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Chicago officials close park in hopes 'calm and quiet' will cause alligator 'Chance the Snapper' to resurface

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Chicago officials close park to capture gator
Armando L. Sanchez/Chicago Tribune/TNS via Getty Images
ByJulia Jacobo
July 15, 2019, 4:55 PM

Chicago officials have closed a portion of the park where a wayward alligator has been lurking in hopes of catching it.

The noise from the onlookers gathering near the Humboldt Park Lagoon may be causing the gator, nicknamed "Chance the Snapper," to remain underwater, Kelley Gandurski, executive director of Chicago Animal Care and Control, said in a statement on Sunday.

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Animal control officials are hoping that "keeping the lagoon and surrounding areas as calm and quiet as possible" will help them humanely capture the gator," Gandurski said.

The Chicago Police Department, Animal Control, and other state workers set out on a search in order to confirm the animal in the lagoon, and warn the public, in Chicago, on July 9, 2019.
Nurphoto/NurPhoto via Getty Images

"It is likely that residents who have been watching from the lagoon banks and paths in the park have been influencing the animal’s behavior," she said. "We are taking these steps in an attempt to create an environment that lends to the animal’s safe capture so we can quickly re-open the entire park to activity."

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(MORE: Officials looking to trap alligator spotted in Humboldt Park Lagoon in Chicago)

Chance the Snapper, a 4 to 5-foot indigenous American alligator , was first spotted in the lagoon on July 9. The gator is believed to have been a pet that someone dropped off at the lagoon, Jenny Schlueter, a spokeswoman for Chicago Animal Care and Control, told ABC News last week.

A volunteer with the Chicago Herpetological Society who goes by "Alligator Bob" sets out in his canoe to find and document an alligator spotted in Chicago's Humboldt Park lagoon, July 9, 2019.
Nurphoto/NurPhoto via Getty Images

The City of Chicago has brought in expert Frank Robb, who owns Crocodilian Specialist Services in St. Augustine, Florida, to assist in the capture. Robb arrived in Chicago on Sunday and has assessed the park and lagoon, according to the CACC. The closure of parts of the park began Sunday night, and will continue until further notice.

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(MORE: 'I have a gigantic alligator ... in my kitchen': 11-foot gator detained after breaking into Florida home)

Just 20 alligators have been seen in Chicago since 1998, Schlueter said. It is believed that Chance is the first gator to surface in the Humboldt Park lagoon.

An alligator floats in the Humboldt Park Lagoon on July 9, 2019, in Chicago.
Armando L. Sanchez/Chicago Tribune/TNS via Getty Images

ABC News' Ella Torres contributed to this report.

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