[FEL-L] Tigers, Cougars, and More in the Back Yard MIAMI !

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Sat Sep 22 16:13:42 CDT 2007


 
Tigers, Cougars, and More in the Back Yard
Miami's feline fringe is a vanishing breed
By Calvin Godfrey  
Published: September 13, 2007
 
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Alan Rigerman pokes his head out the door of his little gray house in  
Northwest Miami-Dade and emits a crackle of excited greetings. He is dressed, as  
always, in a black T-shirt and "sportive" khaki shorts; his hair is pasted to  
the side of his head with a heavy dose of hair spray. 
When he steps inside, a black-and-white housecat named Oreo begins vying for  
attention — to no avail.  
The darkened living room is neat but well-worn; signs of Rigerman can be  
found on every surface. A long bookshelf packed with antique scientific texts  
occupies one wall; a terrarium containing a pair of Gila monsters rests just  
behind his head. Eighteenth-century floral prints accompany a painting of a  
bare-chested brunette that his neighbor almost threw away. The top of his large  
wooden dining table is scarred with millions of tiny loops: the result of  
40-plus years of incessant letter writing.  
At age 64, Rigerman occupies a room like a small tornado: fussing and  
vacillating with all the vim of a supercharged Zero Mostel. He enjoyed a 35-year  
career as a Miami-Dade County schoolteacher. The job was his life. In 1975 he  
married a former student; it lasted seven years. "It was a wonderful marriage," 
 he says. "And a terrific divorce." He retired in 2003.  
In a way, Rigerman offers everything that democracy is supposed to want in  
its citizens: hyperinvolvement, flawless attendance, and a kind of needling  
obsession with all things civic. He writes letters to the editor of every  
publication, small and large (including New Times), from Homestead to  Fort 
Lauderdale. He opines about handicapped parking and his prostate, animal  rights 
activists and his boa constrictors.  
Lately someone has been hurtling jars of excrement through his front window.  
Three in all. Each has coincided with the appearance of a 
letter-to-the-editor.  The last missile was housed in a cup from a nearby restaurant. "So I know 
it's  local," Rigerman says with hardly a trace of indignation. Whoever it was 
also  threw a dead cat.  
He prays for a "federal enema" to come down on the crooked Miami-Dade County  
Commission, and is titillated by the thought that iguanas have been granted 
the  same kind of amnesty as Cuban immigrants. In November 2005 he ran an 
admittedly  futile campaign against county Commissioner Natasha Seijas, just to 
"get [his]  issues out there." One of them is the private ownership of big cats.  
Unholy yowls emanate from the rear of the house. On the way through his tidy  
kitchen, Rigerman picks up a package of raw chicken drumsticks. Oreo follows 
for  a bit and then skedaddles as her master enters a concrete room where he 
stores  feeder mice, cleaning supplies, and a pair of cougars. Half of the 
20-by-30-foot  space is walled off into two chainlink cells. A corridor runs 
between the  enclosures, separating mother and son. If they were placed in the same 
cage,  they would likely kill one another.  
Rigerman begins pushing the drumsticks (six dollars' worth) through spaces in 
 the fencing. The cougars take them up in their mouths and make quick work of 
 them with a single loud snap.  
Chantell, lying on a large wooden shelf, regards Rigerman with a pair of  
beautiful, soft bronze eyes. Chaos, her son, paces furiously. His heavy shoulder  
muscles shift menacingly under his blond hide as he leaps from his shelf to 
the  floor and back. Rigerman, feeling brave, places an air horn in his pocket 
"in  case of emergency" and steps into the cage. He grabs a loose section of 
wire  caging, which he holds up as a kind of shield.  
He did not always need the extra protection, he says, but he now suffers from 
 terrible spinal pain. He can't tussle with his cats these days without some  
measure of caution. He pushes open the door as Chaos thrusts his giant head  
toward the opening, butting Rigerman in the shins.  
The cat dives between his legs and begins pawing his ankles; though Chaos was 
 declawed as a cub, he has visibly powerful jabs. "He's a youngster," 
Rigerman  says, trying to steady himself. "He hasn't learned his manners yet." He 
shuffles  away from Chaos, who darts behind him and leaps up on his owner's back, 
placing  both front paws on his shoulders. Rigerman jerks upright, in agony.  
