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Video Shows Moment 700-Pound Gator Bolts Out Of Water And Attacks 85-Year-Old Florida Woman

   DailyWire.com
AVONDALE, LA - MARCH 29: A posted sign warns of alligators on the course during the completion of the third round of the Zurich Classic of New Orleans at TPC Louisiana on March 29, 2008 in Avondale, Louisiana.
Stan Badz/US PGA TOUR via Getty Images

A video released Wednesday afternoon captured the horrifying moment that a 10-foot alligator exploded out of a Florida pond this week and killed an 85-year-old woman who was walking her dog.

Gloria Serge was walking her small dog around midday on Monday at a community retention pond where she lived at Spanish Lakes Fairways, a community for the elderly, when the incident occurred.

The alligator, which local media said weighed up to 700 pounds, surged out of the water and tried to grab her dog. Serge tried to fight off the alligator, but was knocked over and it grabbed her foot and dragged her into the water.

Video was released that showed the moment that the incident occurred. The video does not show the alligator killing the woman.

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Robert Lilly, a specialist who traps alligators in the state, said that it was difficult for officials to recover the woman’s body and remove the animal from the pond.

“It was definitely a fight. [We] snagged him on the bottom. He never surfaced,” Lilly said. “He stayed down the whole time. We were able to get a second hook in him and a hard line in him so we could get him up.”

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The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission said that while alligators are still on the federal endangered species list, they can still easily be found all over the state.

“Alligators occur in all 67 counties in Florida and can be found in practically all fresh and brackish water bodies and occasionally in salt water,” the state agency said. “Although exact population figures are not known, Florida has a healthy and stable population of about 1.3 million alligators of every size. This population estimate is based on an estimated 6.7 million acres of suitable habitat.”

It is illegal to feed alligators because feeding them teaches them to associate food with humans and thus causes them to lose their fear of people. Despite their numbers in the state, attacks on people remain relatively rare as they prefer to only attack prey that they can easily overpower.

Fully-grown American alligators can be up to 15 feet long and weigh up to 1,000 pounds.

There have been fewer than 450 recorded alligator attacks in Florida since 1948, with a couple dozen resulting in death.

American Alligators, while dangerous, pose less risk to humans than large crocodiles like the Nile Crocodile in Africa and the Saltwater Crocodile found in Asia and Australia.

Saltwater crocodiles are the largest crocodile species in the world, with full-grown males being able to grow up to 28 feet and weighing roughly 2,500 pounds. They are responsible for killing 1,000 people per year.

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