XIAN, China, June 29 (UPI) -- A Chinese farmer has been charged with fraud for allegedly faking photographs and tracks of a South China tiger.
Officials in the Shaanxi provincial government say Zhou Zhenglong used a neighbor's photograph and a wooden tiger claw, Xinhua reported. He claimed he took the photos with a cell phone, the official government news agency said.
Zhou received a reward of 20,000 yuan, or almost $3,000, from the Provincial Forestry Department. He claimed to have taken the photos Oct. 3, 2007.
Bai Shaokang of the Shaanxi Public Security Department said investigators found the area where Zhou's photograph was taken.
"It was a small area with few tall trees, which was not a suitable habitat for a real tiger," he said.
Police also measured the tree trunks and extrapolated the size of the tiger in the picture. They found the tiger would have been 27 centimeters long and 35 centimeters wide -- about 9 inches by 11 inches.
Zhou, who formerly claimed he had "risked his life" to get the pictures, now admits he got the idea when he guided a team searching for tigers in 2006.
| Additional News Stories | |
NEW YORK, Nov. 25 (UPI) --
Singer Adam Lambert said he didn't intend to offend people with his sexy American Music Awards performance, but he doesn't see anything wrong with it either.
|
MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif., Nov. 25 (UPI) --
An altered image of U.S. first lady Michelle Obama won't be excluded by Google, despite complaints the image is racist and vile, the company said.
|
NEW YORK, Nov. 25 (UPI) --
Crude oil prices regained some ground on the New York Mercantile Exchange Wednesday, climbing above $76 per barrel.
|
|