By Tony
Pipitone and Pedro
Cancio 2/27/17, NBCMaiami
For video article is based on:
Nick Bishop likes to go by his
nickname, the Wrangler. He’s an aspiring TV wildlife host.
The videos of his escapades
capturing venomous snakes could bring two thoughts to cross your mind. You
wonder if he has a death wish and you may not want his as your neighbor if he
keeps the snakes he loves at home.
Bishop has kept a venomous snake
in his Hallandale Beach condo.
“There was a pink rattlesnake,
blue eyes, white background,” he said. “It was gorgeous.”
After getting a tip, Florida’s
Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission inspected his home and confiscated
the rattlesnake. He now faces a misdemeanor charge for having the illegal snake
without having a license for it.
“I totally understand,” Bishop
said. “I mean if I lived next door, I wouldn’t want a rattlesnake living in my
neighbor’s apartment.”
To reduce the risk of venomous
snakes in neighborhoods, Florida’s FWC recently changed the rules to make it
tougher to keep a venomous reptile.
The new rule changes include requirements
for enclosures holding venomous reptiles. The changes impact the container the
reptile is held in as well as the room that holds that container. There are
also new regulations on handling reptiles outside the enclosures.
There are more than 1100 license
holders in Florida listed between 2014 and 2016. The new rules add steps for
people seeking to be licensed to have a venomous reptile.
Florida’s Poison Control Centers
keeps track of snake bites reported in Florida. Over 900 people have reported snake
bites in the last three years. That’s almost a bite per day. Two people died in
2014 from snake bites. 70 percent of those who report bites are men.
When a snake gets loose or bites
someone, Miami-Dade Fire Rescue Lieutenant Scott Mullin is likely to get the
call.
Mullin’s Venom One unit is the
only government-run, 24-hour, seven day a week antivenin operation in the
United States.
He knows the excruciating
symptoms that a snake bite victim suffers.
“They say it’s like that part of
their body being put over a hot grill with someone taking a railroad spike and
a hammer and just hitting it with every heartbeat,” Mullin described about a
rattlesnake bite.
Coral Snakes kill with a
neurotoxin.
“Once you can’t expand your lungs
you can’t breathe and when you can’t breathe you got about six minutes before
you die,” Mullin said.
Sometimes he says the victims are
bitten while keeping snakes illegally.
“In one case it was a cobra bite
and the gentleman didn’t want to volunteer to help us because he didn’t want to
face prosecution,” Mullin said.
Police had to get a warrant to
enter his house in order to identify the species and use the correct antivenin
to help save him.
A more regular call for Mullin is
to recover the popular Burmese Python.
“It’s illegal to have one of
these as a pet,” he said
Back at Nick the Wrangler’s
house, he says only legal reptiles and mammals are there now including two
snakes, a turtle, a monitor lizard, a monkey and a dog.
“Yeah I keep it simple,” Bishop
said. “I don’t tangle with FWC anymore.”
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