Animal Attack Book Store - CLICK HERE
Bear kills two, injures two in British Columbia
By Associated Press, 08/17/97 LIARD RIVER, British Columbia - A mother from Texas was mauled to death by a black bear in a remote park in British Columbia as her two children watched helplessly. A man who tried to save Patti McConnell, 37, of Paris, Texas, also was killed by the bear. McConnell's 13-year-old son and a college student were mauled by the animal as well but survived. Royal Canadian Mounted Police said Raymond Kitchen, 56, of Fort Nelson, B.C., was killed while trying to save McConnell. Kitchen is believed to have been an experienced hunter who was familiar with the habits of bears. Hikers who witnessed the attack Thursday night at Liard River Hot Springs Provincial Park threw rocks and sticks to try to distract the bear without avail. Authorities said McConnell had been walking through the brush between hot springs with her son, Kelly, and daughter, Kristen, 7, when the attack occurred. The bear was shot and killed by a tourist who rushed to get a weapon. The park was evacuated and will remain closed while provincial officials and police investigate. Kelly McConnell and a 20-year-old Calgary man suffered non-life-threatening injuries and were airlifted to Fort Nelson, 125 miles southwest of the park near the British Columbia-Yukon border. Kelly was later transferred to B.C. Children's Hospital in Vancouver. The Calgary man, one of several university students conducting research in the park, suffered serious leg injuries and was transferred to a hospital in his hometown Friday. Police would not released his name at his request. The dead woman's mother, Jan Reed, said her daughter was planning to settle in Anchorage, Alaska, and was traveling with her children on a meandering route from Paris through the United States and Canada. Provincial officials said it was the first fatal bear attack in British Columbia this year. Six people were injured and one person was killed by bears in the province last year, while there were 11 injuries and two deaths in 1995. The chances of being attacked by a black bear remain extremely rare, said Matt Austin, a specialist in large carnivores with the provincial Environment Ministry. This story ran on page A15 of the Boston Globe on 08/17/97.
|
Back to table of Contents of the
Animal Attack File