Dereck Dunn has been arrested on a child abuse charge.
A Florida man has been charged with abuse after he allegedly beat an 8-year-old boy and threatened to feed the child to alligators in a nearby pond.
Dereck Dunn, 28, is accused of slapping the boy in the face, hitting him in the buttocks with a belt and pushing his head into the carpet so that, the boy told police, "he could not move and was unable to breath."
The boy also told authorities that Dunn took him behind the house on the Palm Coast, not far from Daytona Beach, and, at some point, told the boy he was going to feed him to the alligators in the water.
"In Florida, it's not against the law to spank your children, but it certainly is against the law to abuse them," Laura Williams, a spokeswoman for the Flagler County Sheriff's Office, told The Washington Post. "We value our children and we take child abuse allegations very seriously."
Dunn is not the boy's father, though it is unclear how he is related to the boy; police said they could not speak about their relationship.
Some news reports stated that Dunn has other children with the boy's mother.
Police said the incident occurred Monday while the boy's mother was running errands.
A Flagler County Sheriff's deputy wrote in his report that he noticed the boy's face was red and that "the impression left behind was similar to marks left behind by fingers."
"I saw loop marks on his right arm and left hamstring area," he wrote in the report.
Deputies said a belt discovered in the home appeared to match the injuries on his leg.
Child protective services officials examined the boy and found signs of physical abuse, including injuries to the area around his right eye and marks on his arms, legs and buttocks, authorities said.
Dunn denied the allegations, telling deputies that he had not hit the boy or held his head to the ground. However, Williams said that after interviewing Dunn, authorities determined a crime had occurred.
The man admitted he took the boy out to the pond and said that, once they were out there, he picked him up and told him he was going to feed him to the alligators.
But he was just teasing the boy, Dunn told authorities.
Dunn was arrested Wednesday on a child abuse charge and is being held on a $7,500 bond, according to online booking records. He has been instructed not to have any contact with the child, police said.
His attorney, William Bookhammer, could not immediately be reached for comment.
According to Florida law, child abuse is defined as "intentional infliction of physical or mental injury upon a child; an intentional act that could reasonably be expected to result in physical or mental injury to a child; or active encouragement of any person to commit an act that results or could reasonably be expected to result in physical or mental injury to a child."
Florida hosts the largest alligator population in the United States and made the creature its official state reptile in 1987, according to the National Zoo. An estimated 1.3 million to 2 million gators live across all 67 counties in Florida, the Orlando Sentinel reported in 2013, and inhabit fresh water marshes, swamps, rivers and lakes.
Nationally, the American alligator population "reached all-time lows in the 1950s, primarily due to market-hunting and habitat loss," according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. But in 1987, the alligator - a member of the crocodile family - "was pronounced fully recovered, making it one of the first endangered species success stories," according to the government.
According to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, the state averages about five unprovoked alligator bites per year. Since 1948, those "unprovoked bites" have resulted in 22 deaths in Florida.
Since 1948, 383 people in Florida have suffered alligator bites, according to Florida FWC records. Twenty-three of those attacks were fatal.
© 2016, The Washington Post
(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
Dereck Dunn, 28, is accused of slapping the boy in the face, hitting him in the buttocks with a belt and pushing his head into the carpet so that, the boy told police, "he could not move and was unable to breath."
The boy also told authorities that Dunn took him behind the house on the Palm Coast, not far from Daytona Beach, and, at some point, told the boy he was going to feed him to the alligators in the water.
"In Florida, it's not against the law to spank your children, but it certainly is against the law to abuse them," Laura Williams, a spokeswoman for the Flagler County Sheriff's Office, told The Washington Post. "We value our children and we take child abuse allegations very seriously."
Dunn is not the boy's father, though it is unclear how he is related to the boy; police said they could not speak about their relationship.
Some news reports stated that Dunn has other children with the boy's mother.
Police said the incident occurred Monday while the boy's mother was running errands.
A Flagler County Sheriff's deputy wrote in his report that he noticed the boy's face was red and that "the impression left behind was similar to marks left behind by fingers."
"I saw loop marks on his right arm and left hamstring area," he wrote in the report.
Deputies said a belt discovered in the home appeared to match the injuries on his leg.
Child protective services officials examined the boy and found signs of physical abuse, including injuries to the area around his right eye and marks on his arms, legs and buttocks, authorities said.
Dunn denied the allegations, telling deputies that he had not hit the boy or held his head to the ground. However, Williams said that after interviewing Dunn, authorities determined a crime had occurred.
The man admitted he took the boy out to the pond and said that, once they were out there, he picked him up and told him he was going to feed him to the alligators.
But he was just teasing the boy, Dunn told authorities.
Dunn was arrested Wednesday on a child abuse charge and is being held on a $7,500 bond, according to online booking records. He has been instructed not to have any contact with the child, police said.
His attorney, William Bookhammer, could not immediately be reached for comment.
According to Florida law, child abuse is defined as "intentional infliction of physical or mental injury upon a child; an intentional act that could reasonably be expected to result in physical or mental injury to a child; or active encouragement of any person to commit an act that results or could reasonably be expected to result in physical or mental injury to a child."
Florida hosts the largest alligator population in the United States and made the creature its official state reptile in 1987, according to the National Zoo. An estimated 1.3 million to 2 million gators live across all 67 counties in Florida, the Orlando Sentinel reported in 2013, and inhabit fresh water marshes, swamps, rivers and lakes.
Nationally, the American alligator population "reached all-time lows in the 1950s, primarily due to market-hunting and habitat loss," according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. But in 1987, the alligator - a member of the crocodile family - "was pronounced fully recovered, making it one of the first endangered species success stories," according to the government.
According to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, the state averages about five unprovoked alligator bites per year. Since 1948, those "unprovoked bites" have resulted in 22 deaths in Florida.
Since 1948, 383 people in Florida have suffered alligator bites, according to Florida FWC records. Twenty-three of those attacks were fatal.
© 2016, The Washington Post
(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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