W. Washington woman killed by lion at Calif. animal park
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DUNLAP, Calif. (AP) - Authorities are trying to determine what provoked a lion at an exotic animal park in Central California to attack and maul to death a 24-year-old intern from Washington state.
She was attacked and killed Wednesday when she entered the male African lion's enclosure at Cat Haven, about 45 miles east of Fresno, authorities said. Sheriff's deputies found her severely injured and still lying inside the enclosure with the lion nearby, said Fresno County sheriff's Lt. Bob Miller.
Another park worker couldn't lure the lion into another pen, so deputies shot and killed it to safely reach the wounded woman, but she died at the scene, he said.
Paul Hanson, a Seattle-area attorney, identified the victim as his daughter, Dianna Hanson, of the north Seattle suburb of Brier, Wash. He said he dropped her off at Cat Haven on Jan. 2 for a six-month internship.
"It was just a dream job for her," he told The Associated Press late Wednesday, adding that she hoped to parlay work at the facility into a job with a zoo later in the summer. He said she gave him a little tour and showed him the lion Cous Cous that authorities said killed her.
Hanson said his daughter had worked with big cats before and "was absolutely fearless," though she told him she would not be allowed to go in the lion cage.
Cat Haven founder and executive director Dale Anderson cried as he read a one-sentence statement about the fatal mauling at the private zoo he has operated since 1993.
Investigators were trying to determine why the intern was inside the enclosure and what might have provoked the attack, sheriff's Sgt. Greg Collins said. The facility is normally closed on Wednesdays, and only one other worker was there when the mauling happened, he said.
California Department of Fish and Wildlife spokeswoman Janice Mackey said she was unaware if any state regulations would prohibit an employee from entering an exotic animal's enclosure.
The lion, Cous Cous, a 4-year-old male, had been raised at Cat Haven since it was a cub, said Tanya Osegueda, a spokeswoman for Project Survival, the nonprofit that operates the animal park.
Since the 100-acre facility just west of Kings Canyon National Park opened two decades ago, it has housed numerous big cats, including tigers, leopards and other exotic species. It is permitted to house exotic animals by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife and is regulated as a zoo by the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Results of the last 13 USDA inspections show no violations dating back to March 2010. The most recent inspection was Feb. 4.
Despite state regulations requiring annual inspections, the California Department of Fish and Wildlife most recently inspected the facility in January 2011, when the inspector found it in "good condition" after checking animal health and features such as enclosures.
"We have to do the best we can with the resources we're provided," said department spokeswoman Jordan Traverso. "Regardless of whether it was inspected, that wouldn't have prevented this from happening."
Cat Haven's current "restricted species" permit, which expires in November, states the park was authorized to house 47 animals but had only 28. The animals must be used for scientific or educational purposes.
Actress Tippi Hedren, who founded the Shambala Preserve in Southern California, home to 53 seized or abandoned exotic pets, expressed dismay over the killing of the lion.
"It wasn't the lion's fault. It's the human's fault always," Hedren said.
Nicole Paquette, vice president of the Humane Society of the United States, said the victim of Wednesday's attack should never have been in the enclosure with the animal.
"These are big cats that are extremely dangerous, and they placed a volunteer in the actual cage with a wild animal," she said. "That should have never happened."
Officials at another big cat sanctuary, Big Cat Rescue in Tampa, Fla., told The Associated Press last year that at least 21 people, including five children, have been killed and 246 mauled by exotic cats in the United States since 1990. Over that period, 254 cats escaped and 143 were killed.
In 2007, a tiger at the San Francisco Zoo was killed by police after jumping out of its enclosure and fatally mauling a 17-year-old boy and injuring two other people.
Cat Haven has housed Bengal tigers, jaguars and leopards as well as bobcats native to the area. The facility's website says it promotes conservation and preservation of wild cats in their native habitats and offers visitors tours and educational outreach.
Anderson said Project Survival would investigate to see if the intern and the other worker on-site followed the group's protocols.
"We take every precaution to ensure the safety of our staff, animals and guests," he said in a statement.
Paul Hanson said his daughter had been fascinated by big cats from an earlier age. She was a 2011 graduate of Western Washington University in Bellingham, Wash., where she majored in biology, her father said. She graduated from Mountlake Terrace High School.
From her early childhood, "she had a thing for lions and tigers, especially tigers," he recalled.
During college, she worked at what Hanson described as "a sizeable estate" outside Bellingham that was home to exotic animals, including three tigers and a lion. There she learned to care for the cats, he said.
"She was at ease with those big cats," he said. "They liked her."
