Goats
A herd of goats owned by Lexington resident Hale Sofia Schatz, graze through conservation land in Lexington, MA on Jun. 19, 2017. Getty Images

The people working in the Argonics office in Louisville, Colorado received a huge shock when they came to their office Monday morning, only to find its glass door completely ravaged.

They assumed it was a case of vandalism. But after checking CCTV footage, it turned out the culprit was not even human but an aggressive goat. That is correct. The video was then posted on YouTube by Argonics, which is a small polyurethane manufacturer. The video showed the unruly goat repeatedly head-butting the glass doors before finally managing to shatter it with its head. After busting through the window however, it just galloped away, escaping the shards of glass, only then to return with accomplices.

It came back to treat the other window in a similar fashion, and in the background, a herd of goats could be seen, proving it was not alone in the act. Later, the vandal shattered the other glass door, and left the scene.

The video that was uploaded Monday quickly got attention, and had around 244,825 views at the time of publishing this article.

The description of the video says: “Our employees arrived at work on Monday, July 17 to find the doors smashed but nothing taken, and security camera footage showed some surprising vandals.”

Greg Cappaert who works for the company told Daily Camera the general manager came in Monday morning to find one of the building's front glass doors had been shattered. "His instant reaction is, 'We've been robbed,'" Cappaert said. "So he called police right away, and they are taking pictures and everything.” The explanation that the video offered caught the police completely off-guard.

"At first they thought (the general manager) said ghosts did it, and they thought he was a crazy person," Cappaert said. "But then he said, 'No, it was goats. You can come watch the video. Everybody had a good chuckle over it."

What prompted the goat to act like this still remains a mystery. Cappaert said: "For like 20 minutes he sat and banged on the front door. He must have seen his reflection in the door and thought it was another goat. He was trying to beat up the whole building."

This herd of goats was reportedly never seen in the area before and is still on the loose.

However, this is not the first time a goat break-in was reported.

Last year, Rohnert Park police in California received several calls about a goat named Milly wandering around a strip mall on the city's eastern edge. The goat, Millie went into a Starbucks after wandering away from her owner. When employees tried to give Milly a banana, she walked past them and began chewing on a box. The pictures of her sniffing around the entire café went viral on social media and helped Milly find her way back to her owner.