Meanwhile on the opposite direction, a man was walking a huge fierce dog.Eventually
the two dogs meet, face to face. The huge fierce dog barks and snarled at the little dog.
The litter yellow dog did not bark. It just stood its ground and then it opens it mouth and
bit the legs of the huge dog and broke it. The man was shock and asked the other boy, "My gosh, what kind of a dog is that." He replied,"well before I cut short its jaw and paint it yellow, folks call it an alligator."
The police in Sydney ,Australia have put out an API,(A person of interest) on a certain Mr Croco Dil.E, suspected to be involved in the case of a missing swimmer on Friday. The suspect,6 ft and dark ,with prominent nose and bright eyes was spotted in the area, where the swimmer was last seen. Anybody seeing the suspect is advice to approach him with caution, or the interested person can turn it himself at any police station to explain his alibi. Foul play is suspected, and therefore the police would like to contact Mr Croco.Dil.E as soon as possible.
Below are the rest of the story.
AUSTRALIAN authorities said on Friday they were hunting a crocodile believed to have taken a swimmer in the country's tropical north.
The 20-year-old man disappeared while swimming in the Daly River, 150 kilometres south of Darwin city, in the early hours of the morning, police said.
'We have received information that there was a crocodile sighting in the area, so there is a likelihood the person has been subjected to a crocodile attack, but that has yet to be confirmed,' said Duty Superintendent John Emeny.
Parks and wildlife officers spent Friday combing the river for the man's body or the croc believed responsible, but found no sign of either, he said.The search would continue into the night, Supt Emeny said, with Australian Associated Press reporting that officers had been ordered to shoot any large crocodile on sight.
It would be the region's second fatal crocodile attack in a month, following the death of an 11-year-old girl in the Black Jungle Swamp, near Darwin, last month.
Briony Goodsell was taken by a saltwater crocodile while swimming with her seven-year-old sister and two friends.
Her death - which came after Jeremy Doble, 5, was killed in Queensland state's Daintree River in February after chasing his dog into the shallows - renewed debate about culling the reptiles.
The government of the Northern Territory, of which Darwin is the capital, is due to release a new draft management plan for crocodiles next week, with some calling for the introduction of a pay-per-kill hunting programme.
Local authorities have pushed for limited trophy hunting of the creatures - a proposal which was rejected in 2005, but has been revisited in the wake of the recent attacks.
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