___
Associated Press writers Kathy McCarthy in Seattle, Garance Burke in San Francisco and Sue Manning in Los Angeles contributed to this report.
She was attacked and killed Wednesday when she entered the male African lion's enclosure at Cat Haven, about 45 miles east of Fresno, authorities said. Sheriff's deputies found her severely injured and still lying inside the enclosure with the lion nearby, said Fresno County sheriff's Lt. Bob Miller.
Another park worker couldn't lure the lion into another pen, so deputies shot and killed it to safely reach the wounded woman, but she died at the scene, he said.
Paul Hanson, a Seattle-area attorney, identified the victim as his daughter, Dianna Hanson, of the north Seattle suburb of Brier, Wash. He said he dropped her off at Cat Haven on Jan. 2 for a six-month internship.
"It was just a dream job for her," he told The Associated Press late Wednesday, adding that she hoped to parlay work at the facility into a job with a zoo later in the summer. He said she gave him a little tour and showed him the lion Cous Cous that authorities said killed her.
Hanson said his daughter had worked with big cats before and "was absolutely fearless," though she told him she would not be allowed to go in the lion cage.
Cat Haven founder and executive director Dale Anderson cried as he read a one-sentence statement about the fatal mauling at the private zoo he has operated since 1993.
Investigators were trying to determine why the intern was inside the enclosure and what might have provoked the attack, sheriff's Sgt. Greg Collins said. The facility is normally closed on Wednesdays, and only one other worker was there when the mauling happened, he said.
California Department of Fish and Wildlife spokeswoman Janice Mackey said she was unaware if any state regulations would prohibit an employee from entering an exotic animal's enclosure.
The lion, Cous Cous, a 4-year-old male, had been raised at Cat Haven since it was a cub, said Tanya Osegueda, a spokeswoman for Project Survival, the nonprofit that operates the animal park.
Since the 100-acre facility just west of Kings Canyon National Park opened two decades ago, it has housed numerous big cats, including tigers, leopards and other exotic species. It is permitted to house exotic animals by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife and is regulated as a zoo by the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Results of the last 13 USDA inspections show no violations dating back to March 2010. The most recent inspection was Feb. 4.
Despite state regulations requiring annual inspections, the California Department of Fish and Wildlife most recently inspected the facility in January 2011, when the inspector found it in "good condition" after checking animal health and features such as enclosures.
"We have to do the best we can with the resources we're provided," said department spokeswoman Jordan Traverso. "Regardless of whether it was inspected, that wouldn't have prevented this from happening."
Cat Haven's current "restricted species" permit, which expires in November, states the park was authorized to house 47 animals but had only 28. The animals must be used for scientific or educational purposes.
Actress Tippi Hedren, who founded the Shambala Preserve in Southern California, home to 53 seized or abandoned exotic pets, expressed dismay over the killing of the lion.
"It wasn't the lion's fault. It's the human's fault always," Hedren said.
Nicole Paquette, vice president of the Humane Society of the United States, said the victim of Wednesday's attack should never have been in the enclosure with the animal.
"These are big cats that are extremely dangerous, and they placed a volunteer in the actual cage with a wild animal," she said. "That should have never happened."
Officials at another big cat sanctuary, Big Cat Rescue in Tampa, Fla., told The Associated Press last year that at least 21 people, including five children, have been killed and 246 mauled by exotic cats in the United States since 1990. Over that period, 254 cats escaped and 143 were killed.
In 2007, a tiger at the San Francisco Zoo was killed by police after jumping out of its enclosure and fatally mauling a 17-year-old boy and injuring two other people.
Cat Haven has housed Bengal tigers, jaguars and leopards as well as bobcats native to the area. The facility's website says it promotes conservation and preservation of wild cats in their native habitats and offers visitors tours and educational outreach.
Anderson said Project Survival would investigate to see if the intern and the other worker on-site followed the group's protocols.
"We take every precaution to ensure the safety of our staff, animals and guests," he said in a statement.
Paul Hanson said his daughter had been fascinated by big cats from an earlier age. She was a 2011 graduate of Western Washington University in Bellingham, Wash., where she majored in biology, her father said. She graduated from Mountlake Terrace High School.
From her early childhood, "she had a thing for lions and tigers, especially tigers," he recalled.
During college, she worked at what Hanson described as "a sizeable estate" outside Bellingham that was home to exotic animals, including three tigers and a lion. There she learned to care for the cats, he said.
"She was at ease with those big cats," he said. "They liked her."
