Source: Telegraph, The (UK) Contact: Thu, 19 Mar 1998 ALLIGATORS SNAPPED UP BY DRUG DEALERS INSTEAD of pitbulls, alligators are becoming the new "guard dogs" of choice for an increasing number of Americans, particularly members of drug gangs anxious to protect their cash and narcotics. In recent months, police in Massachusetts, where keeping large reptiles has been illegal for more than 20 years, have encountered four alligators and caymans used to protect property. The most recent incident involved an alligator guarding drugs kept at the home of a dealer in New Bedford. "It's the new status thing," said Victor Mendes, a drug squad detective. "They've graduated from pitbulls to alligators. They use the things to intimidate." Caymans, in fact, are more useful for their bark than their bite: vets say that, although the ferocious-looking members of the crocodile family can reach up to six feet, they normally would not attack anyone unless starving. There is a big demand for the animals; one renowned for its "ferocious leaping attacks" was stolen recently from a San Francisco zoo. In Lakewood, Colorado, officers had to wrestle with a four-foot specimen while they were evicting a tenant and, in Connecticut, a temporary animal shelter had to be established to house seized reptiles. For years, Americans have bought reptiles as pets, a trend accentuated when Don Johnson kept Elvis the alligator as a companion on his boat in the television crime series Miami Vice. Rumours abound of owners getting tired of them when they grow too large and flushing them down the lavatory, sparking wholly unsubstantiated stories in New York of monster alligators residing in the sewers. However, the trend to use exotic animals for protection is something new: police in New York recently found a 12-ft snake in a cupboard guarding a drug dealers' cocaine supply. Sgt Robert Mercon, of Massachusetts environmental police department, said there are obvious drawbacks to owning alligators and caymans. He said: "They grow too quickly, they get too big and they get too vicious. And they have very sharp teeth." The only upside, he reckons, is that "you don't have to take them for walks and they don't get fleas."