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A raccoon is seen in The Richard B. Russell federal building in August, 2008, in Atlanta. The evidence in his office gave the judge pause: a half-eaten apple and some very distinctive footprints.
John Spink / Atlanda Journal & Constitution


In a photo provided by Andrew and Fran Osiason, their 15-pound cockapoo named Pawlee is seen at their home in Wyckoff, N.J. The 8-month-old Pawlee surprised his family Sunday morning when he scared off a mother bear and her two cubs after they had strayed into his back yard.
Photo provided /


Published August 26, 2008 11:06 am - The evidence in his office gave the judge pause: a half-eaten apple and some very distinctive footprints. The intruder made no effort to cover his tracks across a stack of federal memos in the 14th-floor office. When the judge called in his staff and others to examine the scene, the evidence was conclusive.


Mid-Daily Items: Cracking the critter caper



The evidence in his office gave the judge pause: a half-eaten apple and some very distinctive footprints.

Federal bankruptcy Judge Paul W. Bonapfel reported the break-in last week at the Richard B. Russell Federal Building in downtown Atlanta.

The intruder made no effort to cover his tracks across a stack of federal memos in the 14th-floor office. When the judge called in his staff and others to examine the scene, the evidence was conclusive: The perpetrator was a raccoon.

In the following days, judges and staff who work in the building reported other thefts — chocolate chip cookies stolen from a 10th-floor desk, a sandwich on the 9th floor, and a packet of dried soup purloined from the 23rd floor.

A court clerk created a “wanted” poster, and Bonapfel’s staff posted a “raccoon crossing” sign on the judge’s door.

Workers from a company that specializes in catching wildlife placed a trap in the ceiling over a judge’s office and baited it with tuna.

The wait ended Monday when a judicial assistant heard a noise overhead. Two workers removed the ceiling tiles and grabbed the suspect.

Office workers named the raccoon “Russell,” in honor of the building’s namesake. The General Services Administration, which manages the building, theorizes that Russell wriggled into the heating system from outside.

“We’re going to see if we can get him turned loose on a farm somewhere,” said Robert Perkins, the building’s manager.

“We’re going to take him a long way from this building.”

— If only Goldilocks had a cockapoo.

A 15-pound cocker spaniel-poodle mix named Pawlee scared off a mother bear and her two cubs Sunday morning after they strayed into his owners’ back yard. That’s Pawlee over there on the left of the page, just below the trespassing raccoon.

Whether his bark was worse than his bite, Pawlee’s tactic worked just fine. These three bears got the hint and took off.

“We had just let him out for the morning and he ran into the yard and started barking his head off,” owner Fran Osiason said.



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