___
Associated Press writers Kathy McCarthy in Seattle, Garance Burke in San Francisco and Sue Manning in Los Angeles contributed to this report.
tranquilizer guns should be readily available in places like this so that they can subdue the wild animal in order to get to the stupid human. Mind you it is so sad that Dianna is gone but it was her stupidity that caused her death.
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Well, I'm sure glad that Tipi Hedren has cleared it all up for us! It's always the victim's fault. It couldn't be her fault for founding a facility that keeps wild animals in cages, could it? And how about the fact that 254 cats have escaped these kind of facilities since 1990. I think running into a big cat out in the open would be my worst nightmare. Either return them to the wild or put them down and how about some serious jail time for the jerks that smuggle these animals into the country! Way to go Tipi, now I'll have a different view of you whenever I watch "The Birds".
A wild amimal is a wild animal is a wild animal, no matter how cute and fuzzy it is. Always respect that fact!
Well I guess when they told her to go feed the lion she must have had a blonde moment. Does shooting the lion prevent her from being killed twice or something, or was it a Portland cop and the lion turned its back on him? She must not have watched the show about the guy that loved grizzly bears and wanted to live with them, wonder what ever happened to that guy......
@Richard Goezinyah The bears loved him back by tearing him to shreds!
Authorities are trying to determine what provoked the animal to attack? How about the fact that it is a wild animal and acted on instinct
This is sad all the way around. This young woman, in her dad's words, was fearless of the big cats, and that is what led to her demise. Had she maintained a healthy respect for these animals and their capabilities, they are wild animals after all, then she would probably still be alive. My condolences for the family for their senseless loss, but also for the senseless loss of this lion.
Redneck cops always shoot these animals for no reason. It's a lion! It hunts. Ridiculous story. She knew what she was getting into. Redneck cops trying to be a hero.
@ryanmang Try reading the article - the lion was shot so EMS could safely reach the injured woman and try to save her. That is a pretty good reason in my book.
That lion should have know better than to act like a real lion. Â Didn't he know he was supposed to behave like a larger stuffed animal/house cat. Â Stupid people....Give them a brain and they still don't use it.
She was NOT supposed to go inside the cage with the animals. Apparently she used the fact that only one other worker was on site to sneak into the cage. And found out WHY she should not have done that. Very sad when people do not use caution while dealing with animals, especially Large carnivores.
I am very sorry for the family's loss and the facilities loss of a lion they had raise from a cub. Plus the bad mark on their record.
There's something else going on here. I've kept cats all my life and never have I felt like my life was in danger around them, she must have provoked it.
Well duh..if you read the article and you read between the lines..she probably went up to pet it, and the next thing ya know..she's in the great big petting zoo in the sky.
This is very sad for the family. As an animal lover myself, I feel for this woman just loving them and wanting to be close with them. On the other hand, this quote kinda kills me: "Authorities are trying to determine what provoked a lion at an exotic animal park in Central California to attack and maul to death a 24-year-old intern from Washington state."
They're trying to figure out what provoked it? What do you mean? It's a wild animal. Its nature provoked it.
Fearless is one thing - cautious is another. She may have loved big cats, but the respect goes way beyond that. These are attack animals, and can shred a water buffalo apart. Don't think they won't do that to a human!
At least she died with the felines that she loved. She lived her dream.
Lions are very territorial, especially females, there have been cases in other zoos when lions have been in heat and they protect their home from intruders. There have been other cases when female trainers have been on their monthly cycle, which the lions can smell, and would be attacked. Either way sad story
@ryguy285Â Male Lion in this story
All right. With the recent world wide trend of lions mauling unsuspecting humans to death I think that it is time to put warning labels on those giant kitties to remind people lions are dangerous.
@Portlander29Â Not everything is fodder for tasteless and stupid attempts at humor. Time to grow up.
@Old29 Take your own advice.
What provoked the lion into mauling a human? They're a wild animal, and shouldn't be punished (i.e. killed) for acting as such. I feel for the family and friends who lost their loved ones, but the woman who lost her life knew the risks...
@advocatus diaboli I agree.. The story also indicated several sources, including her own father and the park's owner stated that "she was NOT allowed in the cage with the lion." Â
It's a sad story but they shouldn't have killed that lion! He couldn't have attacked her if she had not broken the rules & entered his enclosure. He did what lions do- I don't believe he should've been killed for it. :(
I'm sorry for the family's loss- and I'm just as sorry that Cous Cous was killed for being himself.Â
The lion was 4 years old, he should have known better.
@cwpholder "Another park worker couldn't lure the lion into another pen, so deputies shot and killed it to safely reach the wounded woman, but she died at the scene, he said."
