The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Pet gator is gone, probably among others in a swamp

Wally, captured and released, is wanted back at home.

- By Victor Mather

WallyGator, the emotional support alligator who enjoyed a moment of fame last year when he was denied admittance to a Major League Baseball game, is back in the news.

He’s gone. Wally’s owner, Joie Henney, said on social media that the alligator had been taken early in the morning of April 21 from a pen where he was being kept in Brunswick, Georgia.

Henney said on Monday that he had learned that Wally was taken by a person who had then dropped him in someone else’s yard, possibly to scare them. When the alligator was discovered, the Georgia Department of Natural Resources was called, and brought in a trapper, who caught and released the animal into a swamp where about 20 other alligators lived, Henney said.

Henney, of Jonestown, Pennsylvan­ia, said the trapper had told him that the chances of finding the alligator now were “slim to none,” but Henney was holding out hope and said he planned to search for WallyGator.

As of Tuesday night, he said, there had been no luck finding Wally, who is roughly 8 to 9 years old and about 6 feet in length.

The Georgia agency said in a statement Wednesday that it often received calls about “nuisance alligators.”

“The agent trapper’s handling of a nuisance alligator was appropriat­e and routine,” it said. “We have no informatio­n confirming whether this is the same alligator that is being reported as stolen/missing (aka ‘Wally’).”

Henney did not immediatel­y respond to a message left for him Wednesday.

Wally was originally found at Disney World, and Henney took him in at his reptile rescue facility in Pennsylvan­ia.

Henney said Wally had helped him out of a deep emotional depression. He began taking the alligator along on errands and walking him on a leash. In interviews, he has said Wally is gentle, demonstrat­ing this by putting his hand in the alligator’s mouth and removing it without getting bitten.

Last fall, Henney and Wally went to Citizens Bank Park in Philadelph­ia to catch a Phillies game. But they were turned away, as the policy at the park is to permit service dogs but not other animals.

Henney has parlayed his relationsh­ip with Wally into a significan­t social media presence, and many people reached out this week with words of support and offers to help in a search.

The number of people who live with a variety of animals for mental health reasons has grown rapidly in recent years. Though most of the animals are dogs, they also include a wider menagerie, including ducks, pigs and squirrels. The animals are often taken to restaurant­s, stores and public places, sometimes leading to consternat­ion or confrontat­ion.

 ?? AP 2019 ?? Joie Henney of York Haven, Pa., credits emotional support gator Wally for helping relieve his depression for nearly a decade, and says he’s searching for the reptile. Wally went missing while kept in a pen in Brunswick while Henney was on vacation.
AP 2019 Joie Henney of York Haven, Pa., credits emotional support gator Wally for helping relieve his depression for nearly a decade, and says he’s searching for the reptile. Wally went missing while kept in a pen in Brunswick while Henney was on vacation.

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