"No!" he barks, his voice echoing like an explosion off the walls. "Bad! Bad! 
 Get back!" He bops Chaos on the head; the cat slinks away. "Does he actually 
 know it's bad? I don't know, but he stops."  
The moment passes like an eternity. For Rigerman, whose arms bear several  
bite marks and long scratches, this counts as a pleasant encounter. "Look how  
good he's being," he says as the cat ecstatically runs his fur through  
Rigerman's fingers.  
Rigerman does not pretend to totally understand the animal and freely admits  
there is a chance it would maul him if he let it. It would not be a bad way 
to  die, he muses.   
Animal rights activists, alarmist neighbors, and the squeeze of increasingly  
tighter legislation have pushed Miami's cat people from the city to the 
suburbs  to the farthest edges of town.  
Over the past two decades, after a trio of child maulings (all associated  
with a single cat owner), the laws regulating the ownership of big cats got  
tougher. Beginning in 2000, Floridians applying to own lions, tigers, and  
leopards ("Class I" cats — the ones that roar) were required to own five acres  
surrounded by a bad-ass eight-foot fence. Owners of cougars, panthers, and  
clouded leopards ("Class II," or purring cats) were required to have two and a  half 
acres — and a bad-ass fence.  
Owners who bought their cats before the state involved itself in exotic pet  
ownership were grandfathered in. But the move marked the beginning of the end  
for the town's cat keepers. "The limitation on acreage will preclude such  
animals from being kept in small residential neighborhoods where zoning and  
public safety conflicts are problematic," Col. Julie Jones, director of the law  
enforcement arm of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, 
wrote  in a 2002 memo.  
This past July, partly in response to growing hysteria about giant pythons in 
 the Everglades, the state legislature voted to require all owners of 
"animals of  concern" — including venomous snakes, bears, and cats — to obtain two 
million  dollars' worth of liability insurance or a $10,000 bond. Despite the 
fact that  they had nothing to do with the python problem, venomous snake 
owners have  already shelled out. Owners of big cats will have to pony up the dough 
come  January 1.  
In 2004, Humane USA, an animal rights-oriented political action committee,  
posted on its Website a list of the names and addresses of all Floridians  
licensed "to display dangerous cats." Only 31 names are listed in Miami. One —  
Rigerman — is listed in Hialeah. There are four in Homestead.  
A half-dozen or so have moved away, lost their cats, or no longer keep them.  
Some are businesses or nonprofit "sanctuaries." Two work in zoos and don't 
own  cats as pets. Some names are redundant — owners and their businesses, 
husbands  and wives. Those who remain comprise a handful of working stiffs 
(plumbers,  schoolteachers, prison guards) and wealthy eccentrics.  
The new legislation will likely ensure that the ownership of big cats will be 
 limited to businesses, the wealthy, and the feckless — those who tend to buy 
the  animals on a whim, only to discover they can't take care of them. The 
Alan  Rigermans of South Florida — thrifty and obsessed, the kind of people 
willing to  own a pet that costs between $7 and $40 per day to feed, who are 
willing to  forgo vacations and shell out thousands of dollars to exotic 
veterinarians — are  becoming a thing of the past.  
Elaine Berman acquired a black leopard in the late Eighties. The cat lived 24 
 years, in her Kendall townhouse, and died this summer. Berman maintains her  
license, but doubts, at age 73, she'll purchase another. Ultimately she 
thinks  the limitations on cat ownership are a good thing. "They can live a long 
time,"  she cautions.  
Organizations like People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals have long  
battled the ownership of big cats. "There's not an accredited zoo in the country  
that gives [big cats] the space they need," says PETA's captive exotic 
animals  specialist, Lisa Watheny, "much less a private owner." She suggests that 
the  tighter regulations will mean a certain end for big-cat exhibitors.  
"They're a dying breed," says Lt. Pat Reynolds of the Florida Fish and  
Wildlife Commission.   
Dressed in a stained white undershirt and hiking boots, a beefy 20-year-old  
named Anthony Zitnick (a.k.a. AJ) walks through Rigerman's front door and  
crashes in a heavy chair. One of several young men Rigerman allows to handle his  
cats, Zitnick navigates the house with the sour familiarity of a teenage son. 
