05/07/2025
Ta**us Judge .410/.45 Long C**t 🔥🔥🔥
Gator Bill Robb retired nuisance alligator trapper Mr. Robb now busies himself doing lectures, safet Mr.
Gator Bill Robb long time Alligator trapper for GFC and FWC retired in 2009. Robb now busies himself raising his own gators which he shows in his wildlife programs. He can be found at schools, libraries, company picnics and birthday parties. He also
participates in alligator and snake research which enables him to better understand and describe their behaviors.
05/07/2025
Ta**us Judge .410/.45 Long C**t 🔥🔥🔥
05/06/2025
Seems on the level...
Pierre lonica, Dante's Hell Under Mont Saint Michel
03/28/2025
Forbidden Planet
This discovery right here? It undoes everything. Everything we’ve been taught, everything we thought we knew—it’s all out the window. Deep beneath the Great Pyramid of Giza, they found eight massive, spiral-shaped cylinders dropping over 600 meters straight into the Earth. That’s not ancient architecture. That’s advanced engineering. That’s technology.
This wasn’t built by primitive tools or slave labor. This was intentional, precise, and hidden on purpose. It reaches into something older and smarter than anything we’ve been allowed to believe.
The narrative is cooked. The official story? A joke. And now they can’t run from it anymore.
I’ve said it before—they’ve been lying to us this whole time. The powers that be have always known we had other sources of energy. Free energy. Efficient. Clean. And they buried it. Because if we weren’t dependent on fossil fuels, we wouldn’t be stuck in this loop of working, paying, and barely scraping by. They needed us enslaved to the system, so they built one around oil, gas, and fake scarcity.
Nikola Tesla knew the truth. He proved we could have free energy. And what happened? He got shut down, wiped out. They say he died old, but anyone who’s been paying attention knows the pattern. Every time someone comes forward with a way to give the world real freedom—real power—they vanish, go silent, or turn up dead.
But this? This one, they can’t bury. Not this time. There’s no walking this one back.
02/20/2024
Later on then Brother...
Tribute for Charles Robb | Lawton Ritter Gray Funeral Home Share memories & support the family
05/21/2022
Educational programs all summer long. Check out EEARSS.ORG for times and locations. Hope to see yall at one of these. They will all be slightly different.
Check out the podcast while your over there too
EEARSS by Alligator Robb Environmental Education Awareness Research Support and Services, or EEARSS, is a non-profit started by Frank Robb. Mr. Robb has 24 years of experience dealing with wildlife and is looking to grow the educational programs for federal, state, city, and county government agencies and schools.
10/10/2021
https://eearss.org/2021/10/10/october-16th-and-17th/
October 16th and 17th!! EEARSS.ORG will be at the Cocoa village art and craft fair the 16th and 17th. Please come through. Say howdy and support conservation and education!!
09/14/2021
Enchanted Forest Fall Festival Tomorrow. I will be doing a program 11ish followed by Frank Robb. Education and awareness awaits you!
04/19/2019
Enchanted Forest Tomorrow Titusville!
Article out in today's...Florida Today newspaper.
It's illegal to hunt alligators outside of hunting season without a permit — but it happens
Headless, tailless alligator was found on a street in Palm Bay.
TYLER VAZQUEZ | FLORIDA TODAY
Updated 1:14 p.m. EDT June 22, 2018
Story Highlights
If you spot a gator, running zigzag won't help you, alligator experts say
It's illegal to poach, take or mutilate an alligator
Alligators can climb, run fast and have excellent vision
About 7,200 gators were hunted legally in Florida last year
TYLER VAZQUEZ, FLORIDA TODAY
They creep through the darkness, in remote, rural areas of Brevard County.
These unauthorized alligator hunters typically go unseen, with most animal remains left largely out of sight in rural areas far from the public eye.
But sometimes, a gator with its head and tail removed will be found out in the open on a city street or in a neighborhood. That's what happened late June 18, when a woman heading to Walmart about 11 p.m. noticed a carcass, missing its head and tail, in the middle of Pace Drive near Delhaven Avenue in Palm Bay.
Florida Fish and Wildlife officers are investigating, but so far, there have been no arrests.
It's illegal to poach, take or mutilate an alligator, and illegal to hunt them outside of hunting season and without a permit. Hunting season begins Aug. 15. Unauthorized alligator hunting is a third-degree felony, punishable by up to five years in prison and $5,000 in fines.
Salvaging alligator carcasses and those of other protected species in the state also requires a permit.
'Gator Bill' has seen it all
Poached gators left mutilated are typically the work of those who respect neither the rules nor the animals, said "Gator Bill" Robb, who worked with the animals for decades before retiring as a gator trapper in Brevard.
"You hear about it a few times a year," said Robb's nephew, Frank Robb, who has researched alligators for more than 20 years. "People are doing it in remote areas in darkness, and people aren't reporting it. These people are doing that to an animal that doesn't deserve it.
"There's some people that don't like the rules."
With a population of 1.3 million animals statewide, the once endangered species is now considered stable with regulated hunts seen as a way to control and maintain the state's alligators.
Alligator hunting in Florida requires a permit applied for during the summer for a hunting season that lasts from Aug. 15 to Nov. 1. For each permit — $272 for Florida residents — hunters are allowed to take two animals each from designated zones.
About 7,200 gators were hunted legally in Florida last year. Getting exact numbers on gators hunted illegally is not possible because many incidents go unreported, Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission officials said.
In Brevard last year, one person was warned for illegally killing, possessing or capturing an alligator. Six people statewide were cited, according to FWC records.
Sometimes, the act of killing a gator can be less malicious, according to Gator Bill. Wandering gators struck by cars can present a crime of opportunity for someone looking for a trophy.
The tails, Gator Bill said, have the highest meat yield on the animal.
So many gators
Frank Robb conducts research on viruses affecting alligators and has surveyed their population locally.
He's crawled through drainage pipes and canals and murky bodies of water across the county chasing after the nomadic reptiles — larger males can travel within a 10-mile radius while all gators will cross the lagoons looking for food and territory.
According to Frank Robb, the local gator population is impossible to count, with thousands of the animals spread out across the St. Johns River system, Kennedy Space Center and the county's hundreds of canals, ditches and retention ponds. The difficulty of tracking the animals makes them that more vulnerable to poaching.
Investigations
Investigating illegal alligator takes is a part of the FWC law enforcement mission, said agency spokesman Robert Klepper.
"It is a violation that our officers investigate on a regular basis," Klepper said. "The illegal take of alligators threatens to harm the population of alligators because our management efforts are in place to preserve that resource for future generations."
Frank Robb, who has dedicated his life to helping preserving and protecting Florida's wildlife, said calling law enforcement is the best way to protect alligators when poaching or something that doesn't look right is suspected.
Something that doesn't look right could be as obvious as as gator carcass in the street or as surreptitious as people scouring a pond with flashlights in the dead of night, he said.
Providing information to authorities on an illegally hunted alligator can earn a $600 reward from FWC.
Money raised from alligator hunting licenses and related permits are used for research and for law enforcement protecting the animals, according to FWC.
Contact Vazquez at 321-917-7491
or [email protected].
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