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September 26, 2006
An Opelika man who killed an alligator after it allegedly
attacked him while fishing admitted that he had been attempting to
catch an alligator a few days prior to the incident. On June 23,
2006, Michael Edwards killed an 8-foot, 9-inch male alligator at
Saugahatchee Lake in Opelika.
After an investigation by the Alabama Division of Wildlife and
Freshwater Fisheries, Edwards admitted that he and a friend had
seen an alligator at the lake a week earlier. Edwards came back to
the lake later the same day and put out steel cables with baited
treble hooks in an attempt to catch the alligator. He removed the
cables and hooks from the lake the next morning because he didn’t
catch the alligator.
Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources
Regulation 220-2-.97 makes it “unlawful to posses, take, capture,
or kill, or attempt to possess, take, capture, or kill, any
alligator.” Since Edwards admitted to attempting to catch the
alligator, he was charged and pled guilty to violating that
regulation. He paid a $250 fine plus court costs of $136.
According to Lt. Mike Pollard, it is possible that his baiting of
the alligator caused the animal to associate Edwards with food.
“Feeding alligators is against the law and can have serious
consequences,” Pollard said. “When animals like this associate
humans with food, they can lose their fear of people, which might
lead to attacks,” he added.
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