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A record was set and certified in August 2017 for the longest alligator bagged in Mississippi. The beast weighed 766.5 pounds and measured 14 feet and 3/4 inches tail to snout.
It turns out there was yet a greater monster still lurking in the murk.
With an inkling of where a "particularly territorial" alligator at least 12 feet long could be found out on the Yazoo River, Will Thomas, Don Woods, Tanner White, and Joey Clark ventured out Friday in search of their gator and glory, reported the Washington Post.
Woods, among those to receive a tag by lottery for this year's 10-day hunting season, told the Clarion Ledger, "We got on the water right at dark. ... It was a calm night. We saw a lot of 8-footers, 10-footers, but that's not what we were after."
Around 9 p.m., they saw their prize.
"We knew he was wide," said Woods. "His back was humongous. It was like we were following a jon boat."
The hunters managed to hook the beast, but it would not go gentle into that good night. Rather, the beast shredded lines, broke rods, and tested the men's endurance for several hours.
"We held onto him awhile — until 10 or so," Woods told the Ledger. "He broke my rod at that point."
Woods and his crew hooked the beast several more times, but again and again it managed to break off.
"He would go down, sit and then take off. He kept going under logs. He knew what he was doing," Woods recalled. "The crazy thing is he stayed in that same spot."
The more the alligator thrashed, the better sense the hunters got of exactly what they were dealing with.
Thomas told the Post, "It was pandemonium. It was chaos. ... When you have an 800-pound animal on the end of a fishing rod, and he's coming up and he looks like a beast, everybody is kind of going crazy, and your adrenaline is pumping."
"We probably didn't have top-of-the-line equipment because he broke everything we had," said Thomas. "By the end of the night, I didn't think we could catch him because our equipment was shot."
"He dictated everything we did. It was exhausting," Woods told the Ledger. "It was more mentally exhausting than anything because he kept getting off."
Although tested, the crew would not be bested.
Taking on water and working feverishly to close the deal before the oppressive Mississippi heat returned along with the sunshine, the men put their last two good rods to use and slayed the beast around 3:30 a.m..
Thomas told NewsNation, "It was a team effort. Everybody kind of had a job and we fought him hard."
The Post indicated that after noosing the gator in accordance with state law, the hunters rendered the beast the inert stuff of legend with a shotgun blast.
In the 30 minutes it took to get the gator on board, the men began to comprehend the full heft of their prize.
"We just knew we had a big alligator," said Woods. "We were just amazed at how wide his back was and how big the head was. It was surreal, to tell you the truth."
Andrew Arnett, Alligator Program coordinator with the Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries, and Parks, later measured it and discovered the hunters had a state record for "longest male alligator taken by a permitted hunter" on their hands. It weighed in at 802.5 lbs, measured 14 feet and 3 inches long, and sported a belly girth of 66 inches.
Arnett told the Post, "I was actually shocked. ... It's not every year you get something of this magnitude."
Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves congratulated the hunters on "harvesting the biggest alligator in state history," adding "#TastesLikeChicken."
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NewsNation indicated that the team donated an estimated 380 pounds of the gator's meat to a program in the state that feeds the hungry.
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How far would you go to make a few bucks? After being caught bizarrely testing his limits, one German man is currently under investigation.
A 60-year-old man from the eastern German city of Magdeburg, whose name was not released, is under investigation for receiving up to 90 COVID-19 shots from vaccination centers. According to reports, the suspect was caught, but not detained, and is currently under investigation for unauthorized issuance of vaccination cards and document forgery.
The criminal police suspect the man intended to illegally sell unauthorized but legitimate vaccine cards. "You have to appreciate his commitment," quipped Steven Crowder.
On Thursday's episode of "Louder with Crowder," Crowder and the crew couldn't help but laugh at the outrageousness of the story, which left them wondering if the 60-year-old had punch cards? "Yeah," Crowder joked, "it's called his triceps."
According to the Associated Press, it's not immediately clear what impact the shots from several different manufacturers had on this man's health.
Watch the clip for more details. Can't watch? Download the podcast here.
To enjoy more of Steven’s uncensored late-night comedy that’s actually funny, join Mug Club — the only place for all of Crowder uncensored and on demand.
Anything is possible when Steven Crowder brings his "Change My Mind" table to a college campus.
Crowder filmed this installment of "Change My Mind" at The University of Texas in Denton, where he asked an enthusiastic crowd to change his mind on whether "biological males should not compete in women's sports."
