It’s going crazy! Cute black bunny ‘terrorizes’ Iowa neighborhood – bites a nurse and 13-year-old who now needs a rabies shot
- Ramona Rustan claimed she was attacked by a rabbit outside her Iowa home
- The little black rabbit had been terrorizing her neighborhood for days
- A 13-year-old female was also bitten by the animal and received a rabies shot
Not your typical Easter bunny.
A black furry rabbit is terrorizing an Iowa neighborhood where residents report seeing the cute animal jump right at them.
While most consider rabbits some of the sweetest creatures in the world, Ramona begs Rustan to disagree.
The Perry resident recalled seeing the rabbit patrolling the neighborhood before approaching her outside.
“He jumps up and bites me,” Rustan said A-Z family as they reminisce about the gruesome encounter. ‘ I’m like, ‘Oh, my God. I just got bitten by a rabbit.”
Aside from Rustan, several other residents have been attacked, including a 13-year-old. The teen needs a rabies shot.
A black squirrel was terrorizing an Iowa neighborhood when residents reported seeing the adorable animal charging right at them
Ramona Rustan claimed she was attacked by a rabbit outside her home in Perry, Iowa
After the rabbit attacked Rustan, it jumped to her neighbors to strike again.
The neighbour, who was not identified, was shocked to find herself barricaded in her car.
“It came to her car and wouldn’t let her out,” Rustan said. “When she got out of her car, it followed her to her door.”
Rustan immediately called the police and found that the same rabbit had also bitten a teenage girl on May 5.
The animal attacked the girl around 7:30 a.m. and broke her skin, records showed. She later went to the doctors and was ordered to get a rabies shot.
Aside from Rustan, several other residents have been attacked, including a 13-year-old
The rabbit will no longer terrorize the quiet neighborhood of Rustan after a wastewater treatment plant captured and relocated it last Friday
But Rustan, who is a nurse, claimed she will not receive medical treatment for her bite because there were no signs the animal was infected.
“When it bit me, you know, I didn’t see it foaming at the mouth or anything like that,” she told the news outlet.
Meanwhile, the rabbit will no longer terrorize Rustan’s quiet neighborhood after the town was taken last Friday and moved to a wastewater treatment plant.