This is what was said about it by the guy who posted the picture on facebook...
Chuck Hurd Sorry I couldn’t get back to you sooner. I sent the pic to FB from my cell. This was my first chance to get on line. The picture has not been doctored, I took it myself with my phone. It was found by a 10 year old kid that I know. I met him and his family a few years ago when I did a snake show at his school. They have been friends of the family ever since. He was always a snake chaser and I worked with him and his dad refining him a little. They have other snakes and have been keeping for a while. They called me yesterday trying to figure out what they had. They were assuming it was a species they didn’t know or a hybrid. I went over to their house and ID’ed it. I would call it a pied. A few have said calico, but I will wait on the Sargent and Joliff to make that call. =) I am convinced it is a corn. There were normal corns from the same area to match it with. The head on this one matches the other corns and the patches of “normal” look like corn pattern. There are also specs of red throughout the snake…there is no red in rats from that area. I have not probed it yet, but I plan to Sunday. I will also take some HD pictures while I am there. It appears to me male and it’s a little over 2 feet long, missing the tip of its tail. Yes, I am certain its wild caught!!! I told them it was going to be worth quite a bit of money, but they have no interest in selling it. They are going to keep it and I am going to bred it out and distribute the babies. I don’t want to be a major player in corns, so I don’t plan to do anything more then prove it out with normals from the area. While they are with me, I will be keeping the locality pure. I am sure other will be producing blood reds and cream cycles with the peid affected added on. I use the term Chattanooga as a generic to describe our area. No one knows the name of the smaller surrounding towns. The snake came from a spot in northeast AL, I am not going to be more specific then that.