 His bleach-blond hair hangs down over his neck, and a thin mustache curls 
over  his upper lip. Scars run up the outside of his forearms, vestiges of 
fisticuffs  from his days at American High School, near Medley.  
"A lot of people thought it was suicidal," Zitnick says, rolling his eyes  
dramatically. "That's how smart people at my high school were — that I had to  
dig through muscle and bone to reach veins on the other side."  
He grew up around the block from Rigerman. About two years ago, following  
Hurricane Wilma, Zitnick began helping him clean up his house. Chaos was born a  
year later, and Zitnick started coming by to help rear the cub. Rigerman  
sometimes pays him eight dollars an hour, and seems happy for the company.  
Zitnick rolls his eyes as Rigerman explains all of this; the young man seems  
impatient to get Chaos out. "He's a good guy," Zitnick mutters as Rigerman 
walks  into the next room. "He just talks a lot."  
Once in the cage room, Rigerman suggests they take out Chantell. Zitnick  
rolls his eyes again. "When was the last time you did that?" he asks.  
Rigerman gives no answer. "There's no question that the best place for all  
these animals is in the wild," he says as Zitnick climbs into Chaos's cage,  
armed with only a collar and a thick chain leash. "But man is such that he has  
been keeping these kinds of animals since the Christians were fed to the 
lions."   
Zitnick's approach to the cat involves a lot of chokeholds and half nelsons.  
He stealthily subdues the rambunctious cougar. "This is where a few years of  
high school wrestling pay off," says Zitnick, who is studying massage therapy 
in  Pompano Beach. He straps the thick nylon collar around Chaos's neck and 
leads  the tremendous cat backward, out the door of the holding pen.  
The two men cut an odd figure as they drag the 200-pound carnivore across  
Rigerman's sloping yard, past grazing tortoises, toward the calm canal water.  
Boats and back-yard playgrounds line the banks. Sometimes the cat charges  
forward; Zitnick baits him with a dried coconut.  
Rigerman takes the thick chain from Zitnick and wades into the water with his 
 feline. "This is what it's all about," he says, grinning. The cat paddles  
clumsily around him, climbs onto his shoulders, and dunks him.  
Zitnick helps Chaos back onto land and begins lathering his fur with  
Johnson's baby shampoo while Rigerman bobs in the water, raving about the  harmless 
inevitability of invasive species.  
Zitnick guesses he'd someday like to own a cat — a tiger or a cougar.  
"They're not ... they're fun to ...," Zitnick pauses to think as he rubs suds  along 
Chaos's tail. "It's not an everyday house pet.... I kinda do things out of  
the ordinary."  
Eventually they tie Chaos to a stone anchor near the property line. The cat  
looks happy, at last, basking under a stubby palm tree, batting at the  
low-hanging fronds.  
"You boys have a cat down there?" asks Rigerman's neighbor Shelly Girling  
from inside her house. A pleasant-looking woman with quaffed red hair and a  
bright floral-print dress wanders to the edge of her yard.  
Rigerman stumbles out of the water and encourages Girling to let her  
Dachshunds out. She decides against it, but leans over her fence and asks how  the 
baby is. Chaos tosses mouthfuls of sod into the air and pounces on the gray  
coconut, sinking a massive canine into it, almost as an answer.  
The scene takes on a Norman Rockwell quality. Fluffy white clouds slide  
across a deep blue Sunday sky, and Chaos begins to look more and more like a  
lovable fixture of the Rigerman household. Until it's time to return him to his  
cage.  
The cat does not want to go.  
Zitnick uses all of his might to drag Chaos back, foot by foot, into his  
enclosure. At the door of the cage, Chaos leaps up onto Zitnick's shoulders and  
opens his mouth, running his canines along the length of his arm like a puppy  
tongue. Zitnick reaches out both hands and seizes the cougar by the throat,  
lifting it off the ground. He steps a few feet into the cage and hurls it to 
the  ground. It hits the concrete floor with a resounding thud and bounds back 
up  just as Zitnick shuts the gate.  
