An
animal-control officer had hundreds of snakes, including two 6-foot
Burmese pythons, at his home, where he ran an illegal side business
selling them, authorities said Thursday.
There
were 850 snakes worth half a million dollars in a detached garage at
the Shirley home of Richard Parrinello, including the Burmese pythons,
which are illegal in New York state, officials said.
“There
is a reason why Burmese pythons are illegal,” said Suffolk County SPCA
Chief Roy Gross, citing the deaths of two young boys in New Brunswick,
Canada, who were killed by an African rock python while they slept last
month.
Gross said Burmese pythons can grow to 30 feet long and are “an accident waiting to happen.”
Parrinello
has worked on and off as an animal-control officer for the town of
Brookhaven since 1988, town spokesman Jack Krieger said.
Authorities
spotted the snakes during an investigation into whether Parrinello was
working while on disability leave from his town job.
During
a weeks-long undercover investigation, authorities said, investigators
caught Parrinello on camera claiming he had $500,000 in inventory –
including snakes, turtles and turtle eggs – stored in a garage he’d
converted into habitat space.
Parrinello
faces multiple charges of owning the pythons and violating town codes
by running a business at his home without a permit. He was issued two
violations by the state’s Department of Environmental Conservation.
Authorities
said Parrinello is cooperating. A man who answered the phone at a
number listed on Parrinello’s Snakeman’s Exotics website said he had no
comment.
Gross
said the pythons were headed to an animal sanctuary in Massachusetts.
It was unclear what would be done with the other snakes.
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