
Watch as newly hired cop from New York encounters his first Florida alligator
A New York transplant recently hired to be a cop in Florida is getting laughs on social media for his uncomfortable reaction to being handed a writhing alligator.
The nuisance gator call was a first for Officer Christopher Martinez, who joined the Largo Police Department in November, department officials told McClatchy News on June 12.
Video shows the predator was a juvenile and its jaws were taped shut, but that didn't seem to matter to Martinez.
'Officers recently responded to a home for a very Florida situation — an alligator wandered onto the property,' Largo police reported in a June 11 social media post.
'While most of our team handled it like seasoned pros, one of our newer officers from New York experienced his very first run-in with a gator and it showed! Let's just say there was some jumping and maybe some squealing.'
Martinez was clearly being a good sport when he volunteered to hold the hissing alligator.
However, he did so only after donning gloves, asking for step-by-step instructions, taking deep breaths, and making sure another officer would 'take him back' if things went badly.
'You have big teeth. I have tiny fingers,' Martinez said to 'Mr. Gator.'
The handoff lasted about 30 seconds and concluded with Martinez screaming as the alligator whipped around in his hands.
His reaction has been viewed over 1.2 million times on social media, and had amassed more than 30,000 comments and reactions on Facebook as of June 12. This includes a few women who asked Martinez out on a date.
'Wait til we have a cold snap and one of the iguanas fall out the tree and land on him,' Glenn Pennell wrote on the department's Facebook page.
'Wait until he finds out they climb fences too,' Melissa Blount said.
'New Yorkers all hard core until a baby dinosaur arrives,' Jennifer Alexander posted.
The alligator was released in a wilderness area, police officials said.
'No officers were harmed and Officer Martinez, our N.Y. transplant, received his official welcome to Florida!' the department wrote.
Largo is about a 20-mile drive west from downtown Tampa.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CNN
13 minutes ago
- CNN
Australian Olympic dressage rider suspended after video appears to show him repeatedly whipping horse
An Australian dressage rider has been provisionally suspended and will be investigated, according to Equestrian Australia (EA), after a video emerged on social media that appears to show him repeatedly whipping a horse. Heath Ryan, who represented Australia in dressage at the 2008 Olympics, can be seen in the video – which the rider said is about two years old – hitting a horse around 40 times. Ryan said in a lengthy Facebook post defending the incident that everything in the video 'transpired sincerely with the (horse's) best interests the sole consideration.' CNN Sports has reached out to Ryan for comment. EA said the provisional suspension will last until 'a thorough investigation of this matter' has been completed, adding that it had also received a formal complaint about the incident. 'Equestrian Australia is extremely alarmed and concerned by the treatment of the horse shown in this footage,' the governing body said in a statement. 'Equestrian Australia has this afternoon imposed a provisional suspension of this person's membership of Equestrian Australia and their rights, privileges and benefits associated with their membership.' EA said it 'takes matters of animal welfare very seriously.' In his Facebook post, the 66-year-old equestrian rider said the horse was brought to him on the way to the 'knackery,' where animals go to be killed, after a riding accident had left his owner in intensive care. Ryan described the horse, Nico, as a 'problem child' that got 'worse and worse until the accident.' 'I felt obliged to the horse to just have a look and see if it was possibly salvageable,' Ryan wrote on Facebook. 'Well did I get a shock and so the video. I have never ridden anything like it. I am so sad this was caught on video. 'If I had been thinking of myself I would have immediately just gotten off and sent Nico to the knackery. That video was a life or death moment for Nico and of that I was very aware. 'I felt I genuinely had to try my very hardest to see if Nico would consider other options. Anyway by the end of that initial ride I did feel Nico was responding. I rode Nico for another couple of days and he responded very well and started to go without the use of excessive driving aids.' Alongside his statement, Ryan posted a new video, which he described as Nico 'thriving in a loving and competitive home with an exciting future.' Ryan said the video which prompted the EA suspension was posted by an 'unhappy ex employee.' 'All I can say is that this awful video was collateral damage of me from the bottom of my heart launching a rescue mission,' Ryan added.


