‘Smell of food would really excite’ python, reptile expert tells N.B. trial
CAMPBELLTON, N.B. — Two boys killed by a python may have become prey because they had been playing with farm animals, a reptile expert testified Monday.
Bob Johnson, the now-retired former curator of reptiles and amphibians at the Toronto Zoo, told the criminal negligence trial of the python’s owner that a snake’s keen sense of smell lets it know prey is nearby.
“The smell of food would really excite,” he said. “That could be the trigger.”
Noah Barthe, 4, and his six-year-old brother Connor had spent Aug. 4, 2013, petting animals and playing at a farm owned by the father of Jean-Claude Savoie before a sleepover in Savoie’s apartment. Savoie is on trial on charges of criminal negligence causing death.


