Evening Standard

Man who crept into ‘empty’ house for quiet joint finds tiger who ate too much tea

- Lizzie Edmonds

A DANGEROUS wild animal making itself comfortabl­e in an urban house might sound l i ke a d r u g-i n d u c e d hallucinat­ion.

But it was no illusion for a marijuana smoker in Houston, Texas, when he discovered a real tiger in an abandoned property.

The man, whose name has not been released, at first thought he was seeing things when he spotted the creature in the garage of the house.

But he called police who, after establishi­ng he was of clear mind, went to the property yesterday and found the female tiger in a cage secured with a screwdrive­r and a nylon strap. The animal, reportedly weighing around 1,000lb, was “well-fed” but “thirsty”. She was tranquilis­ed and has now been moved to a specialist shelter.

Video footage posted on Twitter shows the sleeping animal being lifted in the cage on to the back of a trailer.Police Sergeant Jason Alderete told local media that the terrified caller had “assured us it was not the effect of the drugs that made him believe he was seeing a tiger”, adding: “At first we thought it was a prank or that he was high.”

Lara Cottingham, a spokeswoma­n for Houston’s animal control agency, said of the tiger: “She’s pretty large, so she doesn’t look underfed. She was thirsty.

“She didn’t look particular­ly threatenin­g but they did tranquilis­e her right before they transporte­d her. It is a beautiful animal and we want it to live a happy, healthy life. Living in a cage is not optimal circumstan­ces for anyone involved.” Resident Arturo Jimenez said: “It’s kinda scary. In Houston, that is not normal.”

A report issued last year said 7,000 big cats live in captivity in the US, outnumberi­ng the number of wild tigers worldwide. Most are kept in unregulate­d conditions, including private breeding facilities, back yards and even urban apartments.

 ??  ?? and shirting came city slick.The casting added weight to the idea that this show was as much about the clothes as the wearer, as alt It-girls from Brit Lara Mullen to New Yorker Binx Walton were enlisted with more establishe­d models including Saskia de Brauw.After a brief hiatus from New York Fashion Week, the label has been intent on reaffirmin­g its foundation­s. Common themes of this collection were integral to the brand’s DNA, from generously proportion­ed bags to lashings of leather adorning everything from trousers to sheath dresses.Outerwear was abundant, from denim-panelled trenches to oversized patchwork shearling coats, and touches of frivolity, such as feather sleeves on skin-tight rollnecks, hinted at having fun with fashion very seriously. Front row: actor Mickey Rourke at New York Fashion Week. Top, model Karen Elson and actress Shailee Woodley at the Proenza Schouler show
and shirting came city slick.The casting added weight to the idea that this show was as much about the clothes as the wearer, as alt It-girls from Brit Lara Mullen to New Yorker Binx Walton were enlisted with more establishe­d models including Saskia de Brauw.After a brief hiatus from New York Fashion Week, the label has been intent on reaffirmin­g its foundation­s. Common themes of this collection were integral to the brand’s DNA, from generously proportion­ed bags to lashings of leather adorning everything from trousers to sheath dresses.Outerwear was abundant, from denim-panelled trenches to oversized patchwork shearling coats, and touches of frivolity, such as feather sleeves on skin-tight rollnecks, hinted at having fun with fashion very seriously. Front row: actor Mickey Rourke at New York Fashion Week. Top, model Karen Elson and actress Shailee Woodley at the Proenza Schouler show
 ??  ?? Surprise visitor: the animal, which was said to be “well-fed”, had to be tranquilis­ed before being moved to a specialist shelter for care
Surprise visitor: the animal, which was said to be “well-fed”, had to be tranquilis­ed before being moved to a specialist shelter for care

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