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Crocodile-grabbing US influencer posts second video amid Queensland investigation

US influencer Mike Holston was already being investigated by Queensland authorities after he posted a video of himself grabbing a crocodile in the Lockhart River, when a second video was published.

A composite of two images of the same man holding crocodiles in rivers
US influencer Mike Holston faces fines for two videos showing him grabbing crocodiles in Queensland. Source: Instagram / therealtarzann

American influencer Mike Holston has shared another video of himself grabbing a juvenile crocodile in Australia, after Queensland authorities said it would investigate an initial video of him catching a freshwater crocodile.

Holston, who posts videos under the username therealtarzann, came under criticism after sharing a video where he chases after a young crocodile in the Lockhart River, in Far North Queensland before tackling it in shallow water.

Holston is then seen gagging the two-metre crocodile, saying it was a "what dreams are made of" to hold one, while blood dripped down his body from an apparent bite.

"This thing is sick," he says in the video.

"Ever since I was a kid I wanted to come to Australia and just look at crocodiles ... get my hands on them, see them up close.

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"There's other crocs in here and it could get pretty ugly. I've got to get out of here fast."

The Queensland Department of Environment confirmed it was investigating Holston.

Hours later, Holston posted another video, this time getting off a boat and diving into wetlands to grab a crocodile again, this time a slightly larger saltwater species. The location was also tagged at the Lockhart River.

A spokesperson for the Department told the ABC it was a "significant offence to interfere with freshwater crocodiles in Queensland, not to mention extremely dangerous".

The Department of Environment website states a fine of more than $2,500 can be imposed on someone caught interfering with a crocodile, administered on the spot.

Anyone found to be feeding or deliberately disturbing crocodiles in Queensland could be fined more than $26,000.

Holston has more than 15 million followers on Instagram and his crocodile videos have millions of views.

SBS News has contacted Holston for comment.

Earlier this year, another American influencer, Sam Jones, left the country after facing condemnation for sharing a now-deleted video of her briefly taking a baby wombat from its mother.

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2 min read

Published

By Madeleine Wedesweiler

Source: SBS News



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