New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
Restaurant charges $17 fee for customers who commit this common dining practice: ‘Going a bit far'
People are expressing 'reservations' about this new policy. A French restaurateur has been ripped online after announcing a new fine on dining parties whose number of members didn't match their original booking. Olivier Vincent, chef and manager at L'îlot in Amboise, had reportedly become fed up with parties that either exceeded or fell short of the number of patrons they had reserved for, local media reported. Advertisement The problem — which reportedly occurred on a 'weekly' basis, per the boss — was particularly damaging as his venue only has 20 seats. 4 L'îlot (pictured) currently boasts a respectable 4.7 stars on Google, where it's described as serving 'inventive gourmet plates prepared in a down-to-earth restaurant with an open kitchen.' The Island Restaurant / Facebook Vincent announced in a Facebook post, which has garnered 27,000 views in the first 24 hours, that diners who fail to arrive with the number of guests specified on their reservation 'will be charged 15 euros ($17.27) per missing or additional person.' Advertisement 'Thank you for your understanding,' the Frenchman wrote. 'We're here because we need to make people responsible.' L'îlot currently boasts a respectable 4.7 stars on Google, where it's described as serving 'inventive gourmet plates prepared in a down-to-earth restaurant with an open kitchen.' 4 'From now on, if you do not come with the number of guests for which you reserved, you will be charged 15 euros per missing or additional person,' Vincent announced in the Facebook post (pictured). The Island Restaurant / Facebook According to Vincent, the incorrect booking issue had been ongoing since COVID, but things came to a head last Sunday when one customer exchanged multiple messages trying to change the booking. Advertisement 'After about ten emails with one person, she told us there would be eight, then nine, and finally, they arrived at seven without warning, without apology,' he recalled. 4 The incorrect reservation issue had been piling up since the COVID-19 pandemic, per Vincent. Scott Griessel – Vincent said there's no excuse for this mistake in a day and age where 'everyone has their phone on them, 24/7, in their pocket.' 'If we are able to reserve, we are able to call to say if we will be less, or more, or that we are not coming,' he declared. Advertisement 'If we are here, it is to work. It is not to have tables, not to have customers,' Vincent vented. 'We organize ourselves so that everything is serene. We have staff. We work with fresh products. We do not pay employees and suppliers with Monopoly tickets. My restaurant is a business.' 4 The issue was particularly damaging as the venue (pictured) only has 20 seats. The Island Restaurant / Facebook However, the policy received mixed reviews with some critics claiming that it was unfair to diners who had to cancel last-minute due to unforeseen circumstances. 'A bit of a limiting business practice if there are only one or two people missing from a large table,' said one. 'Emergencies exist. You're not going to get great publicity for yourself.' They added, 'Even if abuses exist, you are going a bit far. Imagine an on-call doctor who can't join their family for dinner, or someone who has a family emergency.' 'A last-minute unforeseen event,' said another. 'Getting left outside the restaurant (it's happened to me before)… Well, I might as well go somewhere else then. It seems pretty counterproductive to me.' However, many were on board with the issue, which they felt was the perfect antidote to an epidemic of inconsiderate diners. Advertisement 'I think it's completely normal, people just have to give enough notice, it's a lack of good manners, that's what reservations are for,' said one defender. 'You have guests, you count 8 people, two don't come without warning, you've done the shopping and the cooking accordingly.' They added, 'Personally, the next time I don't invite them. This is his livelihood, he loses two places, so I completely understand his approach.' Meanwhile, a fellow restaurateur claimed that 'this kind of situation has unfortunately become commonplace.' 'Between phantom reservations, last-minute cancellations, and customers arriving very late hoping to be served anyway, it's become a real headache,' they wrote. 'For a small establishment, every table counts. Service isn't just about dishes coming out, it's about meticulous organization, a kitchen team, precise timing—and when things go off the rails because of careless behavior, the loss of revenue is very real.'

Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Summerfest in Milwaukee adds two new artists to replace former headliner Nessa Barrett
Summerfest in Milwaukee has added two artists to the lineup after pop singer Nessa Barrett dropped out of her headlining slot. Claire Rosinkranz and Sofia Camara — two emerging pop singers whose songs have found success on TikTok — will now perform at the Briggs & Stratton Big Backyard June 26, fest officials revealed June 12. Camara's set is at 8:45 p.m.; Rosinkranz will close out the stage at 10 p.m. Barrett had been booked to play the 10 p.m. slot on the stage June 26 but dropped out of the lineup June 6 due to "a scheduling conflict," according to a Facebook post on the Summerfest page. It's just one of the headliner shakeups that fest officials have had to work through as the Big Gig's opening day, June 19, approaches. On June 4, country-rock band Whiskey Myers announced it could no longer headline Summerfest's Miller Lite Oasis June 21 due to a family matter. Fest officials confirmed on Facebook the band will play Summerfest in 2026, with details to be announced. On June 12, a replacement for Whiskey Myers was revealed — rapper and singer (and University of Wisconsin-Madison alum) Yung Gravy, who has also dipped into country, including a collaboration with Shania Twain. Gravy is used to saving the day at Summerfest. In 2023, after headlining the festival's Generac Power Stage, he was recruited to lead a free show at the American Family Insurance Amphitheater after the previously lined-up fill-in, AJR, had to cancel because of illness in the family. AJR had been promoted to amphitheater headliner when Summerfest's first choice for the date, ailing pop legend Jimmy Buffett, pulled out. Also on June 12, Summerfest officials revealed on Facebook that hip-hop veterans Bone-Thugs-N-Harmony would no longer perform the Aurora Pavilion's primary headlining slot at 7 p.m. June 19 "due to unforeseen circumstances." The group has been replaced by rapper Bow Wow. It's the second headliner to drop out from a show on that Summerfest stage this year. In May, singer-songwriter Julien Baker canceled her summer tour including a June 27 co-headlining show with Torres. Torres was rebooked for a solo set on that stage earlier in the day, and Rubblebucket was added to the original Baker-Torres slot. Summerfest will take place at Maier Festival Park June 19 to 21, June 26 to 28 and July 3 to 5. Chris Foran of the Journal Sentinel contributed to this report. This article originally appeared on Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: Milwaukee's Summerfest replaces former headliner with two new artists