People Magazine 6/24/2016
The
forensic odontologist who worked with the Florida Wildlife Conservation
Commission subject matter experts and law enforcement investigators to
identify the alligator responsible for the death of 2-year-old Lane
Graves on June 16 says he was not able to "make any kind of positive
identification to a specific animal."
Dr.
Kenneth Cohrn, who examined Lane's body postmortem (not the
alligators), says the case had little evidence, and there was no way to
"isolate a specific animal."
"They
could have had 50 alligators there, but if you don't have adequate
information to match the teeth to the bite wounds, there's nothing to
look at," Dr. Cohrn tells PEOPLE.
His
comments come a day after the FWC said they were "confident" they had
removed the alligator responsible for the attack at Disney World's Seven
Seas Lagoon, in a statement released to PEOPLE on Wednesday.
The
reported animal has been euthanized, a spokesperson confirmed to
PEOPLE. The FWC said they were able to correctly identify the alligator
based on "expert analyses and observations by staff with extensive
experience in investigating fatal alligator bite incidents."
Investigators took into account witness descriptions, proximity to the
site of the attack and the size of the alligator.
During
the investigation, trappers euthanized six alligators from the area,
the FWC confirmed to PEOPLE on Friday. Three of those alligators were of
the correct size to have taken the toddler. Two of those three were in
close enough proximity to the incident to have killed Lane.
"I
do believe it was a smaller sized one. Two [of the alligators trapped]
were small, less than five feet. It could have been one of those," says
Dr. Cohrn. "But there is no science behind that. We really couldn't make
an identification."
In
a statement released to PEOPLE on Wednesday, the FWC said that the bite
marks were indeed "inconclusive," but that "subject matter experts were
able to conclude that either of the two suspect alligators captured
near the attack site were capable of inflicting the observed wounds."
The
FWC also said that "DNA was collected from the victim and all
alligators captured. Results from the victim's wounds were negative for
animal DNA, and no comparison could be made."
According to the FWC, 1.3 million alligators live in Florida, but attacks are "a very rare occurrence."
"Any
waterway in Florida could be a potential habitat for alligators and
other critters. So there’s really no way to control it. This is their
habitat, this is where they live and you can expect to see them," says
Dr. Cohrn. "You run into a problem where the boundaries between people
and populations interact with the natural habitat of wild animals. It
happens in communities, it happens in park areas, it happens all over
Florida."
A
memorial foundation has been set up by Lane's parents Melissa and Matt
Graves, who released a statement on the foundation's website.
"After
the tragic loss of our beloved 2-year-old son, Lane Thomas, we have
created the Lane Thomas Foundation to honor his memory," the statement
reads. "Losing Lane has broken our hearts in the worst possible way.
While there is no way to mend our hearts, we can do good work in his
honor."
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