Foul smell leads to apartment zoo with about 200 live animals

Foul smell leads to apartment zoo with about 200 live animals

GERMANTOWN, Wisconsin – A woman kept about 200 creatures, including alligators, scorpions and carnivorous beetles, in an apartment in suburban Milwaukee.

Authorities found the menagerie after neighbours had complained about the foul smell. “The smell was just unbelievable,” said William Mitchell, a state conservation warden who found about 70 ducks cramped in a basement pen with droppings covering the floor.”It was really stinking…. It made my eyes water.”Authorities said the woman fed the animals roadkill.Animal carcasses were in a freezer and decaying carcasses were in an adjacent garage.Among the dead animals were raccoons, rabbits, opossums and squirrels.Jamie L. Verburgt, the apartment resident, was given two state citations for possessing game animals out of season, Mitchell said.Verburgt’s phone number is unlisted.”She said they were car kills,” Mitchell said.”I warned her that it is illegal to take dead animals off the side of a road.”The dead animals were used to feed the live animals, and some were given to flesh-eating beetles.”Among the other live animals found were snakes, rats, turtles and toads.The live animals were seized by the Washington County Humane Society, pending investigation by the US Fish and Wildlife Service, Mitchell said.He added federal wildlife officials plan to investigate those who sold animals to Verburgt through the Internet.”She intended to sell the animals to pet stores,” he said.Verburgt’s boyfriend, John Walters, was prosecuted in 2000 for mistreatment of exotic animals.At that time, police found a female cougar, female leopard, silver-tailed fox, monitor lizard, two caracals, a coatimundi, chinchilla and a reticulated python in Walter’s apartment in Greenfield, another Milwaukee suburb.- Nampa-AP”The smell was just unbelievable,” said William Mitchell, a state conservation warden who found about 70 ducks cramped in a basement pen with droppings covering the floor.”It was really stinking…. It made my eyes water.”Authorities said the woman fed the animals roadkill.Animal carcasses were in a freezer and decaying carcasses were in an adjacent garage.Among the dead animals were raccoons, rabbits, opossums and squirrels.Jamie L. Verburgt, the apartment resident, was given two state citations for possessing game animals out of season, Mitchell said.Verburgt’s phone number is unlisted.”She said they were car kills,” Mitchell said.”I warned her that it is illegal to take dead animals off the side of a road.”The dead animals were used to feed the live animals, and some were given to flesh-eating beetles.”Among the other live animals found were snakes, rats, turtles and toads.The live animals were seized by the Washington County Humane Society, pending investigation by the US Fish and Wildlife Service, Mitchell said.He added federal wildlife officials plan to investigate those who sold animals to Verburgt through the Internet.”She intended to sell the animals to pet stores,” he said.Verburgt’s boyfriend, John Walters, was prosecuted in 2000 for mistreatment of exotic animals.At that time, police found a female cougar, female leopard, silver-tailed fox, monitor lizard, two caracals, a coatimundi, chinchilla and a reticulated python in Walter’s apartment in Greenfield, another Milwaukee suburb.- Nampa-AP

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