Rigerman, seemingly unable to resist, heads into Chantell's cage. He barks  
and coos until she allows him to scratch her behind the ears. "See," he says.  
"She's not going to hurt me. If she were going to hurt me, I would yell, 
scream,  and punch the shit out of her in the face."   
By dazzling the owner of a service station with a few exotic pets, Rigerman  
convinced the man to install a second horn in the trunk of his aging Toyota  
Corolla, free of charge.  
Plodding slowly along the Dolphin Expressway on a recent hot weekday  
afternoon, his vehicle is almost as loud as he is. A baby alligator head sits on  the 
dashboard amid a pile of plastic corn snakes. Rigerman employs the gator's  
lacquered jaws as a caddy for a trio of spare eyeglasses.  
"I wear the same thing every day," Rigerman explains between bursts of his  
horns. "So I like to change my glasses as often as possible."  
Rigerman has decided to pay a visit to Ann, a longtime friend and cat expert, 
 who asked that her last name not be printed for fear of animal rights 
"loonies."  Her small green townhouse in Westchester is among the oldest in Miami, 
she would  later explain, and consists of a kitchen, a living room, and two 
bedrooms: one  for her, one for her cats.  
Rigerman arrives unexpectedly and slowly works his way past the black steel  
door and into the apartment. Ann has spent about the past 20 years perfecting  
her house as a dual habitat — a cat-proof people pen. Orange short-pile 
carpet  lines the floor, and a long, pillow-plotted couch juts out from the middle 
of  the living room. All electronics, books, and cords are neatly tucked away —
  nothing extraneous or chewable is lying about. Occupying one corner of the  
living room is a large leopard-print bar surrounded by framed photographs of  
various cats: leopards, servals, and caracals.  
The back patio had been converted into a sort of outdoor play area, enclosed  
on four sides by a black chainlink fence. Beyond the fence, a small canal  
separates Ann from a row of other houses. Occasionally they enjoy a full view of 
 Ann's three cats — though they rarely go outside.  
"In wintertime they might go out and walk around for five minutes," she says. 
 "But if I close the door, they'll all three press their heads against the 
glass,  looking at me like I'm the worst person in the world."  
Rigerman sits down at the bar to await the arrival of the cats. He booms  
about Ann's feline expertise.  
Ann fusses. "They won't come out because of his loud voice," she says. "I  
told you to cut out the cologne and hair spray."  
"Do you have any idea how that makes me feel?" Rigerman asks sadly. "It makes 
 me feel terrible."  
(Rigerman promises to quiet down and spends the next hour on the phone trying 
 to renew his subscription to an exotic animal catalogue.)  
Ann rushes to the kitchen for a piece of turkey breast. She steps into her  
hallway, meat in hand, and implores her kitties to at least come say  hello.  
"You don't want to at least say hello?"  
Hiss.  
"Oh, don't hit me! You don't want to come? You want to be nasty?"  
Ann wears house slippers and a bright caftan. Her hair forms a perfect silver 
 dome; bangs fall like a sheet of ice over her forehead. She smiles warmly 
and  gestures in large sweeps of her head and arms. She walks with a slight limp 
— a  symptom, she says, of never wanting to come into this world in the first 
place.  The doctors had to yank her in with forceps, resulting in a small 
loss of motor  control on her right side.  
Ann had always wanted an exotic cat. She just never knew it was possible to  
own one. She grew up in Los Angeles and studied theoretical math at a small  
Christian college in Washington. Dancing was prohibited on campus. She left 
just  before graduating and decamped to Manhattan, where her father lived.  
She moved into an eighth-floor apartment and lived with a roommate and three  
German shepherds. One day, while walking the dogs, she came upon a Long 
Island  man walking what looked like a small leopard. Before long, she found 
herself  taking the cat, an ocelot, on the weekends while its owner partied at his 
house  in the Hamptons.  
"The ocelot just sat out on our terrace with no cage or anything," she  
recalls. "He used to play with the dogs and have a wonderful time."  
One rainy summer, while visiting friends in Miami, she got bored and went for 
 a job interview. She lied and said she planned to move here. Soon enough, 
she  did. She found herself working 60 hours a week designing computer software 
for a  variety of airlines. She remembers enjoying it. For a thrill she began 
sitting a  Coconut Grove couple's margay. "I really wanted that cat to like 
me," she  recalls. But every time Ann walked into the house, the cat would march 
to the  middle of their white carpet and relieve itself in protest of her 
arrival.  
