Can't tell when what to see and hear on social media.

Many times such cases come to the fore on the internet, seeing which even the users are left stunned.

Recently, a similar case has come to the fore from New Jersey.

According to Fox News, a man got to see an alligator in the parking area near his house, seeing which he too was stunned.

This matter is becoming increasingly viral on the Internet. 

According to the Monmouth County Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (MCSPCA), on Sunday, January 15, a man found an alligator inside a plastic storage container in a parking lot near his home in a small town in New Jersey.

When New Jersey resident Angel Rosario opened the container, she found a 3-foot-long alligator in it, after which she immediately called 911 and animal control.

The alligator was then brought to a shelter run by the Monmouth County Society for the Prevention of Animal Cruelty, where it was given a clean tank and climate-controlled living space.

Giving details of the incident, MCSPCA shared pictures of the alligator and wrote, 'Late last night an alligator was released in a plastic container in a vacant lot on Bangs Avenue.

It is being told that the alligator will soon be sent to the New Jersey Division of Fish and Wildlife.

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"It is illegal for New Jersey residents to keep alligators or caimans, which are considered potentially dangerous exotic species," Ross Licitra, executive director of the Monmouth County SPCA, said in a statement.

Not only is it a danger to the public, but these animals when kept in captivity require very specialized care, which only professionals can provide.'

Meanwhile, the Humane Law Enforcement Division of the SPCA is still seeking information on who was the owner of the three-feet long alligator and why it was left in a plastic tub like this.

Anyone found guilty of this condition of the alligator could face charges of animal cruelty. 

According to a Metro report, alligators are not native to New Jersey and cannot survive the cold winters.

According to the Smithsonian's National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute, American alligators can grow to over 11 feet in length and over 1,000 pounds.

They are usually found in freshwater and slow flowing rivers and also live in marshes and lakes.

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