Lionel Mandrake
Member
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2011/06/08/national/a120610D36.DTL&tsp=1

UPDATE: 12-7-11
San Fransisco Chronicle said:(06-08) 12:25 PDT Hoquiam, Wash. (AP) --
Police say a man was carrying a dead weasel when he burst into an apartment and assaulted a man in Washington state.
The victim asked, "Why are you carrying a weasel?" Police said the attacker answered, "It's not a weasel, it's a marten," then punched him in the nose and fled.
The attacker was apparently looking for his girlfriend and had gone to her former boyfriend's apartment Monday where the victim was a guest.
KXRO reports he left the carcass behind.
Police later found the 33-year-old Hoquiam man arguing with his girlfriend at another location and arrested him after a fight.
He said he had found the marten dead near Hoquiam, but police don't know why he carried it with him.
A marten is a member of the weasel family.
Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2011/06/08/national/a120610D36.DTL#ixzz1OkXGnECb

UPDATE: 12-7-11
Well, I never thought there'd be an update to this story, but...
Acquittal in Hoquiam dead weasel assault
MONTESANO, Grays Harbor County — A jury acquitted a Hoquiam man who was accused of breaking into a home and throwing a dead mink at another man during a confrontation that made weasel headlines across the country.
Defense lawyer Chris Crew said Monday the Grays Harbor County jury found 33-year-old Jobie J. Watkins of Hoquiam not guilty of burglary.
Crew said witnesses provided inconsistent accounts and the "prosecution failed to prove a link to the mink."
Watkins was accused of attacking his girlfriend's ex-boyfriend on June 6 in Hoquiam.
The victim said that a man burst into his apartment. When the victim asked, "Why are you carrying a weasel?" police said the attacker said, "It's not a weasel, it's a marten," then punched him in the nose and fled.
Neither man was right. Authorities say the carcass was a mink.
The Daily World of Aberdeen reports court records say Watkins admitted finding the dead mink along the road, but never explained why he carried the carcass.