Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Disney World has been home to many gators

Boy’s death in 2016 raised safety questions

- By Darryl Fears

The fatal attack on a 2-year-old boy by an alligator at Disney World last year raised questions: How many more gators prowled the waters of the internatio­nally famous theme park, and did officials know about them?

Now it’s clear that Disney was aware of the problem. There are so many alligators around the popular resort in Orlando that it could easily create its own gator farm.

According to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservati­on Commission, more than 220 of the animals were removed from the location between May 2006 and August 2015. After that 10-year period, the number of captures and removals increased to more than 40 in a single year, June 15, 2015, to June 15, 2016. The child was killed June 14, 2016, and the following year removals more than doubled to 83.

A few days before young Lane Thomas Graves wanturn dered into the white sand Seven Seas Lagoon where his family lounged, six alligators were hauled out of the theme park, four of them 6 feet or larger. Two days after an 18-hour search finally recovered the child’s remains, five alligators were removed from the property.

In a park where alligators are common and a state where 1.3 million gators exist and nearly 16,000 were trapped and removed from properties near humans in just two years, visitors spoke of the paucity of signs warning of their presence.

The boy’s parents, Melissa and Matt Graves, who leapt into the lagoon in a failed attempt to free their son from the alligator’s jaws, said shortly after the Lane’s death that they would not sue Disney World. It was deemed an accident.

Walt Disney World President George Kalogridis released a statement in which he vowed the organizati­on would support the family. The Graveses launched the Lane Thomas Foundation, which works to find organ donors. A year after the death, Disney erected a lighthouse statue in the child’s honor, drawing on the foundation’s mission to its namesake into a “beacon of hope.”

“It is our hope that through the foundation we will be able to share with others the unimaginab­le love Lane etched in our hearts,” the family said in a statement.

Legal experts speculated that a lawsuit or court settlement could have been considerab­le, particular­ly if Disney officials understood that alligators were a constant presence in its park.

And that much is clear. The state wildlife commission’s spreadshee­t shared with The Washington Post shows that four alligators were removed from Disney World in a single day in March last year. Ten days after that, March 14, seven were caught. On May 10, a little more than a month before the fatal attack, trappers removed six alligators from Disney World.

Walt Disney Parks and Resorts sought and received a Target Harvest Area permit from the Florida commission that allows it to “work directly with a designated FWC-contracted nuisance alligator trapper to remove ... alligators from the property.” That’s when the captures grew.

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