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  • 21
    Apr
    2013
    8:52pm, EDT

    Chicago man charged with biting off another man's ear

    Cook County Sheriff's Office

    Police say Richard Vody bit off another man's ear during a dispute in a Chicago suburb Friday morning.

    By Andrew Rafferty, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A 28-year-old man is charged with breaking into a suburban Chicago home and biting off another man's ear during an argument on Friday, according to the Cook County Sheriff’s Office.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Richard Vody, of Justice, Ill., forced his way into the victim’s home early Friday and, during a heated  dispute, leaned in and bit off half of the 26-year-old’s right ear, according to police. Authorities said the victim’s girlfriend also lived in the home and all three knew each other.

    Firefighters responded to the scene and took the victim to an area hospital for treatment. With the help of Chicago police canine units, the missing part of the man’s ear was found Saturday near the home.

    Vody is charged with home invasion, aggravated battery and domestic battery, according to a press release from the Cook County Sheriff’s Office.

    He is currently out on $250,000 bond, and is scheduled to appear in court on Tuesday.

     

    137 comments

    With the help of Chicago police canine units, the missing part of the man's ear was found Saturday near the home. As someone who hunted with dogs for years, I'm wondering what command you give a dog to find an ear. "Ear boy!"?

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  • 6
    Jul
    2012
    2:46pm, EDT

    Python found wrapped around baby's foot in Illinois apartment

    By Sevil Omer, NBC News

    Police say a 2-foot-long ball python slithered its way into an Illinois apartment and wrapped itself around the foot of a sleeping 1-year-old boy and bit him on his left foot.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Mattoon Police Department Deputy Chief Jason Taylor said the boy's parents were awakened by the child's noises to find the snake attacking their son about 11 p.m. Monday, the Mattoon Journal-Gazette & Times-Courier reported.

    The father, Devin Winans, used a blanket to pull the python off the child, and his mother took the boy to a health center for treatment of a bite mark, bruise and scratches, the newspaper reported.


    “It was definitely something we never thought of happening. It was definitely really scary,” the child's mother, Sara Lacey told the newspaper.

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    She said it was the first time she has seen the python and the apartment building is supposed to be pet-free.

    Investigators believe the python escaped from a neighboring apartment within the building, Taylor said. Police have not been able to find the owner.

    He said the snake’s owner could face charges for having an animal at large, according to the newspaper.

    The snake is being held at the Coles County animal shelter.

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    142 comments

    Find the owner and stick him with the child's medical bills!

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    Explore related topics: python, illinois, snake, bite
  • 15
    May
    2012
    5:06am, EDT

    Shopper bitten by rattlesnake in Wal-Mart

    When reaching down to brush what he thought was a stick off some mulch in the garden section of a Washington state Wal-mart, Mica Craig, 47, was bitten by a foot-long rattlesnake. KHQ-TV's Dylan Wohlenhaus reports.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    SALMON, Idaho -- When Mica Craig reached down to brush what he thought was a stick off some mulch in the garden section of a Washington state Wal-Mart, it turned around and sank its fangs into his hand. 


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    The Friday encounter with a rattlesnake sent Craig, 47, to the hospital, where he said he remained in excruciating pain and may lose feeling in two fingers. Wal-Mart Stores Inc has apologized.


    "I reached down to grab the stick to move it out of the way, and the snake stretched out, turned around and got its fangs in my right hand," he said. "I slung it off and I did a tap dance on it until it was dead."

    Craig was rushed to the hospital by fellow customer Maria Geffre, who told Reuters she saw him crumple to the ground after crying out that he had been bitten by a snake.

    "He had punctures on his hand and there was the dead rattler he'd stomped on," Geffre said, describing the snake as at least a foot long with four buttons, or rattles.

    Craig, a married father of two, said the mulch was for his marijuana plants, which he is licensed to grow for medical reasons. It was unclear whether the snake came from an adjacent field or arrived at the store along with garden supplies.

    "It's the most scared I've ever been in my life," Craig told KIRO FM from his hospital bed in Lewiston, Idaho. "I was screaming bloody murder through the parking lot."

    'Isolated incident'
    Craig said emergency room doctors sent him home because there was little swelling initially - he had iced the wound - and they thought the snake had inflicted only a "dry bite," or one that did not inject venom.

    But his hand quickly swelled up to "the size of a grapefruit," Craig told KIRO, and he returned to the hospital. Doctors treated him with six bags of anti-venom, Craig said.

    "As of right now, my little finger doesn't move at all and my ring finger barely moves," he said according to KIRO. "I'm just hoping that my hand works."

    A Wal-Mart spokeswoman offered an apology to Craig and said the retailer was looking into how the incident could have happened at the store in Clarkston, in eastern Washington.

    "At this point, it appears to be an isolated incident. We are working with a pest management team, which is conducting a sweep of the property to ensure there is no additional rattlesnake activity," Wal-Mart spokeswoman Kayla Whaling said.

    Travis Taggart, director of the Center for North American Herpetology, said about half of documented rattlesnake bites, which are usually defensive when directed at humans, are "dry" but still cause severe pain.

    Msnbc.com staff and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    395 comments

    There you go again. Had Mary Jane been legalized this guy wouldn't be needing to purchase mulch for his ' home grown' and he'd be just fine. Poor snake though, had to die for marijuana and had no use for it.

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    Explore related topics: washington, wal-mart, snake, bite, weird, featured, mica-craig
  • 16
    Mar
    2012
    9:02am, EDT

    Bear bites Florida woman in rear end as she walks her dog

    By msnbc.com staff

    Ouch! A woman walking her dog near an apartment complex in Longwood, Fla., early Friday morning was bitten in the rear end by a bear.

    A wildlife official told the Orlando Sentinel that the woman was taken to a nearby hospital after the incident, which took place northeast of Orlando, the home of Disney World.



    Follow @msnbc_us

    Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission spokeswoman Joy Hill said the attack happened at about 7 a.m. 

    The woman was taken to Florida Hospital-Altamonte in Altamonte Springs with four puncture wounds, the paper reported.

    According to the Sentinel, the woman was disposing of her dog's waste into the apartment complex's trash container when she turned around, saw the bear and stumbled to the ground. She was then attacked.

    The bear may have been spooked by the woman's large dog, an Akita Shepherd mix, Hill said.

    Traps set
    Hill told the Sentinel that officers are setting traps for the bear, which will be euthanized if it is caught.

    Florida black bears, which are a sub-species, are listed by the state's Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission as being a threatened animal. However, they have surged in numbers in recent decades, the paper reported, rebounding from about 300 to about 3,000, and the commission has proposed taking the species off the list.

    Mike Orlando, who works for the wildlife agency, told the Sentinel that bear sightings are not uncommon in the area, which is near a state park, but that attacks are rare.

    A resident of the complex, Arlene Friedlander, 79, told the paper that she often sees bears near the apartments. "I'm not afraid of them," she said.

     

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    289 comments

    Maybe the bear needed a piece of a--

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