Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Police Seek Cheetah Spotted Along Southeast B.C. Highway 3A Near Creston

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Dec, 2015 10:19 AM
    CRESTON, B.C. — Conservation officers are looking for a cheetah seen wandering the snowy roads of southeastern British Columbia.
     
    RCMP in Creston said the cheetah was spotted along Highway 3A on Thursday at about 4:30 p.m. in the Crawford Bay and Kootenay Bay areas.
     
    A motorist who saw the animal sent photos to police. The witness told RCMP the animal appeared to be wearing an orange cloth collar.
     
    Insp. Joe Caravetta of the B.C. Conservation Officer Service said Friday that three officers are hunting for the cat and also looking for its owner.
     
    He said the provincial wildlife veterinarian doesn't believe the public is at risk but the situation is being treated seriously.
     
     
    "We want to be able to find this cheetah and for its own health and benefit be able to capture it and get it to a facility and have it checked out," Caravetta said in an interview from Cranbrook.
     
    "It could be hungry, and any animal that is hungry may do things that may not be in its character."
     
    Caravetta said cheetahs are typically shy and less aggressive than other big cats, but noted the animal is out in the cold rather than in its normal tropical habitat.
     
    He said staff are trying to determine if anyone in the area has registered the cheetah, adding the jungle cats are legally allowed with a permit.
     
    "It could simply be a pet, but at this point we haven't been able to talk to the potential custodian."
     

    RCMP Cpl. Dan Moskaluk said people should keep a close eye on small children and pets until the animal is located.
     
    "Regardless of it having a collar on, it should be considered and respected as a wild animal," he said in a news release.
     
    Area residents and staff at Crawford Bay School have been notified of the situation.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    New Brunswick Opposition Turns Over Atcon Computer Servers To The RCMP

    New Brunswick Opposition Turns Over Atcon Computer Servers To The RCMP
    Opposition spokesman Bob Fowlie says the servers were bought at a bankruptcy auction in 2013, but the party only became aware of the information on one of the servers recently.

    New Brunswick Opposition Turns Over Atcon Computer Servers To The RCMP

    Ontario Exempts Teachers Who Went On Illegal Strikes From Pension Rules

    TORONTO — Ontario's education minister says an agreement allowing teachers who went on illegal strikes earlier this year to make pension contributions for that time won't apply to future illegal job actions.

    Ontario Exempts Teachers Who Went On Illegal Strikes From Pension Rules

    Hotline In Manitoba To Let People Know How To Help Syrian Refugees

    Hotline In Manitoba To Let People Know How To Help Syrian Refugees
    It will provide information to anyone looking to make a donation or who wants to volunteer with resettlement efforts.

    Hotline In Manitoba To Let People Know How To Help Syrian Refugees

    NATO Eager To Size Up Justin Trudeau Government As ISIL Threat Emerges In Libya

    NATO Eager To Size Up Justin Trudeau Government As ISIL Threat Emerges In Libya
    BRUSSELS — Stephane Dion hasn't even arrived yet in Brussels, but a lineup is already forming to meet Canada's new global affairs minister.

    NATO Eager To Size Up Justin Trudeau Government As ISIL Threat Emerges In Libya

    Ontario Prepared To Take Roughly 4,000 Refugees This Year: Minister

    Ontario Prepared To Take Roughly 4,000 Refugees This Year: Minister
    TORONTO — Ontario's health minister says the province is prepared to take roughly 4,000 of the 10,000 Syrian refugees set to arrive in Canada by the end of the year.

    Ontario Prepared To Take Roughly 4,000 Refugees This Year: Minister

    Opening Five Safe-Injection Sites Makes Financial Sense For Ontario: Study

    Opening Five Safe-Injection Sites Makes Financial Sense For Ontario: Study
    Ahmed Bayoumi, a medical researcher at St. Michael's Hospital in Toronto, says three such facilities in that city and two in Ottawa would make financial sense given the increasing effectiveness of hepatitis C treatment.

    Opening Five Safe-Injection Sites Makes Financial Sense For Ontario: Study