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Another reptile roundup - DE

Clay Davenport

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The newest batch of reptiles to make the SPCA shelter their home include three aggressive corn snakes, a red-tail boa, a ball python, a small snapping turtle, a large albino Burmese python, a large boa, a medium-size unidentified snake and an American alligator.

The dilemma now for the folks at Delaware's Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals is to find homes for the creatures, seized Tuesday from a Hockessin home.

The only other alternative is to euthanize them, SPCA Executive Director John E. Caldwell said.


A ninth snake -- a 3-foot-long ball python -- also was confiscated Tuesday from a home in the 100 block of Christiana Road near New Castle, Caldwell said.

None of the snakes can be put up for public adoption because they are not indigenous to Delaware, which makes owning or possessing them without a state permit illegal. New Castle County, which has its own law, bans them altogether unless they are kept on a farm with more than an acre of property, state Department of Agriculture inspector Bob Moore said.

"They're illegal, you're not supposed to have them and they're still being sold," Caldwell said. "And the victims are the reptiles."

Caldwell said he has called the Cape May County and Philadelphia zoos, but neither facility is interested in them.

An educational facility in Lancaster County expressed interest, but can't take them for a couple of weeks because it is remodeling, Caldwell said.

"I'm having a difficult time placing them because there's an overabundance of snakes," he said.

Less than two weeks ago, five boa constrictors were brought to the shelter -- four found abandoned at William Penn Village Apartments and the fifth seized from a Wilmington man who was spotted walking around with the 5-foot boa wrapped around his neck.

"We've got a huge 10-foot-long snake in Sussex County whose owners turned it in last week," Caldwell said. "We are trying to place that one."

That makes 15 snakes recovered in less than two weeks -- all owned illegally according to state laws. "It's a problem that needs to be addressed with additional legislation," Caldwell said.

He said laws need to be changed to prohibit pet store owners from selling exotic reptiles that are illegal to own in the state.

Moore, of the state Department of Agriculture, said anyone seeking to purchase a snake at a pet store in Delaware must first get a permit. None is issued if the snake is poisonous.

"Many times, when people are buying these types of reptiles, they are impulse buys," he said. "But there are penalties in place for the pet stores if they are selling you a snake without a permit. They are breaking the law."

Moore said when inspectors make visits to the stores and ask to see the store's records, snake purchases are checked against state records to ensure the buyer had a permit.

Ben Klenk, manager of Pet Village at 1812 Marsh Road in Brandywine Hundred, said that although the store sells only a few pythons a year, customers must get a permit before they can purchase one.

For New Castle County residents, those permits are largely unavailable.

"It's up to a $500 fine if you do possess or harbor one of these things," Caldwell said. "We want to make the public aware that you can't have them without a permit."

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Glad I don't live in Delaware.

Um, so why don't they sell them to someone, a zoo even, out of state and keep the $ to help the ASPCA? Maybe that would be against their laws too, but I think a little bit of REFORM would be in the best interest of the animals. Don't tell me the ASPCA doesn't have some clout with the legislature...
 
Clay Davenport said:
three aggressive corn snakes, a red-tail boa, a ball python, a small snapping turtle, a large albino Burmese python, a large boa, a medium-size unidentified snake and an American alligator.
Yup, all these animals are gonna kill ya.

Clay Davenport said:
New Castle County, which has its own law, bans them altogether unless they are kept on a farm with more than an acre of property, state Department of Agriculture inspector Bob Moore said.
Exactly how does owning more than one acre of property relate to the ownership of a corn snake? Maybe they think that since the neighbors are farther away when one owns more than one acre of property and therefore the neighbors are safer if you owned, say "three aggressive corn snakes". **Super Sarcasm Here** hahaha That is the most idiotic law I've ever read regarding reptile ownership.
 
I simply can't believe that you can't own ANY kind of non-indigenous sankes in the entire state without a permit....WTF?

I wonder what is involved in getting a permit there? And why the heck can't they offer for them for adoption to the "public" who may HAVE permits???

Cripes.
 
Here's an update on the story. The animals will make their home at Alligator Adventure in Myrtle Beach.
A happy ending except for the fact they were confiscated in the first place. AA is a pretty nice place, I was there last week actually.
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Eleven confiscated snakes, including a pet, 40-pound Burmese python named Jake, will soon be calling Alligator Adventure home -- once SPCA officials figure out how to safely ship the critters to the "Reptile Capital of the World."

Eight snakes, an American alligator and a snapping turtle seized earlier this week from a Hockessin home and a 3-foot ball python confiscated Tuesday from a home near New Castle are bound for the park in North Myrtle Beach, S.C.

So is a 4-foot Argentine boa constrictor confiscated Thursday from a garage in the first block of Salem Church Road in Ogletown, said Delaware Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals executive director John E. Caldwell.
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Then there's Jake, the SPCA's latest addition, who arrived Thursday at the Stanton shelter. He's so big, it takes three people to hold him, Caldwell said. Jake, who hailed from the Dover area, likes to dine on ham hocks and rodents.

His owner turned Jake and his 125-pound aquarium over to the SPCA officials this week because he was moving and couldn't take the reptile.

"I don't think he's dangerous, but I would be really concerned from a public safety aspect if something that big got loose," Caldwell said.

SPCA officials are grappling with ways to ship the reptiles. Alligator Adventure officials are paying the freight, Caldwell said.

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