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Why did this animal need to be euthenized?
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by agkistrodude on July 24, 2009
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http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/32101001/
I can feel for the dog and the man's fingers,but it didn't do anything wrong.
"Alligators frequently snack on dogs and cats, the household pets being the same size as the reptiles’ normal prey in the wild. But they rarely attack humans."
It didn't attack a human. He put his hands in it mouth. Marty
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RE: Why did this animal need to be euthenized?
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by Agkistrodoncomplex on July 24, 2009
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I dunno, it could have been just as easy to relocate it rather than kill it, I guess because its an evil ugly man eating alligator.
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RE: Why did this animal need to be euthenized?
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by jared on July 24, 2009
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Just like pit bulls, anything that makes the pulse spike has to be eliminated, even if its only a name.
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RE: Why did this animal need to be euthenized?
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by Pug on July 26, 2009
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Alligators over four feet in length are poor candidates for relocation. They usually return to their familiar home range, often travelling grerat distances. The trappers who do the dirty work are compensated by being allowed to sell the meat and hide. An adult gator that has to be captured for some interaction with humans is dead meat.
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