Python blamed for death euthanized

Published: Oct. 28, 2008 at 2:49 PM

VIRGINIA BEACH, Va., Oct. 28 (UPI) -- A 13-foot reticulated python blamed for the death of a Virginia woman has been put down at the request of her husband.

Amanda Ruth Black's husband found her body last week in their Virginia Beach home. She was in front of the python's open container, and the snake was loose in the room.

A medical examiner determined that Black had died from asphyxiation, probably from the python, a constrictor, wrapping itself around her neck. Investigators said that Black, who worked in a pet shop and was experienced at handling snakes, was apparently giving the 13-foot python medicine.

Reticulated pythons are native of Southeast Asia and can grow to be more than 30 feet long, about the same length as the heavier-bodied South American anaconda. The pythons are popular pets, although experts warn that they can be dangerous if they are provoked or frightened or if they mistake a human hand for food.

Margie Long, a spokesman for Virginia Beach police, said that Black's husband signed over the snake and it was euthanized.

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
New York allows all to get H1N1 vaccine (35 min)
Rangers sign pitcher Rich Harden (52 min)
Jeweler: Gatecrasher's watch a fake (54 min)
Crude oil prices slide Thursday
UPI NewsTrack Business
Indians/Alaska Natives see higher flu risk
CDC: Some 10,000 U.S. deaths from H1N1 flu
fark
Slow news day in Seattle upgraded from "It's farking cold outside" to "Bovine trapped in frozen...
Tips on how to get that holiday vacation you have been asking for
Remember that time you got arrested because the police misread the name on the warrant and then...
Man asks American Airlines flight attendant for orange juice. Attendant flips out, screams at passengers,...
It's not my fault this article is terrible. Take it up with the author. Or better yet, let's go...
It's the holiday season in Times Square. The tree, the lights, the MAC-10 fire