Lowe's customer bitten by rattlesnake
06:04 PM CDT on Wednesday, April 14, 2004
By BRIAN ANDERSON / DallasNews.com
The story has all the makings of a classic urban legend, but paramedics say there was nothing fake about the snake bite suffered by a Lowes shopper in Broken Arrow, Okla., on Sunday.
He had a definite bite mark two puncture wounds on the left outer hand, said Dustin Lunow, a firefighter/paramedic for the Broken Arrow Fire Department. It was legitimate as legitimate can be.
Police and paramedics were dispatched to the Lowes Home Improvement store at 1:24 p.m. Sunday after receiving reports that a man had been bitten by a rattlesnake. The victim, identified only as a Broken Arrow man in his mid-30s, told authorities he was perusing the stores selection of birch trees when he felt what he thought was a thorn prick to his hand.
He pulled it out and the snake was still dangling from his hand, Lunow said, adding that other shoppers stepped in and beat the 18-inch-long snake to death. He said the snakes rattles were still moving when he arrived on the scene.
The victim was transported to a Tulsa hospital for treatment. The dead snake, coiled inside a plastic Lowes shopping bag, accompanied him in the ambulance.
Jennifer Smith, a Lowes company spokeswoman in Mooresville, N.C., said the snake was later identified as an eastern diamondback rattlesnake.
We understand this type of snake isnt native to Oklahoma, Smith said, explaining that the snake may have been shipped along with the trees from a vendor in Tennessee.
Sundays incident bore striking similarities to an October incident reported at a Wal-Mart store in Brownwood, Texas. A 31-year-old carpenter from nearby Bangs said he was reaching to take a pair of shoes from a store shelf when he was bitten by a 16-inch-long western diamondback rattlesnake. The man said he stomped the snake to death before notifying store employees.
However, officials at Brownwood Regional Medical Center later filed a police report claiming the incident was a hoax. A store investigation came to the same conclusion.
We did close the case, and we denied the claim, said Suzanne Haney, a spokeswoman for Bentonville, Ark.-based Wal-Mart. We did a very thorough investigation on this.
Lowes officials said they were unaware of the Texas hoax and had no reason to suspect foul play in the Oklahoma incident.
It certainly is a very unusual, isolated case, Smith said.