ESCAPED JAGUAR RECAPTURES AND PUT TO SLEEP
Max, the jaguar sought by its keepers and the forestry department following the death of U-S national Bruce Cullerton was captured last night. Max was under the care of Richard and Carol Foster, wild life documentary film makers, who intended to use the cat in an upcoming documentary for National Geographic. During Hurricane Richard a tree fell on the cage where the jaguar was being kept and he escaped. On Monday night it is believed that the jaguar mauled Cullerton as his body was found the following morning in the bushes near his house, about three hundred yards from the Fosters. Love News spoke with Carol Foster.
Carol Foster; Documentary Film Maker
“The jaguar was captured with loop trap by Omar who studies cats in Belize. We set three or four traps in the back where the cat has a cage and we left the cage open because that’s where he normally gets fed. Around 9:30 last night he walked through and got trapped in the first trap. Everybody was here; the zoo, Omar and a veterinarian and the forestry department. They went ahead and knocked him out and he’s definitely Max the cat. We videoed him and interviewed the forestry department and they decided to go ahead and put him to sleep. They gave more drugs and put him to sleep and the forestry department just took him away.”
Wildlife experts say it is out of character for a jaguar to attack a human being.
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Max the Jaguar is dead
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| Max was put down by lethal injection. |
Max, a jaguar owned by the National Geographic filmmaker Richard Foster, was put down by lethal injection after he was believed to have killed 47-year-old U.S. national Bruce Colleton, a mechanic residing in Belize, on Monday night, October 25.
Foster’s neighbor, Bruce Colleton, was found dead with lacerations to his neck and body, which suggested he had been mauled by a jaguar.
After that, all efforts were made to snare the animal and put him down before he could kill another human being, and he walked into one of four leg traps set by conservation biologist Omar Figueroa to capture him around 9:35 Tuesday night.
Max had been in captivity for about a year and a half, but escaped from Foster’s home near mile 28 1⁄2 on the Western Highway on Sunday night when a large tree fell on his cage during Hurricane Richard.
Foster told Channel 7 News that Forestry Department officials had told him it was best for the country if Max were put down, but he was sad because this was a very healthy cat.
Figueroa told The Reporter the Forestry Department called him in because they did not have the expertise to capture the jaguar. He opined that a cat like this would never have entered one of the small traps the Forestry officers had set up for its capture.
Figueroa said he used a bait to attract the jaguar. “I was working under the assumption that this cat would not venture far from the area that he was familiar with. And if he had gone outside of the area that he was familiar with, he would have been killed by another jaguar.”
“I knew that the cat would start to become active around 6:00 p.m. and I had all my traps rigged with VHS radios,” Figueroa said.
Ordinarily a cat in the wild would never attack a human being, but Max had been around humans and lost some of its fear for humans, Figueroa said.
Figueroa said that he was there to help capture and identify Max, which he was able to do by some dental work which had left scars on Max. Jaguars each have a unique rosette pattern, no two jaguars are alike.
He theorized Bruce Colleton may have seen the jaguar attacking one of his favorite dogs and decided to step in and help the dog. He said there are between 600 - 800 jaguars living in the wild in Belize.
The Reporter