Four Port St. Lucie police officers on Friday captured the
12-foot-long snake, which they believe is the culprit in the
disappearance of a slew of neighborhood pets over the past nine
months.
“It’s the answer to so many questions,” said Pamela Dinola, who
lost five of her seven cats.
Pythons are an exotic species and growing nuisance in Florida
where they have no natural predator and feed on native wildlife,
most notably in the Florida Everglades. Occasionally a snake
finds its way into populated areas.
Dinola said she suspected raccoons when her first cat
disappeared in November.
“But they kept disappearing over a matter of months,” Dinola
said.
On Friday, Dinola said she spotted the python wrapped around a
neighbor’s cat.
An officer familiar with snakes believes the python was let
loose by a pet owner well before it reached its current size, a
typical scenario. State wildlife officials were looking for the
snake's owner, said Frank Sabol, a spokesman for the Port St.
Lucie police department.
Meanwhile, police consider the case of the missing cats closed.
“It’s more than speculative to say that the python has been
(responsible). It’s more probable than not,” Sabol said.
(Editing by David Adams and Eric Walsh)
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