Roaming Cougar And Chicago's PC Yuppies

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DeweyOxburger
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releasing a volley of shots some neighbors called excessive. :mj11:

Cougar 'looks at us as food'

COUGAR KILLED | Cops, mayor defend shooting as experts try to find how predator got here

April 16, 2008

BY ANNIE SWEENEY, KARA SPAK AND DAN ROZEK Staff Reporters

A DNA sample taken from the snows of Wisconsin might help unravel the mystery of how a rogue big cat shot by Chicago Police wound up in fashionable Roscoe Village this week.

But based on a necropsy performed Tuesday there doesn't seem to be any doubt the cougar was a wild animal, not a kept exotic pet that somehow got loose.

Donna Alexander, the administrator of Cook County animal control, said the animal was missing all the hallmarks of a kept animal -- his incisors, or gripping teeth, were intact, as were his claws. And there was no microchip inserted in the animal or reports from sanctioned sanctuaries of a missing cougar.

One possible lead came from the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, which contacted Cook County officials to tell them they had collected a blood sample from a cougar they were tracking. A DNA comparison and other tests will be performed to try and figure out where the cat migrated from.

Alexander said the cat could have been following the railway paths -- as various recent sightings in North Chicago and Wilmette would suggest. She said it's possible he was chased off his Wisconsin territory by adult males during this spring mating season.

That could have sent the young cat south alone looking for a mate.

"That's why he was a little bit disoriented,'' Alexander said. "He's young."

The cougar was just under 2 years old, weighed 122 pounds and had a fine coat -- good color and no lesions.

The big cat expert at the Field Museum -- who did not examine the cougar -- agreed it was probably wild, based on its elusive behavior. The pristine coat points to a diet of rich deer meat.

"He's looking for territory, looking for a mate,'' said Bruce Patterson, the Field's curator of mammals. "Young males do a lot of roaming."

Patterson said the appearance of the cougar is not entirely surprising, given the animal's population surge in the last 40 years since predator controls -- which allow certain animals to be killed -- were lifted. Cougars are now roaming into places they hadn't been seen for 100 years.

Patterson said there have been 14 cougar attacks in California between 1900 and 2000 -- but nine of those came in the 1990s.

"I'm anticipating we are going to see a lot more cougar-people conflict than we have in the past,'' Patterson said.

Alexander also said the animal was a serious threat to the neighborhood, especially children.

"They are not afraid of people,'' she said. "They attack people. Children have a tendency to run and become prey to them.''

On Tuesday, a smear of blood remained on the concrete where police shot the cougar after it was cornered and lunged at an officer. The animal was shot seven times, including in the leg and head.

City Animal Care and Control officers were first in the neighborhood early in the day after a teacher at Audubon Elementary school saw the animal sitting in an alley behind the school. The officers patrolled the area, and school staff canceled outdoor recess.

It wasn't until about 4 p.m. that the animal was spotted again. Officers shot it around 6 p.m. -- releasing a volley of shots some neighbors called excessive.

Marek Dygas, a veterinarian with the city's Animal Care and Control office, said that tranquilizing the animal was not a good option because it takes 15 to 20 minutes for the drug to penetrate the muscle of the animal. Cook County's Alexander said tranquilizing would have sent the animal running. When it slowed down, it would have been angry, she said.

Police brass and the mayor defended the decision to shoot.

"You've got a wild animal running in the streets,'' said Supt. Jody P. Weis. "And while it looks very playful and very sweet ... that cat was about a block away from an elementary school. It looks at us as food. The officers acted properly."

Mayor Daley agreed.

"I didn't see a neighbor running out and grabbing it and saying 'I love you, oh come in the house,' '' he said, wrapping his arms around himself in an embrace. "This is unbelievable.''
 

IntenseOperator

DeweyOxburger
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Alexander also said the animal was a serious threat to the neighborhood, especially children.

"They are not afraid of people,'' she said. "They attack people. Children have a tendency to run and become prey to them.''

On Tuesday, a smear of blood remained on the concrete where police shot the cougar after it was cornered and lunged at an officer. The animal was shot seven times, including in the leg and head.
 

SixFive

bonswa
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very interesting!

We have reports of cougar and black panther sightings in Kentucky all of the time. Most people like me don't believe them, but some swear by it. We're covered up in bobcats and coyotes, so maybe one day the big cats will move in too.:shrug:
 

Agent 0659

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That cat is lucky it didn't wander into Elgin, things would have been a lot worse for him.

:mj07: :mj07: :mj07:
 

gjn23

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i opened this thread thinking i'd be reading about smoking hot 35-40 year old, recently divorced, (likely milfs) on the prowl "cougars" looking for a quickie at my local watering hole.
 

