Crime & Safety
911 Call: Alligator Found With Human Body
The Lakeland Police Department has released the 911 call it received reporting the discovery of an alligator with a human body in its mouth.
LAKELAND, FL — As Lakeland Police continue to investigate the death of a person found in an alligator’s jaws in Lake Hunter on Tuesday, the 911 call reporting the grisly discovery has been released.
As of Wednesday morning, police did not know the identity of the person found, nor did they have a definitive cause of death. An autopsy has been scheduled for Wednesday, Sgt. Gary Gross wrote in an email to media.
A Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission trapper did capture a 9-foot alligator from the lake overnight Tuesday, but it was discovered the creature was “not the alligator in question,” Gross said.
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The trapper intends to return to the lake Wednesday night to try and capture the alligator involved in the death.
The sighting that led to the 911 call occurred about 1:40 p.m. Tuesday, June 7 outside Florida Presbyterian Homes in Lakeland. It seems a passerby made the discovery and notified police. When officers arrived, they confirmed the finding.
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Police were able to get the body away from the alligator, but they do not know the deceased’s identity yet. “(We) think it’s a male,” said Gross, adding that it appeared as if the person has been dead for a day or more.
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While Tuesday's discovery remains under investigation, Gross reported his agency had received several calls in the past few days related to Lake Hunter. On June 4, a call came in to the police department around 8:53 a.m. from a person who said a pair of pants and backpack had been found at the Lake Hunter Boat Ramp, 650 Sikes Blvd., Gross said.
That caller also mentioned seeing an aggressive alligator near the boat ramp during the week. Police responded to the area around 10:01 a.m. and did not see anyone in the water. Gross said police also used the fire department's boat to search the surrounding lake, but nothing out of the ordinary, including an aggressive gator, was found.
The June 4 call was followed by another one on June 5 around 5:16 p.m. Police say someone reported seeing "something large floating in Lake Hunter with an alligator circling it," an email from Gross noted. Police once again checked the lake area, but didn't see anything out of place.
This is the second time in recent weeks a Lakeland alligator has been involved in a rather grisly case. In May, a 21-year-old man had part of his left arm bitten off by a gator. The man jumped into a lake while trying to avoid police who were searching for him at his mother’s request.
At some point, the man dove into the lake and swam across, Gross told Patch in May. Fortunately, a Polk County Sheriff’s helicopter spotted him when he came out of the water, enabling immediate life-saving action.
“Three quarters of his left arm (was) bitten off by an alligator,” Gross said. “It probably just happened and the officers luckily saw him.”
The fast sighting, Gross said, probably “saved his life.”
Late last year, an alligator reportedly ate a burglary suspect in Brevard County.
Despite the state’s bustling alligator population, serious attacks and fatalities are not common in Florida. Between 1948 and 2013, there were 22 fatalities recorded, according to FWC records. During that period, a total of 122 minor bites and 235 major bites were also logged. The last fatal alligator attack on record prior to this year occurred in 2007.
Alligator-related human fatalities might not be common, but encounters with the creatures are. Those encounters add up to so many over the course of any given year that the state has set up its own hotline to accept nuisance alligator calls. That number is 1-866-FWC-GATOR (866-392-4286).
In 2013 alone, the state fielded 15,036 nuisance alligator calls, which resulted in the removal of 6,605 creatures.
Photo courtesy of the Brevard County Sheriff's Office
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