
Newly hired cop from New York encounters baby alligator in Florida and leaves internet roaring in laughter
A newly transferred police officer from New York got a crash course in Florida wildlife when his first alligator call ended in a panicked reaction, which is now snapping up laughs online.
Officer Christopher Martinez, a new hire with the Largo Police Department, is going viral for his startled reaction to being handed a wriggling juvenile alligator found on a residential lawn.
Martinez's frightened reaction during his first-ever gator call, caught on video by colleagues, has amassed more than 1.4 million views on Facebook since Wednesday.
In the clip, Martinez nervously takes deep breaths as a female officer hands him a hissing, taped-mouthed gator. He warns her to be ready to intervene if things go wrong.
'I will drop you if you drop him,' the female officer jokes.
'You have big teeth. I have tiny fingers,' Martinez told the reptile before finally clutching the wiggling animal, which flailed in his hands.
Martinez's fellow officers advised him to hold the reptile tight as he smiled for a photo.
'Take a picture of me, for the love of God,' a heavy-breathing Martinez begged his howling colleagues.
After the photo op, Martinez handed the reptile back to the female cop and ran away following more flails by the gator.
'In the end, the gator was safely removed and relocated to a proper area. No officers were harmed, and Officer Martinez, our NY transplant, received his official welcome to Florida,' the department wrote on Facebook.
More than 2,700 people have commented on the video, laughing along with Martinez's colleagues.
'New Yorkers all hard core until a baby dinosaur arrives,' one person wrote.
'Come on, you got new york rats that big,' another said.
'Even the gator was like, 'dude,'' a third person chuckled.
Other viewers gave Martinez a new nickname.
'He will henceforth be dubbed 'Gator,'' someone said.
'Dude is NEVER going to EVER live that down. Call him gator boy,' another added.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
28 minutes ago
- The Independent
The ‘inappropriate' post over Iran that led the LA County Sheriff's Department to apologize
The Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department (LASD) apologized for an "offensive and inappropriate" social media post regarding recent U.S. strikes in Iran. The initial post, published hours after U.S. bombings, referenced "victims and families impacted" despite no reported fatalities. The LASD faced significant public backlash, with social media users criticizing the statement as a "slap in the face" to the U.S. military. The department first edited the post, then issued a formal apology, stating the original message was "unacceptable, made in error, and does not reflect the views of Sheriff Robert G. Luna or the Department." The LASD is conducting an internal review into the post's creation and publication, and is reviewing its social media oversight protocols.


The Independent
38 minutes ago
- The Independent
Palestine Action protesters clash with police as government confirms ban on group
Protesters clashed with police at a demonstration in support of Palestine Action as the government confirmed a move to ban the group. The crowd surged towards police when officers tried to detain someone in Trafalgar Square in central London, while onlookers chanted 'let them go'. The protest had initially been planned to take place outside the Houses of Parliament, but the location was changed early on Monday morning after the Metropolitan Police imposed an exclusion zone. The Met commissioner Sir Mark Rowley said he was 'shocked' by the planned protest and described Palestine Action as an 'organised extremist criminal group'. Shortly after the protest began, Home Secretary Yvetter Cooper announced she had decided to proscribe Palestine Action, following the group's vandalism of two planes at an RAF base. She said she would lay an order before Parliament next week which, if passed, will make membership and support for the protest group illegal. Belonging to or expressing support for a proscribed organisation, along with a number of other actions, are criminal offences carrying a maximum sentence of 14 years in prison. On Sunday, Cabinet minister Jonathan Reynolds said he could not rule out the possibility of a foreign power being behind Palestine Action. Speaking at the protest, Palestine Action spokesperson Max Geller said there had never been any evidence of such claims. 'I can't overstate how absurd and disappointing that accusation is,' he told the PA news agency. 'I want to make very clear that there has never been any evidence offered to support such a claim, and if we were allowed to be a legally recognised group, that man would be being sued right now for libel.' Asked about Sir Mark Rowley's comments, he said: 'It's really troubling that the head of the Met would pre-empt the government and ban us from protesting (at the Houses of Parliament). 'It's a frustrating turn for democracy in this country.' The decision comes after the group posted footage online showing two people inside the base at RAF Brize Norton in Oxfordshire. The clip shows one person riding an electric scooter up to an Airbus Voyager air-to-air refuelling tanker and appearing to spray paint into its jet engine. Speaking on Sunday, the head of the Met said he was 'shocked and frustrated' at the protest, but that until the group is proscribed the force had 'no power in law' to prevent it taking place. 'The right to protest is essential and we will always defend it, but actions in support of such a group go beyond what most would see as legitimate protest,' he added. 'Thousands of people attend protests of a different character every week without clashing with the law or with the police. The criminal charges faced by Palestine Action members, in contrast, represent a form of extremism that I believe the overwhelming majority of the public rejects.' Some 81 organisations have been proscribed under the 2000 Act, including Islamist terrorist groups such as Hamas and al Qaida, far-right groups such as National Action, and Russian private military company the Wagner Group. Palestine Action has staged a series of demonstrations in recent months, including spraying the London offices of Allianz Insurance with red paint over its alleged links to Israeli defence company Elbit, and vandalising Donald Trump's Turnberry golf course in South Ayrshire.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Children's worker branded police officer 'evil' during drink-driving arrest and pleaded 'I've got a lovely house', court told
