BAY COUNTY, MI — Police arrested an unusual trespasser they caught lazily sunbathing in a mid-Michigan yard.
Thankfully, the four-legged, scale-covered encroacher didn’t resist by biting the officers with its extended jaws or try spinning them in one of its species’ infamous death rolls.
The suspect, a juvenile Nile crocodile, is no longer in police custody, having been released to a local zoo.
“In my 29 years of service, I’ve never had a call like this before,” said Hampton Township Public Safety Lt. Todd Becker.
About 3:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Sept. 23, Becker and Officer Brett Whitman responded to a residence in the 800 block of West Hampton Road after a woman resident called 911 to report some kind of crocodilian in her yard, lazing under a crab apple tree.
Becker and Whittman spotted the approximately 3-foot-long reptile lying near a chain link fence.
Hampton Township Police Officer Brett Whittman stands with a juvenile Nile crocodile he and Lt. Todd Becker recovered from a woman’s yard the afternoon of Sept. 23, 2025.Cole Waterman
“You could see it plain as day, even from pretty far away,” Becker said. “It was just lying there in the nice, fresh-cut grass. I thought it was a joke at first, because it wasn’t moving or nothing.”
After looking over their shoulders to ensure they weren’t the butt of some practical joke, the officers approached the animal and realized it was alive. The homeowner gave the officers a plastic tote, with which they corralled the croc.
“Till then, it hadn’t moved, but then it started banging on the sides,” Becker said.
With the animal wrangled, the officers had to figure out what to do with it. Bay County Central Dispatch employees manned the phones and contacted staff at the Wilderness Trails Zoo, 11721 Gera Road in Saginaw County’s Birch Run Township, who were willing to accept the croc.
Jeremiah Tietz, the zoo’s director, said the animal appears to belong to the Nile crocodile, or Crocodylus niloticus, species.
“I have no idea how a private owner would even get ahold of something like this,” he said. “It’s not something you normally see with private owners, as they do get extremely large and mean.”
An adult Nile crocodile can grow to about 16 feet long, Tietz said. The species is the largest crocodilian in Africa and second largest in the world, behind only the saltwater crocodile.
Becker added no one has come forward to claim ownership of the croc. He further noted Hampton Township has an ordinance prohibiting private ownership of exotic animals such as crocs.
“We’re assuming it got too big for somebody,” Becker said. “Who knows how long ago they let it go?”
The croc was in rough shape and is now receiving care at the zoo, Tietz said. Once the croc is stabilized and healthy, Heitz plans to introduce it to another Nile croc of similar size, he said.
“Crocs are a bit more aggressive than alligators, so we may have to do protected introductions to make sure they don’t hurt each other,” he said.
Anyone with information on how the crocodile ended up in Hampton Township can call police at 989-892-0571.
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