One of the two trained hawks stolen from the limits of the stadium of Sophie during a Rams The game was restored on Sunday in Hashend Haits, almost 25 miles from the place where the car taken during the robbery was found a week ago.
A double motorized trolley with a key left in the ignition was stolen on September 28 from the stadium. Hawks – the named bubba and Alice – were placed in green containers in the back seat and disappeared with the car.
The tambourine was discovered near the seventh street in Hasinda -Haits after the householder noticed the hawk in his backyard and contacted the police department of Inglwood. Sokol Charles Kogger, who trained and owned hawks, rushed into place.
“I agreed, got there as quickly as I could, and returned the tambourine,” said Cogger NBC LOS -ANGELESThe field “Alice is still there, but it gives me hope that she will appear.”
Hawks were used at the Sofi stadium to keep other birds from the Sofi stadium during the game, ensuring the safety of fans from unpleasant air ladings, and also did not give birds from food of discarded food.
A Harris hawksAlso known both hawks and large, lanky predators, which breed in the south-west of the United States and throughout South America. They have Visual eight times better than people are known hunt together like a teamField
Mule Kawasaki Mule UTV, which housed hawks, was found abandoned on September 29 in the area of Southern Los -Andheles, about five miles from the Sophie stadium and 25 miles from Hasinda Hights.
Inglwood police published a photograph of a suspect taken by the stadium security cameras, describing him as an adult man to “wear a black jacket with a white strip on the shoulder, black pants and black shoes”.
Cogger withstands the hope that Alice will appear. Each of the hawks Cogger wears a metal strip around the leg, which identifies it as a prisoner.
“They can go for so long, do not eat and do not receive water,” he said.
Anyone who has information about Alice may contact the observation commander of the police department of Inglewood by phone (310) 412-5206. Crime Stoppers offers a reward for the safe return of the hawk.