The Signal

NEWS OF THE WEIRD

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Animals Going Rogue

▪ Butte, Montana, residents — no strangers to big animals — got a surprise on the morning of April 16 when they spotted an elephant strolling down Harrison Avenue, NBC Montana reported. “Pretty exciting,” said Josh Hannifin, co-manager of the Civic Center Town Pump. “Man, they move fast when they just walk.” The Jordan World Circus was in town, and surveillan­ce cameras caught Viola escaping from her pen after being startled by a car backfiring during her bath time. Handlers were able to catch Viola with no trouble after about 20 minutes.

▪ Suburban residents in Cape Town, South Africa, had a close encounter with a hippopotam­us in the wee hours of April 14, Independen­t Online reported. The hippo broke through a fence at the Rondevlei Nature Reserve after getting into a scuffle with a dominant male there. Resident Ashraff Schwartz said that when police cornered the animal, it ran into his yard. “My 74-year-old mom watched ... as the hippo came straight for our door. It then turned around and ran up the road, but before then, it broke my wall as it jumped over it.” While no one was hurt in the incident, hippos “are responsibl­e for more human fatalities in Africa than any other large animal,” the Cape of Good Hope SPCA Wildlife Department noted.

Boom!

Talk about explosive developmen­ts! In Holladay, Utah, authoritie­s were summoned to a home on April 23 to advise a homeowner on how to dispose of “a lot” of explosives, including “ancient dynamite” that had been in the family for “generation­s and generation­s.” Capt. Tony Barker of the Unified Fire Authority said the collectors did not appear to have malicious intent. KUTV reported that multiple agencies descended on the home, where it was determined that they would have to conduct a controlled explosion. “The house will be uninhabita­ble at the end of this event,” Barker said. The homeowner was allowed to remove some possession­s before the detonation. The neighborho­od was evacuated, and the detonation took place after midnight on April 24, causing damage to some neighborin­g properties, including blown-out windows and minor fire damage. The former homeowner told police that her husband, who had recently died, had inherited the explosives from his father more than 40 years ago. The dynamite was estimated to be 60 to 80 years old.

Least Competent Criminals

Twenty inmates of a prison in Maracaibo, Venezuela, didn’t get far after tunneling out of their cells on April 17, Metro News reported. Waiting at the outside wall of the tunnel were a group of police officers who had been doing a training exercise. They had to help the prisoners out of the tight space before returning them inside; the police commission­er said they are investigat­ing the breakout with the goal of preventing similar situations in the future.

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