Florida Alligator Attack
Florida  Alligator Attack. Woman's leg amputated after Fla. alligator attack.  Florida wildlife officials searched Thursday for an alligator that  attacked a 90-year old woman and nearly severed her leg, which doctors  later had to amputate.
Longtime resident Margaret Webb was  walking near her home in a small southwest Florida community Wednesday  when an eight-foot long alligator lunged out of a canal and bit Webb's  leg.
Florida Fish and Wildlife  Conservation Commission spokeswoman Gabriela Ferraro said a neighbor was  driving by and saw the alligator trying to drag Webb into the water.  The man _ Dwyane Daniels, who Ferraro called "a good Samaritan _ pulled  out a gun and tried to shoot the gator.
The reptile crawled away and Daniels dialed 911. Webb was airlifted to a Naples hospital, where she is in critical condition.
Ferraro said officers initially  thought the alligator had swallowed Webb's leg, but that wasn't the  case. Her leg was "barely attached" after the attack and was later  amputated, Ferraro said.
Officers want to find and trap the alligator, she said.
"When a person is bitten, our priority is to remove the suspect alligator," she said.
Because Daniels shot at the  alligator, it's possible that it is already dead. Daniels is an airboat  operator in the Everglades and has known Webb his entire life. Residents  describe Webb as being "like a grandma" to everyone in the small  community.
About five people are bitten each year in Florida by unprovoked alligators, officials said.
The attack happened in Copeland,  a small town in Collier County with a population of 275 people that is  located in southwest Florida near the Everglades.
Source: stltoda

