Today's award goes to a hapless New Zealand serial offender whose criminal career went rather . . . er . . . squirrely, so to speak. This is an older report, but it's only just come to my attention, and it's too good not to recognize with an appropriate award.
John [Casford] admits he was "high as a kite" when he bypassed an unsecured gate, broke through two padlocks and entered the monkey enclosure at Wellington Zoo. He had it in his mind that he was going to catch one of the zoo's squirrel monkeys—a canopy-dwelling species from the Central and South Americas—and take it home to his girlfriend. The squirrel monkeys had other ideas.
"I don't know what happened in the squirrel monkey enclosure," said Wellington District Court judge Bill Hastings during John's sentencing last week. "The squirrel monkeys know. You say you couldn't find them and I don't speak squirrel [monkey].
"What I know is that by daybreak all the monkeys were distressed, two of them were injured, and you had a broken leg, two fractured teeth, a sprained ankle, and bruises on your back."
John reportedly told zookeepers that he'd broken his leg while jumping the boundary fence—but his attempted monkey heist was ultimately foiled by the fact that monkeys are not, as it turns out, just hairy little children with tails. They are savage acrobats that will beat the living piss out of anyone who wanders into their territory unannounced. And in this case, that someone also happened to be a wanted criminal.
Police had been chasing John for a string of unrelated offences over the previous seven months, including an unprovoked assault on a man waiting at traffic lights, an alcohol-fuelled attack at a convenience store, and assaults on a Wellington City Council community safety officer and a night shelter resident who refused to hand over cigarettes, the New Zealand Herald reports.
Judge Hastings sentenced him to two years and seven months in prison for both the attempted monkey burglary and the crime spree leading up to it.
There's more at the link.
"Not my circus, not my monkeys" - oh, no, wait: those are my monkeys!
I'd like to see him try that with African baboons. Those suckers'll flat-out kill you. They've been known to gang up on and take down leopards on occasion, so a drunk human wouldn't be much of a problem for them.
Peter
So high he thought he heard the Steve Miller Band tell him "Take The Monkey and Run".
ReplyDeleteReminiscent of Phil Jupitus's hilarious riff on some nitwit who broke in to the Lion enclosure at London Park Zoo. My Web-Fu is weak or I would post the link, but it is reliably up on YouTube.
ReplyDeleteYou would have to be beyond doofus to tackle a baboon even one on one let alone the fact that baboons rarely travel alone.
ReplyDeletePaul in Texas
I must re-read the Peter Hathaway Capstick story where he had to get rid of a tribe(?) of baboons that were killing the children of his staff. It took a MAC-10 and flame trenches to shift them.
ReplyDeleteThe jokes just write themselves, Don't monkeys with the monkeys. Monkey see, monkey do doofus. "The Minkey was the lookout" ("Pink Panther" reference). Etc.
ReplyDeleteSquirrel monkeys run up to 2 1/2 lbs. If they were the size of baboons, the guy would be dead!
ReplyDeleteSo that's four assaults, at least, on humans, in the last seven months, not counting the attempt on the monkeys. Works out to be about 6 months per crime.
ReplyDeletePretty serious crimes too --"an unprovoked assault on a man waiting at traffic lights, an alcohol-fuelled attack at a convenience store, and assaults on a Wellington City Council community safety officer and a night shelter resident "
And those are just the ones they know he did. Sounds like the guy is completely out of control, -- or, shall we say, has serious 'anger-management problems' -- serious enough that he is willing to assault a cop -- if that's what a 'community safety officer' is. Sounds like a menace to society and anyone who comes in contact with him. How does he only get 2 1/2 years? And if New Zealand is like the US, eligible for parole in half that time. Seems like a wrist slap. Not a serious attempt to protect the inhabitants.