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Police probe ‘killer’ python in urban Japan

USHIKU CITY, Japan — Police in urban Japan on Monday were probing the death of a man whose body was found next to a 21-foot python.

Shoji Fujita, 66, was found dead outside his home in Ushiku city, 30 miles northeast of Tokyo, with a reticulated python sitting next to him, a local police spokesman said.

The snake was kept by his son, who operated an exotic pet store in the same city, the spokesman continued.

Fujita died after telling his wife he was going outside to check the temperature of a locked reptile compound next to the couple’s house.

When he failed to return, the woman went to check and found her recumbent husband with bite marks on his head and right arm, the spokesman said, adding that an autopsy was being carried out to determine the cause of death.

“We believe there is a high likelihood of an accident,” in which the snake got out of its container and killed Fujita, the police spokesman said.

The reticulated python, native to Southeast Asia, is a carnivore that kills its prey by constriction.

The snake’s usual diet is animals up to the size of a primate or pig, but a small number of fatal attacks on humans have been reported, with some attacks resulting in the victim being swallowed whole.