Merchandise commemorating the raccoon that gained international fame by barging into a Virginia liquor store, smashing bottled spirits and passing out drunk in a bathroom on Black Friday has raised more than a quarter-million dollars for the local animal shelter where he slept off his bender.
The Hanover county animal protection shelter raised the charitable amount after caring for the inebriated raccoon in question and teaming up with custom apparel maker Bonfire to create and sell items seizing on the internet virality achieved by the creature.
Emblazoned with the words “Trashed Panda”, the shirts, sweatshirts, cups and stickers contain an image of a raccoon spread-eagle next to a spilled booze bottle – unmistakably evoking the compromising position the animal that burgled the Ashland ABC store on 29 November was found and photographed in.
Proceeds from the campaign anchored by those limited edition items “directly support shelter animal care and enrichment”, according to Bonfire’s website.
Figures posted by the company based in Richmond, Virginia, indicated the campaign had raised more than $254,000 as of Tuesday morning. At the time, the campaign was also within 250 sales of its goal of selling 19,000 items.
“While this raccoon gave us all a much-needed laugh, our officers handle hundreds of calls each year involving wildlife, stray animals, and emergencies requiring specialized training and equipment,” said a message from the shelter on Bonfire’s website. “Your support helps us continue providing compassionate, professional service to both animals and residents of Hanover county.”
An ABC store employee found what Bonfire’s website referred to as “our unexpected raccoon celebrity” next to a toilet the day after Thanksgiving. Shattered whisky bottles littered the path to the bathroom, and the raccoon was evidently inebriated when it was photographed for posterity’s sake.
The animal was uninjured beyond possibly grappling with hangover symptoms and regret over “poor life choices”, said officials at the shelter where the raccoon was brought to proverbially dry out.
Hanover county animal protection officer Samantha Martin more recently told the local government’s official podcast that the raccoon had at least two other break-ins on his rap sheet.
Martin told Hear in Hanover that the raccoon had previously broken into a karate studio and a department of motor vehicles office, all on the same block of businesses. She made it a point to say that the raccoon had eaten some of the DMV’s snacks, calling him “a smart little critter”.
After the raccoon sobered up from the drunken liquor store break-in, officials released him in the vicinity of that business, the karate studio and the DMV office. Martin said on the podcast that to relocate the raccoon from his familiar environs would be “a death sentence”.
“I think he’s living his best life,” Martin joked on the podcast. “And why not? Have a drink or two, especially on Black Friday.”
News of the raccoon’s liquor store banditry spread worldwide after a study recently concluded that his brethren had adapted to living in urban areas so well that they had been developing certain physical signs of domestication, including shorter snouts and smaller teeth.
Experts say raccoons have been able to successfully live alongside people because of their ability to survive on human refuse.