One day, while the system was down at work, she noticed in the Miami  Herald 
an advertisement for baby cougars and other exotics. She dialed the  number.  
To her surprise, she discovered she would need a license for a big cat. To  
obtain a license, she would need 1000 hours of "husbandry" training in a  
12-month period.  
So she spent weekends volunteering at a veterinary clinic in Fort Lauderdale. 
 "The only thing I learned was how to clean large litter boxes and open cans 
of  [zoo-grade] cat food," she says.  
Finally, as she entered her late forties, Ann acquired an African serval  
named Pandora. She would take the cat for a six-month trial, she decided.  
Pandora refused to be touched — a quirk she communicated by biting.  
"She slept on top of me," Ann recalls, exasperated. "But if I woke up, I  
couldn't touch her." In order to put the cat in its cage, Ann had to devise all  
manner of clever trapping and baiting techniques, involving everything from  
stuffed animals to canvas harnesses. The 30-pound feline would wake up in the  
middle of the night and drink its entire bottle of water just to pee on her.  
Ann was hooked.  
She equipped her spare room with high shelves, huge litter boxes, and a  
serval-size ladder. From then on she continued to take care of cats: raising  
exotic kittens, finding owners for unwanted cats, and, of course, tending to her  
own flock (four, at its peak).  
Ann installed a Murphy bed in the cats' room so she could sleep surrounded by 
 the animals (a practice that ended about two years ago, when a serval named  
Tango taught the others how to leap onto her in the middle of the night).  
Ann's cats have all been servals or caracals (or combinations of the two).  
The animals look something like a cross between a cheetah and a housecat. In 
the  wild their long legs help them search for prey by leaping over the high 
savanna  grass. They have been known to jump more than 10 feet into the air to 
catch  birds midflight. In Ann's house, they have developed a taste for ground 
turkey,  air conditioning, and television.  
Ann has several brothers and sisters, but she considers her cats her family.  
"I've called them my friends," she says. "I've called them my kids. But it's  
really not the same as a normal domestic [cat] or a dog. The top of their 
list  is certainly not pleasing you."  
In 1992 Ann became ill. She couldn't go to work for two months, she says. She 
 was constantly exhausted and found herself unable to cope. After undergoing 
a  battery of tests, she was diagnosed with chronic fatigue syndrome. She 
recalls  losing her short-term memory and running a low-grade fever for three 
years.  Things are slightly better now, she says, but not by much. "If I didn't 
have my  cats," she says, "I'd be gone. They need someone to love them and feed 
them."  
Rigerman rises and heads for the cat room. He meows loudly, and Ann's cats  
stare down at him from their high perches, hissing and baring their teeth.  
"I remember once I was here and the licking started," he says, staring  
fearlessly at the canines of Ann's oldest cat, a pure caracal named Kira. "The  
licking turned to biting." The cat sank its teeth into Rigerman's arm. He sat  
calmly and waited for it to retract them. "Ann was mortified. But I told her:  
'Ann what are you upset about?'"   
Rigerman putters deep into the Redland, passing tree farms, fruit stands, and 
 barren you-pick fields. The sun hangs low on the horizon as he inches his 
way,  both horns blaring, down Krome Avenue. The rural byway gleams with the 
sinking  yellow sun; everything is made beautiful in that light. Rigerman counts 
roadside  memorial markers aloud and wonders why he and Ann never became an 
item.  
He is happy to be back in this part of town, the place where his interest in  
owning cats was sparked. When he began teaching, he made a bond with a couple 
 named Frank and Ellen Weed, who lived in a trailer out in the Glades. The 
two  bred hundreds of cougars in what's now Everglades National Park. Ultimately 
they  were shut down and kicked out after being cited ad nauseam by federal 
wildlife  inspectors eyeing their land, but not before Rigerman had brought 
class after  class out to see the Weeds and their cats.  
He recalls a visiting troop of Boy Scouts one day needling an aging Frank  
Weed with questions. "Mr. Weed," said one boy in an obnoxious voice, "why do you 
 have all these animals?" Rigerman loved Weed's response. "Because I want to 
and  I can," the old man told him.  