IntenseOperator

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Daley arson is 'about the cougar'

MICHIGAN | 'Very personal and vicious' threat arrived 2 days before blaze targeted summer home, after cops killed cougar

May 17, 2008

BY FRAN SPIELMAN AND FRANK MAIN Staff Reporters

The letter to Mayor Daley was blunt, "very personal and vicious" -- and singled out the mayor's wife, Maggie, and their children.

The writer was furious about the slaying of a wild, roaming cougar in Roscoe Village on April 14, and threatened to torch the mayor's home.


On April 24, two days after the unsigned letter arrived, its writer -- or an associate -- is suspected of setting a fire on the grassy dunes near Daley's summer home in scenic Grand Beach, Mich., sources said.

"It's about the cougar," a source told the Chicago Sun-Times on Friday, calling the writer an apparent animal rights activist. "The connection was to the killing of the cougar and [Daley's] comments making light of the killing of the cougar."

Another source called the letter "very personal and vicious."

The fire -- which didn't reach the mayor's home but burned the homes of his neighbors -- was initially believed to be an accidental brush fire. But police reopened the investigation after learning about the threatening letter sent to Daley's City Hall office and ruled it arson, Berrien County (Mich.) Sheriff J. Paul Bailey said this week.

The Chicago office of the FBI said in a statement it is investigating "a series of letters that have been received at various locations during the past several weeks.

"These letters appear to be written by the same group or individual and threaten physical harm to specific individuals and entities in connection to the recent shooting of a wild cougar in Chicago last month," the FBI said.

The FBI said no suspects had been identified.

On Friday, Chicago Police were giving few updates Friday.

"I'm not going to go into any details of that investigation, but what I can tell you [is] we've taken every measure we can to make sure that the mayor and his family remain safe," said Chicago Police Supt. Jody Weis.

Chicago Police and the FBI are working together on the case through the agencies' joint terrorism task force, Weis said.

Law enforcement officials suspect the Grand Beach arson may also be linked to a "firebombing or threat" triggered by an unrelated animal killing elsewhere in the Chicago area, a source said.

The writer of the letter sent to Daley raged against the shooting of the Roscoe Village cougar, which happened 10 days before the fire was set. Chicago Police shot the animal seven times in a North Side alley after it lunged at an officer, police said.

The 124-pound cat arrived in the city by way of Wisconsin, according to experts who matched its DNA to blood left in an abandoned barn near Wilton, Wis., in January.

The experts theorize the cat was looking for a mate and may have come from the Black Hills of South Dakota, where he was forced out by older, dominant males.

After the cat was shot, Daley scoffed at suggestions that the animal should have been tranquilized.

"I didn't see a neighbor running out and grabbing it and saying, 'I love you, oh come in the house,' " Daley said, wrapping his arms around himself in an embrace. "This is unbelievable."

After the shooting, an elementary school a block south of where the cougar was shot also received a threatening letter by someone angry about the kill.

Police patrols were beefed up around Audubon Elementary, 3500 N. Hoyne, and the school principal sent a letter to parents notifying them of the threat.

The April 24 fire was set in a wooded area adjacent to the Daley summer home in Grand Beach, according to Bailey, the local sheriff. The dune fire swept through the area and destroyed the more-than $2 million home owned by Brad Griffith, vice chairman of the Chicago Board Options Exchange, and his fashion designer wife, Tiffani Kim.

The fire shattered the long windows of the home. Nearby, another expensive home sustained major smoke and fire damage.

Those burned homes overlook Lake Michigan -- offering stunning, unobstructed views. Neither was occupied at the time. No one was hurt.

The fire came close to the Daley home -- a white cedar ranch with green shutters -- but did not damage it. Brush and branches less than 15 feet from the back of the house were burned to cinders, and two nearby pine trees were singed.

Two small propane tanks for a gas grill were a stone's throw from the blaze. Grass on the dunes surrounding the homes was bone dry and burned in a flash, fueled by winds coming from the south, said Grand Beach Police Officer George Keeler. But Daley's yard was thick and green that day, and Keeler speculated that it acted as a barrier against the flames.

Bob Fischer, a 68-year-old retiree, said he was one of the first people on the scene of the fire.

Fischer was doing spring cleaning on a neighbor's yard the day of the fire. He said he watched the flames leap across the dunes, catching the two homes on fire.

"I went on top of the hill to see what was going on, and [everything] was ablaze," he said. "You could hear the glass popping."

Fischer scoffed at the notion that an arsonist could have struck at Grand Beach.

"If it was an arsonist, he did a poor job," Fischer said. "I think it was an accident. I bet someone tossed a cigarette out a car window."
 

MadJack

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i opened this thread thinking i'd be reading about smoking hot 35-40 year old, recently divorced, (likely milfs) on the prowl "cougars" looking for a quickie at my local watering hole.
me too :shrug:
 
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