Driving in the rural town of Veazie, Maine, after
midnight, a woman accidentally hits what she thinks is an oversized cat. She
puts the unconscious animal in her car and drives several miles.
In the town of Bangor, Maine, the cat regains consciousness. That's when
the woman realizes it's no house cat.
She's riding with a wild bobcat.
It may seem like a scenario for a road-trip comedy at the movies, but it
really happened early Wednesday morning, police said. The woman immediately
pulled over in downtown Bangor and got out of her car.
"It jumped out of her vehicle and immediately went underneath it.
It was trying to find the most immediate protection," Maine Warden Service
Lt. Dan Scott told ABC News over the phone. "Several police officers
responded and one happened to have a catch pole that you put around the
animal's neck."
After removing the bobcat from underneath
the car, Game Warden Jim Fahey evaluated the animal and confirmed that the
strike from the car was fatal. The bobcat was euthanized in what Sgt. Paul
Edwards from the Bangor Police Department described over the phone as "the
most humane way possible."
"Some people are concerned that we killed the bobcat, but it was
wounded and suffering. This is normal procedure that we engage in," said
Scott. "Maine is a big state. We have a staff of 100 game wardens and
people are routinely hitting animals by accident. We don't often have citizens
driving them around in their vehicles." The woman involved in the incident
declined to comment to ABC News, and police declined to publicly identify her.
Bobcats can range in size anywhere from 20 to 30
pounds and often have spots or stripes covering their grey and brown coats,
according to Adam Zorn, a naturalist at Westmoreland Sanctuary in Mount Kisco,
N.Y. They are shy and secretive, with only rare reported incidents of direct
human contact, he said.
But does a bobcat look sort of like an oversized house cat?
"That would be a really big house cat," he said. "Most
cats have long tails, and a bobcat does not. They have short, stubby tails.
Also, their appearance is an indicator. They look like they are built to live
in the wilderness." Edwards emphasized the danger of approaching a wild
animal in his police report.
"Although this seems amusing," he wrote,
"one should always be careful handling injured animals and call local
animal control officer or game wardens when in doubt."
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