During welfare check, police find dead man and 124 snakes inside Maryland home
-
Rudy Giuliani spends nine hours under oath with the 1/6 committee New York Times congressional reporter Luke Broadwater discusses how a central player in the plot to overturn the 2020 election, Rudy Giuliani, met with the January 6 select committee for nine hours
MSNBC
-
Democrats become the last line of defense against Big Lie Republicans New York Times domestic correspondent Nick Corasaniti details his reporting on how Trump’s 2020 election lies have gripped state legislatures
MSNBC
-
How two Georgia races will test Trump’s sway over the GOP The Post’s Amy Gardner previews the Georgia Republican primaries for governor and secretary of state on May 24, and analyzes former president Donald Trump’s impact.
The Washington Post
While conducting a welfare check in Maryland, police discovered a dead man and his collection of 124 caged snakes.
The snakes, some of them venomous and illegal, were "meticulously cared for" in cages stacked throughout the home, Charles County spokesperson Jennifer Harris told NBC Washington.
On Wednesday, fire and EMS authorities knocked down the front door and discovered a 49-year-old man dead. The man's identity was not released, and his death was being investigated. Authorities did not suspect foul play.
Start the day smarter. Get all the news you need in your inbox each morning.
The next day, the snakes were removed from the home. Among them were rattlesnakes, cobras, black mambas and a 14-foot-long Burmese python, Harris said.
Python pops out: Python seeks to slip the capture of snake wrangler's bag
Watch: Family spots snake slithering in Christmas tree, one of world's most poisonous
Snakes are now being unloaded in containers from the Maryland home where a man was found dead last night. @SegravesNBC4 has the latest minutes away on @nbcwashington https://t.co/MbLLdHHnCO https://t.co/qnZaMAgzV4 pic.twitter.com/N9qlg1HCTv
— Tom Lynch (@TomLynch_) January 20, 2022
“We don’t anticipate that there was any security issue with any of the snakes escaping. He was well-known by his neighbors in the community, but nobody had just basically ever been inside his home to know that this part of the home life was going on," Harris told NBC Washington.
Harris said the Charles County chief of animal control told her he had never seen or heard of anything improper that occurred in the Maryland home.
“The feedback we heard was he was very pleasant, nice, quiet,” Harris told The Baltimore Sun. “A neighborly guy.”
Follow Gabriela Miranda on Twitter: @itsgabbymiranda
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: During welfare check, police find dead man and 124 snakes inside Maryland home