Florida officials investigate after a big exotic bird killed his 75-year-old owner



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A sheriff in Florida is reported to have opened an investigation into the death of a large, dagger-shaped, exotic bird who attacked and killed his 75-year-old owner.

Marvin Hajos raised the cassowary, a huge, flightless bird that looks like an emu, who eventually killed him after he fell on his farm Friday near Gainesville, authorities said.

The San Diego Zoo calls the endangered cassowary, which measures up to 6 feet tall and has long claws, the most dangerous bird in the world.

The 2015 photo shows an endangered cassowary in the Daintree National Forest, Australia. (AP Photo / Wilson Ring)

The 2015 photo shows an endangered cassowary in the Daintree National Forest, Australia. (AP Photo / Wilson Ring)

Sheriff of Alachua County, Sadie Darnell, investigates the death of Hajos, according to the Gainesville Sun newspaper. He was identified Saturday.

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"The initial information indicates that it is a tragic accident for Mr. Hajos and his family," said department spokesman, Lt. Brett Rhodenizer.

He added that the cassowary who killed Hajos "remains secure on private property".

The Sun said he spoke to a farm woman who said she was Hajos' fiancée.

"He was doing what he liked," she said in a brief interview.

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Owners of cassowaries need a license to own the birds under Florida law, the newspaper reported.

To obtain a license, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission requires casowary owners that they possess "substantial experience" and that they meet specific cage requirements, said the spokesperson. Karen Parker in the newspaper.

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She added that the commission had listed cassowary as a type of wildlife that could "pose a danger to people".

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