A children's worker branded police 'evil' and insisted she was a 'decent girl with a lovely house' as she was arrested on suspicion of drink driving. Melissa Truswell, 39, was pulled over by traffic officers after they spotted her driving her Mercedes erratically two miles from her home in Romiley, near Stockport, Greater Manchester. But when she was asked to provide a roadside breath test, Truswell failed to blow properly and instead burst into tears and begged the officers to spare her. During her meltdown, Truswell - who lives in a £350,000 three bedroomed detached house - begged: 'Please don't destroy my life. I'm trying to blow. I was trying it for you there. 'I will show you that I am a decent person. Come on, you know I am a nice person. But you are going to treat me like I am a tramp. Does that make you feel quite special? 'You know I mean I'm a decent girl. Why have you done that to me? I am a really nice person. I've got a lovely house. ' It has since emerged that Truswell had a previous conviction for drink driving from 2009. At Wigan Magistrates' Court, Truswell pleaded guilty to failing to provide a specimen of breath for analysis. She branded a police officer 'evil' and insisted she was a 'decent girl with a lovely house' as she was arrested on suspicion of drink driving. Pictured is Ms Truswell's home She lost her job as a senior residential support worker with a childcare company following her arrest. The court heard the incident occurred at 11.40pm on August 6 last year when police saw Truswell's Mercedes being driven along the street with its hazard warning lights illuminated. In a statement an officer named only as Sgt Taylor said: 'I could not see any hazards so it made me think the person may need assistance or help of some sort. I turned the police vehicle around and positioned myself behind the white Mercedes with the intention of stopping it. 'But when driving behind it I saw that the driving was in a manner that was concerning due to swerving and poor road positioning. When attempting a right hand turn the car nearly collided with the central bollard which was illuminated and it had to make a correction. 'Due to the extreme risk I illuminated my emergency lights on the police vehicle but the Mercedes took some time to stop and bumped up the kerb.' The court was played footage of Truswell as she sat in the back seat of the police car. As officers quizzed her she said: 'I have not had anything to eat for a while. Please do not destroy my life. I am a really nice person. I've got a lovely house.' When asked for a sample of breath she started crying and said: 'Why? Why are you doing this to me?' Sgt Taylor told Truswell to blow into the machine but she did not blow for a long enough period despite being given four chances and was arrested. In response she went on: 'Why are you arresting me? I'm trying my best' then when she was refused a cigarette added: ' 'Are you being serious? I was really trying my best for you. Why would you do that? I've lost my job. 'Can I go to my car? I will show you that I am a decent person. I want to go to my car and get my stuff. Come on, you know I am a nice person.' Sgt Taylor insisted: 'I do not know you from Adam. I just know you have not provided a specimen of breath. You need to take some responsibility. Unfortunately you failed to provide a roadside sample.' But Truswell sniped back: 'That's evil. You are not perfect either. I've got work to go to, I've got kids and everything to look after.' The court heard she was also charged with possession of cocaine following her arrest but the charge was dropped by prosecutors after no evidence was provided showing a substance seized from her contained drugs. In mitigation defence lawyer Brian Koffman said: 'What we see in the footage is a woman in a very distressed state. 'The reason she is in such a distressed state is because she knew perfectly well the moment she was stopped by the police that a conviction for driving with excess alcohol or drugs or failing to provide would be very serious indeed for her professional life. 'She was anxious to provide a sample and she tried to do so at the roadside and tried to do so at the police station. She repeatedly said:, 'I tried', 'I tried', and one can see she makes a number of attempts but she is unable to provide it. It is not a deliberate refusal. 'There is no doubt looking at that footage and the other footage that she is very distressed because she was aware that being arrested is a very serious matter and she was aware of the consequences. ' He added: 'The explanation for her driving was that she reached for a glass bottle of Lucozade and it spilt all over her. Up to this point she has had a responsible position and was a senior residential support worker, giving support to children who had issues. 'The moment she was charged with this, and charged with the possession of drugs which she has always denied, that went on her DBS and she immediately lost that job. 'The principal reason was the drug allegation although the prosecution have served no evidence as to whether the sample analyzed did contain drugs. Failing to provide would not have lost her the job. 'She has been deeply affected by the consequences of her behaviour and her response in the police car was that of somebody very very upset about what happened. The consequences have been devastating for her and she deeply regrets the matter. 'She understands people should not drive with drink or drugs, and should provide a sample. There is no doubt that she has learned a very important lesson from what has taken place. The consequences have already been felt and will continue to be felt.' Truswell was bailed until September for a probation report to be prepared. An interim driving ban was also put in place.