast of his stature.

“I’m not lying,” the woman told a perplexed 311 dispatcher, according to a recording reviewed by the Houston Chronicle.

“I don’t know how he got it in there,” she said. “It’s not a baby tiger. It’s pretty big.”

“How do you even get a tiger?” the dispatcher wondered.

Authoritie­s have honored the 311 caller’s request to remain anonymous, even to late night comic Jimmy Kimmel, whose representa­tives had hoped to bring the marijuana-toting good Samaritan on ABC’s “Jimmy Kimmel Live!”

The woman’s call was soon patched through to BARC, which then dispatched an animal control officer to the home. An HPD officer joined him. The officers could hear the striped animal — and smell the unmistakab­le aroma associated with cat urine that followed it to the shelter. It was enough to obtain a search warrant. Neighbors shocked

The feline they found inside was trapped inside a 4x8-feet cage, resting on a bed of hay. He had eaten recently but was dehydrated.

“It wasn’t well cared for,” said Lara Cottingham, of the city’s Administra­tion & Regulatory Affairs Department, which oversees BARC and 311.

She said the tiger woke up Tuesday in “good spirits” at BARC’s animal shelter in a tranquiliz­er-induced cat nap. “It was snoring adorably,” she said, adding that he was well behaved. The tiger posed regally for photograph­s and picked up its food bowl with his mouth in an attempt to request a meaty nosh.

“It was really Instagram friendly,” Cottingham said.

Neighbors to the Avenuue J home were shocked to hear they were sharing a block with a tiger, whose counterpar­ts in the wild are an endangered species.

“Maybe they had it like a pet,” said Pablo Briagas, whose guard dogs were roaming his driveway. “You know people these days.”

He was worried that the tiger could have escaped and hurt someone.

“I have my kids here,” Briagas said alongside his 8-year-old son. “It’s dangerous.”

His son Isaac was certain their dogs would have protected them.

How the planet’s largest cat species ended up at the east Houston home is a mystery to law enforcemen­t. Tigers are not a permitted pet in the city limits unless the handler, such as a zoo, is licensed to have exotic animals.

Investigat­ors with HPD’s Major Offenders’ Animal Cruelty Squad have leads into who owned the tiger but it may not be the same person who owns the property, said Jodi Silva, a police spokeswoma­n. Owner a mystery

The dilapidate­d lot in the Manchester subdivisio­n has changed ownership at some point from 2018 to 2019. It went into foreclosur­e after its resident of two decades died, according to Harris County records and a man whose phone number was spray painted on the crooked garage.

The man, who declined to be identified, was trying to purchase the property last year but the deal fell through, he said. The tiger was not a fixture in the home when he toured it. The animal’s presence Monday was a surprise to him.

“I had a good laugh. I didn’t think you could have a tiger in Houston,” he said.

The woman who records show currently owns the property could not be reached for comment.

The tiger appeared to be in good health after his 200-mile journey to the ranch, where a fiveacre habitat could become his forever home depending on the outcome of the police investigat­ion.

An initial assessment determined the tiger is “a little overweight.”

“Probably because he wasn't getting any exercise,” ranch director Noelle Almrud.

“We feel we can provide him a better life,” Almrud said. “We currently have the space. It's not a hardship for us."

Back in Houston, his rescuers settled on the name Tyson, for the profession­al boxer Mike Tyson who had a tiger in the movie “The Hangover.” Jay R. Jordan contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Godofredo A. Vasquez / Staff photograph­er ?? The tiger that was found in a tiny cage in a southeast Houston vacant house spent time at the BARC Animal Shelter and Adoptions building before being moved to a North Texas sanctuary.
Godofredo A. Vasquez / Staff photograph­er The tiger that was found in a tiny cage in a southeast Houston vacant house spent time at the BARC Animal Shelter and Adoptions building before being moved to a North Texas sanctuary.

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