'She Was Coiling Around Him': Animal Lover 'Killed by His Pet Snake'
- 8 years ago
Keen snake handler Dan Brandon, 31, died of asphyxiation at his home in Church Crookham, Hampshire, on August 25, 2017, Basingstoke Coroners’ Court was told this week.
His mother, Babs, said he kept 10 snakes and 12 tarantulas in his bedroom at the family home and owned Tiny, an African rock python, since she was small enough to fit in his hand.
Coroner Andrew Bradley recorded a verdict of misadventure.
“The most likely scenario is that Tiny was engaged with Dan – I have no doubt about that,” he said.
“She was coiling around him ... there was a point at which either she takes hold of him unexpectedly or trips him up or some other mechanism."
Mr Bradley said the snake then hid, probably “because of the shock of him falling or because of his reaction”.
He added Mr Brandon was asphyxiated “as a result of contact with Tiny”, and that he “cannot see any other reason” for the death.

Mr Brandon’s parents, brother and sister were in court, and Mrs Brandon told the coroner the snake loved her son, was his “baby”, and that he never felt threatened by Tiny and was aware of how strong she was.
Pathologist Dr Adman al-Badri found a haemorrhage behind one eye, plus burst blood vessels, and congested lungs – another sign of asphyxiation.
He told the court he examined the neck muscles and “dissected them layer by layer” and that there were “no specific signs on his neck”.
Mr Bradley ruled there was no aggression from the python.

Reptile expert Professor John Cooper said he examined Tiny at the Brandons' home in November and measured her at eight feet and four inches long.
Describing Mr Brandon, who had kept snakes for 16 years, as someone who was “obviously experienced” at caring for tropical creatures, he told the court he “would have known how to unwrap a python”.
Mrs Brandon told the court on the night of her son’s death she heard a bang coming from his room, but had assumed it was a dumbbell falling or that he knocked something over.
She later discovered Mr Brandon unconscious and face down on the floor of his small bedroom that was packed full of tanks, called emergency services and could see Tiny was not in her tank.
Mrs Brandon said she later discovered the snake coiled under a cabinet, and revealed that there had previously been occasions when the snake would “strike out” if she entered the room.
Tiny was eventually put back in her tank by Mr Brandon’s friends.
Describing her son’s relationship with the reptile, she told the court he never got bitten by Tiny, that he was wary of her, and was aware of how she behaved.
In a statement issued after the conclusion of the inquest, read on behalf of the family by a detective investigating the case, it said Mr Brandon as a son, brother, uncle and best friend was “one of the funniest people you could wish to meet”.
“I cry every day and night and relive that evening all the time,” the statement written by Mrs Brandon added.
“All the family wanted was answers to our questions, and I have no idea yet whether we have that or will.”
Friend John Cottrell set up a JustGiving fundraising page in Mr Brandon’s memory which has raised more than A$870 for the World Wildlife Fund.
Source: yahoo
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