Whatever Rigerman owned, he brought to school. He was Mr. Rigerman,  the 
oddball ecology teacher who disdained homework and reveled in field trips.  "I 
love teaching," he says. "It's fun. Where else can I get that kind of an  
audience?"  
After giving it up, he began substitute teaching. That was cut short in 2003, 
 following a melodramatic flareup in a photography class. Several students  
accused him of disappearing into the darkroom in the middle of class and  
returning to conduct the remainder of the session in his underwear. They alleged  
that he terrorized them with a sack full of snakes and lizards, and made lewd  
and lascivious comments: mocking a girl about the length of her skirt,  
suggesting he had slept with their teacher, and telling one student she was  
"fucking beautiful" for her age.  
He thinks the accusations were drummed up by a group of pernicious girls. The 
 animals were harmless. He says his "underwear" was, in fact, a pair of 
shorts.  
Rigerman battled the charges, and in August 2005 he was reinstated to an  
eligible list of substitute teachers. "You are prohibited from bringing any  
animals to any school site at any time," wrote Maria Teresa Rojas, assistant  
superintendent.  
Rigerman heads west on SW 168th Street. A detour takes him over some nasty  
dirt roads before delivering him to a five-acre gated compound. The fence is  
impressive, rising high into the air with a cantilevered incline.  
These are where his animals will go when he dies, Rigerman guesses.  
Beyond the fence, flocks of emus graze on a large meadow. A massive bison  
idles up to a parked swamp buggy and begins scratching itself against the  
chassis.  
Set back from the mass of wildlife is a large gray house.  
Rigerman slowly rolls up a dirt road and settles at a sort of shed piled with 
 the makings of a great Tom Waits song. Tractors and huge circus cages sit 
amid a  clutter of engine parts beneath a wooden overhang adorned with cow 
skulls. A  trio of mean pythons captured from the swamps sit idly in cages.  
A broad-shouldered man with red skin and a trim black beard appears out of  
the distance. A thick, slobbery guard dog trots along at his side. The figure  
smiles and nods at Rigerman. This is his land, and his name is Frank Pajon.  
Pajon came to the States from Cuba at the age of one. At age eight, he began  
working in his father's gas stations in Elizabeth, New Jersey, and sometimes 
got  pulled out of school to work the pump during the cold winters. During his 
 formative years, Pajon dreamed of living on a kind of jungle ranch, 
surrounded  by every animal under the sun.  
In 1973, at age 13, he moved to Miami. He wanted to be a veterinarian, he  
says, but joined the Marine Corps instead. After his discharge, he worked as an  
auto mechanic at Gables Lincoln-Mercury, which happened to be next door to a  
business owned by an animal importer and drug kingpin named Mario Tabraue.  
Pajon had already taken care of a serval at that point, but Tabraue was into  
big animals. He hung out at Tabraue's business as often as possible and  
developed an eye for tigers and cougars. To Pajon, Tabraue was an animal guru —  
someone who loved and knew a lot about exotics. Pajon would not comment about  
Tabraue's legal trouble, but according to a Miami Herald article, he was  
busted in 1987 on racketeering charges (which included dismembering and burning  
the body of a federal informant). It was around that time when Pajon decided to 
 get his license to own cats.  
(Tabraue served 12 years of a 100-year sentence and has since resumed his  
import business on a compound in the Redland. He declined, through  
intermediaries, to be interviewed for this story.)  
Pajon began keeping and breeding cougars. About five years ago he bought the  
adjoining lot and cleared the land. He put up eight-foot posts and wired them 
 with electric fencing — all for the sake of lions and tigers. A year later 
he  got his Class I license and purchased a pair of six-month-old tigers.  
Pajon provides a brief tour of his menagerie as chickens skitter about his  
feet. Beyond a sliding gate, a mishmash of red deer, turkeys, peacocks, cows,  
geese, toy ponies, llamas, and a donkey roam the meadow Pajon cleared. Many 
peck  at a pile of Cuban bread loaves put out that evening.  
