Shark dumped on Australian newspaper's doorstep



 


                           A fluorescent yellow Port Jackson shark at the Sydney Aquarium ...

AFP/File
Thu Apr 23, 12:12 PM ET
2 of 15

A fluorescent yellow Port Jackson shark at the Sydney Aquarium in 2004. A live shark was found dumped on the doorstep of a newspaper's office in a coastal town in southeast Australia, police said Thursday.

(AFP/File/Greg Wood)








                        A tourist looks up through a glass tunnel at a group of Port ...

Reuters
Thu Apr 23, 10:21 PM ET
1 of 15

A tourist looks up through a glass tunnel at a group of Port Jackson sharks resting in the Sydney Aquarium August 5, 2003.

REUTERS/David Gray







Shark dumped on Australian newspaper's doorstep

SYDNEY – Journalists have a lot to be nervous about lately: layoffs, furloughs, newspaper closures. But reporters at an Australian paper may have received the scariest threat of the day when a live shark was left on their doorstep. Police said the two-foot creature was spotted early Wednesday by a man who was leaving a McDonald's restaurant next door to the offices of The Standard in the small Victoria state town of Warrnambool.

When police arrived, the animal — believed to be a relatively harmless Port Jackson shark — was still breathing, Warrnambool police Sgt. Tom Revell said Thursday.

So officers borrowed a bucket of water from McDonald's, placed the shark inside it and drove to a nearby pier, where they released the creature back into the ocean.

But why would someone dump a shark outside the newspaper?

"We've got no idea why," Revell said.

Nor does the newspaper's chief of staff, Glen Bernoth, who learned of the bizarre incident in a middle-of-the-night phone call from a friend who'd heard about it on his police scanner.

"Naturally, I assumed it was like some sort of prank or something, but I'd been asleep for a couple hours," Bernoth said with a laugh Thursday.

There are a couple of theories on the motive: Some readers were angered by a photograph the newspaper recently ran on its front page featuring a man who caught a large reef shark. Those upset by the photo didn't believe the creature should have been caught.

Another possibility, Bernoth says, is that the offering is somehow related to the local football club — named the Sharks.

"But that's just a stab in the dark," he said. "At the moment, we're sitting tight desperately hoping something will be revealed."













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