
The metallic python is the latest in a line of robot snakes designed to inspect tight spaces, disarm bombs or locate disaster survivors.

The metallic python is the latest in a line of robot snakes designed to inspect tight spaces, disarm bombs or locate disaster survivors.
KUALA LUMPUR — Malaysian prosecutors said Wednesday they will seek a tougher sentence against wildlife trafficker Anson Wong, whose six-month jail term for smuggling snakes has been sharply criticised.
Wong, nicknamed the “Lizard King” and described as one of the world’s most-wanted traffickers, was handed the sentence Monday for attempting to smuggle 95 endangered boa constrictors to neighbouring Indonesia.
WWF Malaysia has described the penalty as a “slap on the wrist” and urged authorities to revoke Wong’s licences to trade in wildlife and permits to operate wildlife establishments.
“The sentence was too low so I instructed that we appeal the sentence. So the notice has now been signed and the appeal has been filed,” said Abdul Majib Hamzah, head of prosecutions at the attorney general’s chambers.
“We decided that an appeal had to be filed following the sentencing on the very day itself,” he told AFP.
Wong was sentenced under laws that prohibit the export of animals without a permit and also fined 190,000 ringgit (61,000 dollars).
Malaysian airport authorities are reportedly investigating how Wong managed to board a flight from the resort island of Penang with the suitcase full of snakes, which broke open while in transit in Kuala Lumpur.
“I cannot give you the details of the investigation but we will try to complete it as soon as possible,” Malaysia Airports Holdings senior general manager Azmi Murad told the Star daily.
Wildlife groups said the sentence and fine were far too lenient, and a tragic missed opportunity to throw the book at “a man who has brought shame to this country”.
Wong was reportedly sentenced to 71 months in jail in the United States in 2001 after he pleaded guilty to trafficking charges.
Despite efforts by Southeast Asian authorities to crack down on animal smuggling, the practice still persists in the region, posing a threat to endangered species, activists say.

An alligator hunter encountered a huge alligator Saturday in the creek near Cleve Cox Landing.
He not only survived the experience, but managed to take the gator as a prize.
And this one was no baby. It measured 11.5 feet, and weighed an estimated 500 pounds.
The reptile nearly filled the Jon boat as seen in the accompanying photo. The animal was captured the gator on the first day of Georgia’s alligator hunting season.
Albany’s Michael Lacey was on hand to document the event, and allowed us to use his photograph.
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STOCKTON, CA – Stockton police were searching for a teenager who allegedly shoplifted from two Stockton businesses Monday with the help of an unlikely accomplice — a live snake wrapped around his arm.
The teen walked into the Walgreens pharmacy at the corner of Center and West Harding Way in Stockton just after 9 p.m. Monday, Stockton police spokesman Pete Smith said.
According to witnesses, the boy was acting strangely when store security noticed him trying to hide a flashlight in his clothes, Smith said.
“He was acting kind of erratically,” Smith said. “The security guard saw what he thought was the suspect trying to conceal some items to shoplift from the store.”
But when security approached the man, Smith said the boy began to act “even more erratically, revealing…a live snake which was wrapped around his arm.”
As Walgreens workers approached the boy, employee Mohammad Sohail said the suspect began threatening those workers with the reptile.
“He tried to scare us with the snake,” Sohail said.
Smith said the boy fled on a BMX bike. A teen matching a similar description was also suspected of stealing from a nearby McDonald’s restaurant on Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard earlier Monday.
It was a “very, very strange course of events…using this live animal to intimidate,” Smith said.
Smith said investigators believe the snake was 3 to 5 feet long and they were not immediately sure what type of snake the suspect used.
NORTH BELLE VERNON, Pa. — Police said they were forced to use a Taser on a man who was trying to rescue his pets from a house fire in Westmoreland County.
Firefighters learned that 11 exotic snakes were inside one of the two homes that caught fire in North Belle Vernon on Monday.Monica Baker, who is 8 weeks pregnant with triplets, and her two children were able to escape when flames from their next-door neighbor’s home spread to their home on Green Street.Monica’s husband, Damon Baker, desperately battled the fast-moving flames with his garden hose before firefighters arrived.“I was outside, at the end of the garden hose, trying to spray down the side of the house to keep it from spreading so rapidly,” said Baker.Police on scene said they tried three times to get him away from the fire to protect him, but he resisted so they were forced to subdue him with a Taser.
“Had I been able to stay there a few minutes spraying it down before the fire department got here, we might not have lost all of our animals,” said Baker. u local: Channel 4 Action News Viewer Shares Photos Of The Fire Scene The animals, firefighters learned, were 11 Ball Pythons that escaped from their cage and were loose inside the burning home.“This is the first time we’ve really had to bring snakes out of a structure like that,” said Chief Ken Ramsdell of the North Bell Vernon Fire Department. “Sometimes it’s good to know if people have exotic animals.”Baker told Channel 4 Action News reporter Keith Jones that only 5 of the snakes survived the fire.Police said Baker will not be charged with any crime following the Taser incident.The cause of the fire remains under investigation.

An exotic animal shop in York Street was broken into some time between Saturday evening and Monday morning.
Twenty-seven lizards and 14 snakes were stolen. The snakes are thought to be corn snakes which are not venemous.
Police have appealed for information and are especially keen to hear from anyone offered exotic animals for sale in suspicious circumstances.
WHITEHALL TWP., Pa. — Emergency crews rushed to help a woman who reported being bitten by some sort of snake in her car.The woman, who parked at the Sheetz in Whitehall Township, Lehigh County, told a 911 dispatcher she felt dizzy.She said there was a snake in her car two weeks ago, but when her husband went to get it out, he couldn’t find it. So, they figured it was gone.After arriving on the scene, emergency crews determined she was actually stung by a bee.