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There's only one problem. Keeping wild animals as pets is illegal in Alabama. "Somebody called and reported seeing her," said Webster. Keith Gauldin, a Wildlife Biologist at the Alabama Department of Natural Resources enforced the law. He tranquilized Bambi, and they dropped her off at a sort of "deer sanctuary" fifty miles away on Mason Ferry Road. "It's not really us being the bad guys," said Gauldin. "It was their mistake when they first captured the deer as a youngster, so he shouldn't have done that in the first place, and we wouldn't have had a problem."
Little did they know, Bambi was homeward bound. Kenneth Webster was at work at the time, when his neighbours called with the unbelievable news: Bambi was back at his front gate. Neighbour Joey Hall spotted Bambi on their street. "We got a little fence in our backyard, so we put it there," said Hall. "My dad went and called him, told him we had his deer." Nearly two weeks later, the domesticated doe is back home in the Webster's yard. But her chances of staying there are slim.
"We have a regulation in place that prohibits that, that keeps the general public from keeping any species of wildlife in captivity, so, unfortunately the law is the law," said Gauldin. "You can see the scratches on her from the travel," said Bambi's owner. "I don't know what all she went through, and only God knows what all she went through to make it back, but she made it back, so why not leave her alone?" said Webster. Kenneth Webster says it's a miracle Bambi made it back alive. He worries she won't have the instincts to survive on her own. Gauldin says they plan to enforce the law and confiscate Bambi once again. This time, they may take it someplace different.