A man who helped kill a Burmese python in front of journalists at a Hallandale Beach processing plant broke the rules governing the hunting of the non-native snakes in the Everglades, according to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.
Josh Zarmati, a Miami snake breeder, was one of several licensed snake dealers allowed by the state to kill pythons in the Everglades. But under the rules, he was required to either kill the python where it was found or bring it to a veterinarian or research facility, said Scott Hardin, the agency’s exotic species coordinator.
Instead, Zarmati brought two pythons last week to All American Gator in Hallandale Beach and held one down while the company’s president, Brian Wood, whacked off its head with a hatchet. The top four inches of the snake continued to writhe, the mouth opening and closing, until Wood smashed it several times with the hatchet’s blunt end. An account appeared in Wednesday’s Sun-Sentinel.
The Animal Rights Foundation of Florida, based in Fort Lauderdale, e-mailed the state wildlife commission Wednesday asking if this was the proper procedure. The agency contacted Zarmati and told him to follow the rules next time.
“They didn’t want any of the animals — because of the animal rights groups and PETA — to be killed on camera,” Zarmati said. “I kind of got into a little bit of trouble.”
Although the state had begun a special Burmese python hunt in the Everglades last week, Zarmati was not participating in that but had been catching pythons as one of several snake experts who had a special permit.
Euthanasia guidelines from the American Veterinary Medical Association say decapitation is not adequate for snakes and other reptiles because death may not be immediate.
Stephanie Bell, cruelty case manager for People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, said best method, is to stun the snake or pithe it, that is, scramble its brain immediately with a metal tool. She said Wood did the right thing by whacking it on the head to put it out of its misery.