Bangkok Post

Cops seek crocodile sidekicks

-

SYDNEY: Wanted the shirtless reptile-hurlers of Humpty Doo. It sounds like a crazy caper in a children’s book. But the police in Australia are serious.

Investigat­ors in the Northern Territory announced on Sunday that they needed the public’s help in identifyin­g four halfnaked men who had broken into a school office in the town of Humpty Doo, shattering a window and heaving a few saltwater crocodiles inside.

Presumably, investigat­ors also want the answer to that age-old question of crimesolvi­ng: Why did you do it?

The police released a security camera video of the break-in, which occurred at about 5am on Sunday.

The video shows the interior of an unremarkab­le office: desk, file cabinets, computer. Then the panes of a glass door tremble and crack, and in comes a crocodile, toppling headfirst into the room. The scaly beast is followed by another, and then a third crocodile flops headfirst through the broken glass.

The reptilian advance team is followed by human counterpar­ts. A man is seen reaching through the broken glass to open the locked door. He darts in, shirtless but with his face covered, and three more men follow. At first they appear to be searching for something, yanking open drawers and tossing aside papers and equipment.

Finally, the video shows them grabbing a computer and making their escape, leaving the crocodiles behind to face the music. The reptiles are barely visible on the floor, shuffling around the furniture.

A school alarm alerted a caretaker, who called the police, according to NT News, which covers the Northern Territory.

The episode happened at Taminmin College, a rural secondary school serving students in grades seven through 12.

The police released little else in the way of descriptio­ns of the suspects, but it appeared likely that investigat­ors would want to talk to anyone in the vicinity who had easy access to crocodiles.

It was far from clear what the three reptiles — 1.5m-long female saltwater crocodiles, or “salties” — were supposed to accomplish for the intruders. The most plausible guess seemed to be that they were meant to scare off anyone who might have been present in the office at 5am. Arrests, of sorts, were made. “Police attended, and managed to, with the aid of a ranger, get the crocodiles in custody, if you like,” Senior Constable David Gregory of the Northern Territory Police told reporters at a news conference.

“The ranger that turned up was very concerned for them — they had their mouths taped shut, obviously,” he said. “They’re in very poor shape, they haven’t seen water for a long time, they’re undernouri­shed.”

In a photograph distribute­d by the police, one of the crocodiles appeared to have its mouth clamped shut with a zip tie.

The Northern Territory is a vast, sparsely populated area of more than 1.4 million sq km, known for its outback desert landscape. Humpty Doo, which had a population of about 8,700 in 2013, is about 32km southeast of Darwin, the territory’s capital.

The Australian newspaper The Age describes Humpty Doo as a way station of sorts for people who commute to Darwin or who pass through on their way to Kakadu National Park, which attracts tourists and scientists.

 ?? EPA/NORTHERN TERRITORY POLICE ?? CCTV footage shows a crocodile being dumped into Taminmin College, in Humpty Doo, Australia, on Sunday.
EPA/NORTHERN TERRITORY POLICE CCTV footage shows a crocodile being dumped into Taminmin College, in Humpty Doo, Australia, on Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand