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Reggie the alligator's canine imitator in custody

4:14 PM, April 21, 2008

Reggie_the_alligator

Maybe it's the water.

A stray German shepherd that attacked a 15-year-old boy April 13 was captured over the weekend, but not before leading authorities on a pursuit through the waters of Lake Machado, where the famed urban alligator Reggie used to lurk, writes Donna Littlejohn at the Daily Breeze's South Bay Pets blog.

The dog eluded animal services workers for days by swimming through the same Harbor City lake where Reggie the alligator, above, was repeatedly sighted for nearly two years. Reggie was finally captured in 2007, then relocated, via motorcade, to the Los Angeles Zoo.

Animal Services Capt. Daniel Pantoja said officers had tried to catch the dog after the incident was reported to them Wednesday, three days after the attack.

"The dog was very evasive," Pantoja said. "He would swim into the lake to the island, so on Saturday [at 4:30 a.m.] we went out there with a tranquilizer gun."

The tool wasn't needed, though, after authorities were able to move the dog toward the golf course and finally lasso him at about 6:30 a.m.

Littlejohn adds that the dog is now safely housed in a San Pedro animal shelter. Meanwhile, we wonder if his caretakers might want to double-check his enclosure. If he continues acting like Reggie, whom The Times dubbed the "John Dillinger of semi-aquatic reptiles," he might try another escape. For that story read on...

-- Tony Barboza 

Photo: Chuck Bennett / AP / The Daily Breeze

Thursday, August 16, 2007

Top of the world, Ma -- for a few hours
* Reggie the gator busts out of his zoo pen and goes exploring before he's finally corralled.

By Tiffany Hsu and James Ricci, Times Staff Writers

Reggie the alligator -- the John Dillinger of semi-aquatic reptiles -- was returned to custody Wednesday after having busted out of the slammer at the L.A. Zoo overnight.

Reggie, who had won international fame while eluding capture in a Harbor City lake for almost two years, was last seen in stir about 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. About 8:30 a.m. Wednesday, zoo personnel discovered he'd blown the joint.

It was an hour and a half later when a search party of zoo handlers discovered him hiding out near a zoo loading dock.

"He'd found a comfortable bush to hang out under," said handler Ian Recchio, who participated in the bust. "He was just sleeping there. Reggie was pretty heated up this morning. As the weather gets warm, alligators get more agile and stronger."

Recchio said the 7 1/2 -foot, 120-pound fugitive "put up a little fight" as authorities laid hands on him. He then went quietly as he was hustled off to quarantine while zoo investigators tried to dope out his escape route and tightened security at his luxury cell.

At 2:30 p.m. Wednesday, a yellow truck pulled up to his habitat and five zoo personnel emerged carrying the fugitive, whose face was wrapped in a white towel. Once inside, while Reggie hissed loudly, they removed the towel and a black band that bound his mouth, then scattered, at breakneck speed, to safety.

As 50 visitors watched, Reggie swiveled his head and crawled slowly into the water. As onlookers yelled, "Reggie! Reggie!" he showily swam the perimeter of the pond, then buried himself beneath vegetation in one of its murky corners.

Initial indications were that Reggie had climbed a chain-link fence at the back of his enclosure, then clambered over a series of brick ridges above it to freedom. Once on the ground, he followed another chain-link fence about 500 yards to the loading dock area.

"It's been so warm lately, and alligators are all nocturnal, so Reggie was just moving around, checking things out, just exploring when he escaped," said Zoo Director John Lewis. "It just goes to show that he's an extremely healthy, agile animal. We've certainly learned our lesson."

The inmate had been on display at the zoo since only last Thursday.

He'd been kept in solitary confinement, isolated from the facility's eight other alligators, in what officials termed a "luxury suite" with shade, vegetation and a pond and waterfall of filtered water.

Authorities had expanded it to accommodate their celebrity prisoner, and they speculated Wednesday that some of the improvements might have contributed to his escape.

"It's just speculation," Recchio said, "but I definitely found areas where he used his tail for leverage." Alligators' short legs, he said, ordinarily discourage climbing.

Wednesday, workers added chain-link overhangs to low spots in Reggie's habitat. Zoo authorities said the escapee would be placed under 24-hour watch to ensure he didn't repeat his caper.

Reggie's jailbreak generated media attention worthy of Dillinger's legendary escape from the county jail in Crown Point, Ind., in 1934.

Television reporters climbed into his enclosure to deliver their reports.

Zoo officials begged that TV helicopters give the facility a wider berth because they were spooking other animals.

It was a continuation of the circus-like atmosphere that has attended Reggie since he was discovered in the water of Lake Machado in August 2005, having allegedly been dumped there by owners who thought him too large to keep as a pet. For the ensuing two years, a parade of would-be captors -- official and unofficial -- tried unsuccessfully to seize him. Finally, on May 24, Recchio wrangled him with a dog-catcher's pole. Officials ran up a bill of $200,000 pursuing him.

His fame spawned children's books, T-shirts and other merchandise.

"He may have a brain the size of a walnut, but he's outsmarted every man I know," said Councilwoman Janice Hahn after hearing about Reggie's escape.

All the hoopla attending Reggie's return Wednesday attracted the attention of passing children, several of whom were heard to ask, "Where's Reggie?"

Anthony Montes, 14, of Studio City said he had come to see Reggie for the first time and brought along his 12-year-old brother, Zachary.

"Reggie is getting more publicity than Paris Hilton's arrest," he said. "I've been following the story from the start, especially because Reggie's around my little brother's age."

Zoo visitor Celia Ramirez, 28, of Sylmar said Reggie's escape showed "it's obvious he's not meant to be in captivity. He went from a home to a huge lake, to a very small enclosure. He should be released back to the wild or a refuge where he has more space. He's used to being free."

After 10 minutes buried in the pond vegetation where he'd taken refuge upon his return, Reggie emerged and swam the pond again. Wearing a hat of leaves that had stuck to his head. Probably pondering his next move.

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Our Bloggers

Tony Barboza, a Colorado native who moved to Southern California as a college student, is a reporter for The Times' Orange County edition, where he covers the beaches and the city of Irvine. A lifelong animal lover, he lives with his 2-year-old cats Mario and Vincent.
Carla Hall, a general assignment reporter, has covered animals and their people across the state of California (and occasionally beyond). She chronicled the Oakland Zoo's attempts to hand-raise a baby African elephant and followed the Los Angeles Zoo's L.A.-born gorilla Caesar on his trek to a new home at Zoo Atlanta several years ago. Preferring to get up close and personal with her subjects, she once fed corn cobs to the L.A. Zoo's now-deceased elephant Gita (no connection between her demise and the feeding) and spent hours interviewing pit bulls at the Laurel Canyon Dog Park. Currently animal-less, Carla still insists on plying people with anecdotes about her cat Arnold, who died 10 years ago.
Francisco Vara-Orta has been a staff writer at The Times since 2006, writing about birth control for squirrels in Santa Monica and pigeons in Hollywood, the hidden culture of TV pet adoptions and puppy theft. Although he grew up with pet dogs, he realized the sad realities of neglected animals after spending a summer in high school volunteering at a local shelter. Francisco, an L.A. transplant, graduated from St. Mary's University in his hometown of San Antonio, where his dog Diego now keeps his mother company.

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