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News / Nation & World

Ohio woman rescued after boa constrictor wraps around face

She owns other snakes; officials kill animal to save her

By Cleve R. Wootson Jr., The Washington Post
Published: July 29, 2017, 10:23pm

The snake and the Ohio woman it was wrapped around had not always been at odds.

The 911 dispatcher who answered the woman’s frantic call on Thursday was able to discern some aspects of the interspecies relationship that had suddenly and dangerously soured.

There had been some sort of rescue, the woman said after giving her location in the Ohio city of Sheffield Lake and a brief, breathless description of the predicament she was in, according to a 911 recording obtained by the Elyria, Ohio-based Chronicle-Telegram. The woman had brought the 5 1/2 -foot-long snake into her home along with another snake in recent days.

They joined a growing assemblage of legless reptiles. The woman possessed nine other snakes, presumably also rescues, but they weren’t loose and weren’t attacking people at the moment, she told the dispatcher.

What was unclear is where the woman’s rescue plan went so badly awry.

Now, she said, she was on the ground, with an unyielding boa constrictor wrapped around her body.

“Oh, please. I have a boa constrictor stuck to my — my face,” she told the dispatcher.

The dispatcher seemed incredulous: “Ma’am, you have a what?”

“A boa constrictor,” the woman confirmed.

The dispatcher notified paramedics, then tried to figure out more about the woman’s predicament, which was clearly petrifying her.

“Please hurry,” she screamed. “He has a hold of my nose.”

The snake wasn’t venomous, the woman said. And it wasn’t cutting off her breathing or circulation — at least not yet. But there was “blood everywhere.”

“Oh, God, hurry, please. He’s around my waist and he has my nose.”

The woman may have been in more danger than she or dispatchers thought at the time.

A 2015 study showed that boa constrictors don’t actually suffocate their prey, as The Washington Post’s Elahe Izadi reported. Their squeezing cuts off the unwitting victim’s blood flow, stopping oxygen from getting to the brain. Victims quickly lose consciousness, then die.

Near the end of the recording, she went silent for a while, but then sirens could be heard, growing louder, getting closer.

Sheffield Lake Fire Chief Tim Card told the Chronicle-Telegram what first responders found when they reached her.

“It was wrapped around her neck and biting her nose and wouldn’t let go,” Card said. “They had to cut its head off with a knife to get it to let go of her face.”

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