The place looks like a strange slice of Xanadu, a sort of rough-cut exotic  
dreamscape dotted with the occasional palm tree. Though Pajon's place is 
located  in Miami-Dade, it seems a planet away from the chintzy boardwalks, seedy  
ghettos, and cookie-cutter suburbs that define Miami in movies.  
Pajon has made himself a paradise, or at least he's working on it.  
He wanders over to a female lion named Nala. "That's Alan spelled backwards," 
 Rigerman chimes in from over Pajon's shoulder.  
"It's also the name from the Lion King," Pajon replies.  
Rigerman purchased the baby lion last summer — he maintains a Class I  
license, but only for infants — and turned it over to Pajon after three months.  
The cat's fur is matted; it looks exhausted. Pajon recently dropped close to  
$1000 treating the lion for toxoplasmosis, a parasite typically found in  
domestic cat poop. Nala is slow, Pajon says, from the medicine.  
Stray cats have been traipsing on his property and might have contaminated  
the lion's food. At the advice of county police, Pajon and his rifle keep a  
lookout for roving feral packs of the town's unwanted pets.  
Next Pajon crosses to Sinbad, a 600-pound Siberian male tiger. He's being  
held in a temporary cage, cobbled together out of a section of white tile  
flooring and chainlink fence. The Siberian (the largest cat in the world)  lumbers 
toward the fence as Pajon nears, stroking itself against the metal weave  as 
if the links were the fingers of a benevolent giant.  
Pajon walks deeper into his property, past a wolf in a circular enclosure to  
a huge oblong cage where his most precious creature is kept: Umba, a 
400-pound  female Bengal tiger. She leaps out of a plastic hot tub liner, shooting 
gallons  of water playfully toward Pajon. The cat eats roughly 15 pounds of fresh 
meat a  day and seems to melt before her master.  
"I try to sit with her for at least a half an hour a day," he says, gazing at 
 the deep orange lines that slither and slide over her massive sides.  
He has never trained her to perform, he says. "If you train them to perform,  
you can't touch them," he says. "You have to use the whip." Though he has 
spent  as much time with Umba as possible and accustomed her to walking on a 
leash,  Pajon attributes her pleasant nature to the luck of the draw.  
He ducks through the outer door and into her cage without hesitation. While  
he shovels out some unwanted bones and droppings, Pajon turns his back to 
Umba.  
"I trust her completely," he says, taking her head in his hands and placing a 
 heavy chain leash around her neck. He walks her like a big dog, muttering 
"leave  it" out of the side of his mouth as she eyes a passing chicken or a cage 
full of  yapping Dachshunds. Pajon proudly leads his tiger up onto the bed of 
his pickup  truck and back down. He wraps his arms around her neck and 
squeezes — a  tremendous, sphincter-puckering hug.  
Pajon makes a living as a corrections officer, often working double shifts in 
 the Miami-Dade jail system. He might begin at 4:30 a.m. and end at 9:00 p.m. 
On  a good day, however, he will get home at noon and spend quality time with 
his  animals.  
He has brought the tigers on Sábado Gigante and to photo shoots in an  effort 
to offset the cost of the upkeep. He and Rigerman plotted a recent event  at 
Club Space, to exhibit the tigers in cages outside to net a windfall of  
$5000, but the deal was broken when animal rights activists got hold of the  
flyers, lobbied city officials, and hounded the club owners. Rigerman offered to  
show up with his porcupine and a few snakes, free of charge. But the club turned 
 him down.  
As Pajon leads Umba back into her cage, he regards the grounds with a squint. 
 "If it was up to me," he says, "I'd get a baby elephant. Boy, if I hit the  
Lotto...."  
The sunset is casting strange light onto the animals in Pajon's back yard.  
His helpers have all headed home by now. Rigerman wheels out the front gate.  
Before darkness settles, Pajon will release a trailer full of guard dogs to 
roam  the property.  
Rigerman is happy to know Pajon is around. At his age, Rigerman says, he  
couldn't buy anything new without knowing he had a place they could go. "And  
that's Frank," he says.  
Meanwhile Rigerman is looking to purchase a baby serval. "I want it as a  
house cat," he says. "I'll neuter it, declaw it, and let it roam the house."  
What about Oreo?  
"They'll get along," he says. 



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