Anything can happen at a Bass Pro Shop, especially in Alabama.
A man was arrested in Leeds, Alabama after an unprecedented evening at a Bass Pro Shop.
First, the man crashed his car into the store before making his way inside.
Them, while completely naked, he plunged into the giant aquarium inside the store.
The incident happened on Thursday night in front of shocked shoppers, one of whom took video of the ordeal.
The confusing display went down in the town just outside Birmingham, Leeds Police Chief Paul Irwin said.
The 42-year-old Alabama man did a “cannonball” leap into the aquarium before standing under a waterfall.
He soon left the water to yell at two officers, but later dove back into the aquarium, according to police.
The man eventually climbed over the side of the aquarium and fell to the concrete floor below.
After his fall is when police apprehended him, according to news site Al.com.
The man was in the water for about five minutes before officers arrived.
Now, he faces several charges, including public lewdness, disorderly conduct, and criminal mischief.
Luckily for onlookers, someone covered the man with a blanket as officers escorted him out of the store.
He was taken to a hospital for a mental evaluation and then booked into the St. Clair County Jail.
This bizarre news story out of a Bass Pro Shop comes just weeks after another weird headline from the store.
According to reports from the Miami Herald, a person in Florida entered a Bass Pro Shops, snatched a live tarpon from the store’s fish tank and left.
A video shared by the Lee County Sheriff’s Office shows a male suspect carrying a large fish through the store with a net while bystanders move out of his way to make room.
“This kid just got it outta the small pond,” the caption of the video says.
As bystanders record the event, the live fish flops in the net as he walks out.
The incident took place the evening of Dec. 20 at a Bass Pro Shops in Fort Myers, deputies said.
Authorities said that the suspect entered the store with a net and caught one of the fish swimming around in the store’s signature indoor pond.
“LCSO is attempting to locate (a) retail theft suspect,” deputies shared on Facebook.
“But not just your ‘normal’ retail theft,” the post continued. We guess you could say THIS one will o-fish-ially catch your eye.”
The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission is working with the Lee County Sheriff’s Office Animal Cruelty Task Force and detectives to find the person.