Categories
News

A third fox joins the gang that’s terrorizing downtown

Early this morning, a fox bit a Charlottesville woman on her lower leg, making her the third person in two weeks to report being attacked or bitten by a potentially rabid fox.

According to city police, animal control responded to a report of a fox acting aggressively in the 1200 block of Monticello Road around 9:33am and, at that time, learned of the woman who was bitten in the 1100 block of Leonard Street earlier that morning. The officer captured the fox on Monticello and it was euthanized at the Charlottesville Albemarle SPCA. Its remains have been sent to the Virginia Department of Health for testing.

Officers captured and put down a fox “acting suspiciously” on Watson Avenue March 14. Two days later, police said tests on the animal did not show any signs of rabies. Animal control officer Casey Breeden told C-VILLE she believed this to be a different fox than the first one that bit two people in north Downtown on March 8, evaded capture at Allied Concrete on Harris Street and reportedly crawled into a storm drain.

Small animals like foxes can only live with rabies for a matter of days, according to Breeden. She and other neighbors speculate that the first fox is already dead.

City spokesperson Miriam Dickler says if you see a fox in your neighborhood, do not approach the animal. “Don’t try to capture it yourself,” she says. “And don’t try to pet it.”

Stay inside or get inside if an animal is concerning you, she adds. Keep all garbage covered and don’t feed your pets outdoors or leave their food outside.

If a suspicious animal—like the group of potentially rabid foxes recently seen downtown—is in your line of sight, Dickler says to call 911. If you are reporting a previous fox sighting, call animal control at 434-970-3280.

“Leave it to the professionals,” Dickler says.

Bonus fox fact: A group of foxes is called a skulk or a leash.

Categories
News

Another rabid fox? Reported descriptions don’t match

An aggressive and potentially rabid fox attacking residents in North Downtown has worried people for the past week. Police say a fox acting suspiciously on March 14 was captured and put down, but did not appear to be the same fox originally reported.

“We just want our neighborhood to be safe,” says Sarah Peaslee, who lives on First Street NW, across from one of the two victims who police say was bitten by the first aggressive fox.

The victim was carrying groceries from her car around 6pm March 7 when a fox approached her and bit her leg several times, according to police.

“She yelled and screamed and couldn’t get the fox off her,” Peaslee says. Eventually, a neighbor walking his dog passed by and the dog scared the fox away. The victim was taken to UVA and treated with rabies shots. Peaslee says her neighbor was finally feeling well enough to go back to work March 14.

While police are still searching for the original fox, neighbors speculate that it has died and at least one has reported seeing a fox enter a storm drain near Grove Street. Some are worried that other animals could be feeding on its body and spreading disease, according to Peaslee.

Animal control officer Casey Breeden says she can’t know if the original fox was rabid without testing, but, in her experience, small rabid animals only live about two or three days.

“He just kind of stared at me for a while and then he would fall over,” Breeden says about the behavior of the original fox. “I went down to pick something up and he charged right at me.”

The fox evaded capture, according to police. The second fox’s remains have been taken to the health department for testing.