They had to kill Cous Cous, because they didn't want Ms. Hanson to be lunch. At least she died for doing what she loved. RIP Ms. Hanson (and Cous Cous).
Tippi's not wrong. She shouldn't have been in there. I doubt they were insured for having interns in mingling with the lions. The lion is programmed, it cannot control the instinct that is hard wired in it's brain.Â
"Hanson said his daughter had worked with big cats before and "was absolutely fearless," though she told him she would not be allowed to go in the lion cage" Â
"From her early childhood, "she had a thing for lions and tigers, especially tigers," he recalled."
As a parent, I'm mortified. Â As a rational human being, I'm thinking that Darwinism was at work here. Â It's just too bad nobody succeeded in giving her a healthy respect (e.g.-Â wariness) of big cats during her short life.
Waiting patiently for the story about daddy suing them out of business.
I'm with Tippi Hedron. It's the human who puts themselves and ultimately the animal at risk of being killed when they disobey safety rules. I feel sorry for the family's loss but I also feel sorry that her actions got the lion killed.
I know how this lady feels. I was at my Aunts house the other day, and while sitting at the dinning room table, her cat, "sadie," walked up to me purring and brushing my leg. I bent down to give it some attention and it bit me.
@UselessOpinion Love bite?
 Authorities are trying to determine what provoked a lion at an exotic animal park in Central California to attack and maul to death a 24-year-old intern
Um, it's a lion. It's what they do.Â
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@Kitty Korny But not wife, right?
@Kitty Korny the word is 'compassion'.Â
I thought she misspelled 'competition'...I got excited and was waiting to hear the rules to start playing.
Where do you go to buy a lion or tiger? I felt bad when Mike Tyson had his tigers repoed
Hummmm.... man goes into enclosure of the King of Beast and said beast, a wild animal, kills the aforementioned man. Seems to me his carelessness got him killed and the lion. Way to go rocket scientist.
Interesting. If she was a rocket scientist, that might explain why she didn't know what to do around lions.
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@Dr. Rawdog @The Resistance It is a man eater
@The Resistance He was eating a Carls Jr burger while working
You can take the animal out of the wild, but you can't take the wild out of the animal.
Very sad... both for the loss of the worker and the beautiful lion... Â makes one wonder what provoked the attack... not placing any blame on anyone, just wondering why, since it seems that the lion had been there for a long time, and would have been accustomed to the workers... Very sad, in any case...
@margay1 You just never know with wild animals. Growing up a friends grandma had a Margay which is about the size of a very very large house cat but is a wild cat from South America. Much of the time it acted like a house cat but if something triggered its instincts it just reacted. One day we got the bright idea to take it out of the cage and play with it. Two hours later we were still trying to get it back into the cage without getting shredded up...
@FreedomRocks @margay1 ~  Um-hmm... way back in the '60s, my husband and I came very close to buying a margay (legal then in CA to have them)... We went to the lady's home to see the cat; a female about 1-1/2 years old - and absolutely GORGEOUS..!  We fell in love with her, but the lady who owned her didn't have any kids, and the margay had never been around kids... our son was just about a year old then... and we (reluctantly) decided it was just too risky...Â
I know we made the right decision... but I always feel a little "heart-tug" whenever I see a picture of a margay... Â
@margay1Â @FreedomRocks Yep they are gorgeous cats and small enough to actually be a pet.
Also learned you don't play with Margays with leather gloves on:)
It normally would not bite down when playing but one day we came in from working and had our leather gloves on and started to play with it which turned out to be a painful lesson.
It was fun when it was out of the cage watching it play though. I was sitting on a chair and all of the sudden it started stalking me. It took about two minutes to sneak up from the side and then pounced for my neck. Luckily it was playing but still reminds you their basic instincts are built in.
Bad kitty. I wonder if they chase the laser pointer dot
Maybe he got tired of being called Couscous, they should have named him Clarence.
@GladiOla Funny, I got a definite Hannibal Lector vibe out of it, but maybe not so much of a good beast name.  Sad for the worker, but I'm sure he was aware of the potential risks. Â
@Sundowner Don't you remember Clarence the Cross-Eyed Lion?
@Sundowner @GladiOla Sundowner, I just discovered that the first season of "Daktari" was released on DVD in 2011. Second season to be released later this year (that is, according to Wikipedia). You can also get the movie that served as the basis for the series.
@Sundowner Gotcha, I wasn't busy until the 70s.  : )
@GladiOla @Sundowner They finally fixed him with glasses
@GladiOla It was the 60s -- I was busy.  That's all I'm willing to admit on this forum.  =)