Frank H. had complained to his neighbour about the noise several times and threatened to "blow them away," the court heard. Van Straelen had installed a video camera on his house, trained on his neighbour’s window - just in case something happened, he said. Then it did. “I was looking at the monitor. The window opened and the gun was pointing out, and it went off,” he said. “As I went to photograph him, the camera beeped and he ducked down.”
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It was too late for Knötti, his favourite green frog, who, with tragic irony, had never made any noise due to a possible genetic defect. That night he died of massive head injuries. A second frog was seriously hurt, one of his back legs blown off. Van Straelen called the police, but Frank H. told them he had been sleeping. He had apparently not reckoned on the police checking his house for weapons. They did so, and found two guns for which he had no licence.
Van Straelen said he had kept Knötti’s body in the deep freeze for several months, in case it was going to be needed as evidence in court. “Anyone could recognise the bullet entry wound,” he said. The injured frog was saved, and has been renamed Ahab after the one-legged captain in the novel Moby Dick. Van Straelen said he was “a bit disappointed” that the killing of Knötti was not discussed in court. But he was “happy the case had been made public,” he said.
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