Before Steven could sit down for a rational discussion, he humored the more unhinged crowd members and gave them the spotlight to shout their truths. Predictably, it turned out that the people screaming "f*** you" didn't have much else to share with the group, so Crowder moved ahead with the show.
The conversation kicked off with 21-year-old Isaac, who argued that his primary concern with Crowder's "men shouldn't compete in women's sports" sign was how Crowder worded his premise.
Watch the video to see Part One of the latest "Change My Mind." Can't watch? Download the podcast here.
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To enjoy more of Steven’s uncensored late-night comedy that’s actually funny, join "Mug Club" — the only place for all of Crowder uncensored and on demand.
Special Assistant to the President and Coordinator for the Southern Border Roberta Jacobson said Friday that she is leaving government at the end of the month, making the announcement a day after U.S. Customs and Border Protection released data showing record numbers of illegal immigrants are pouring into the U.S. from Mexico.
National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan issued a statement saying that Jacobson would be "retiring from her role as Coordinator" at the end of this month, saying the move was "consistent with her commitment at the outset to serve in the [Biden] Administration's first 100 days."
Jacobson, the former ambassador to Mexico, confirmed the news to The New York Times while praising the Biden administration, saying, "They continue to drive toward the architecture that the president has laid out: an immigration system that is humane, orderly and safe."
She added, "I leave optimistically. The policy direction is so clearly right for our country."
The Times reported that Jacobson intends to leave government entirely at the end of April, adding:
The timing of her departure is nonetheless striking, coming in the middle of the administration's efforts to reduce the flow of immigration from Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador. Ms. Jacobson had been charged with leading that effort when her appointment was announced this year.
On Thursday, the CBP reported that according to their numbers, March saw the highest monthly total of migrants attempting to cross into the U.S. from Mexico in more than a decade, hitting 172,000 — a 71% increase from the month before.
More than two weeks ago, President Joe Biden announced that Vice President Kamala Harris would be taking the lead for the administration to stem the surge of migration at the southern border, but Harris has yet to hold a press conference on the matter or to visit the area.
In Sullivan's statement on Friday, he reiterated that Biden asked Harris "to lead the Administration's work on our efforts with Mexico and the Northern Triangle, a testament to the importance this administration places on improving conditions in the region."
Jacobson denies that Harris being tapped to handle the crisis had any bearing on her decision to step down, telling The Times, "I briefed and worked in support of the vice president's leadership on this issue. Nobody could be more delighted to see the vice president take on that role. It didn't have anything to do with my decision."
The looting and destruction of property linked to riots following the death of George Floyd are estimated to be the "most expensive in insurance history," according to an exclusive report from Axios.
Axios reported that according to data from a firm called Property Claim Services, "The protests that took place in 140 U.S. cities this spring were mostly peaceful, but the arson, vandalism and looting that did occur will result in at least $1 billion to $2 billion of paid insurance claims — eclipsing the record set in Los Angeles in 1992 after the acquittal of the police officers who brutalized Rodney King."
Damage from the LA riots following the acquittal of the officers seen on video beating King cost insurers $775 million, which comes in at $1.42 billion when adjusted to 2020 dollars.
But the claims keep rolling in for property damage linked to civil unrest following the death of Floyd in late May, as riots in several U.S. cities continue months later — meaning even the high $2 billion estimate could be eclipsed.
Loretta Worters of the Insurance Information Institute explained to the outlet, "It's not just happening in one city or state — it's all over the country. And this is still happening, so the losses could be significantly more."
The Daily Wire noted:
The Floyd riots are also notable because the destruction is ongoing in places like Portland, Oregon, and Seattle, Washington, and new riots and incidents of looting crop up in cities weekly, as new police-involved shooting incidents come to light. The $2 billion likely does not include damage in Rochester, New York, or Lancaster, Pennsylvania, both of which played host, last weekend, to demonstrations that eventually turned violent. And it definitely does not include anticipated unrest following the November presidential election.
Other costly periods of civil unrest in America "include the Watts riots in Los Angeles in 1965, the 1967 Detroit riot, and the New York City blackout of 1977," Fox News reported.
Those events racked up losses totaling $357 million, $322 million, and $118 million respectively, in 2020 dollars.
Property Claim Services classifies events that result in more than $25 million in losses to be a "catastrophe."
The Daily Mail pointed out that property damage claims due to civil unrest typically "pale in comparison to those related to natural disasters."
The outlet reported, "Insurance companies paid out a total of $219billion worldwide for natural disasters in 2017 and 2018, according to Swiss Re," adding that "in California alone, insurance companies paid out $20 billion in claims during those two years after wildfires devastated the state."
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