Officials
seeking clues to tiger attack in SF
SAN
FRANCISCO (AP) — The San Francisco Zoo was closed to visitors Wednesday as
investigators tried to determine how a Siberian tiger escaped from its
enclosure on Christmas Day and attacked three visitors, killing one of the men
and mauling two others.
Police
spent the morning searching for any possible additional victims on the zoo
grounds, but found none. They wanted to conduct a thorough sweep of the grounds
because it was unclear how long the tiger had been loose before she was killed
by officers.
“There’s
no better light than daylight,” said Sgt. Neville Gittens,
a police spokesman. “The idea was to come back and quadruple check to make sure
nobody’s out there. We just want to know.”
The
tiger, a female named Tatiana, was the same animal that ripped the flesh off a
zookeeper’s arm just before Christmas 2006. An investigation of that incident
by the California Division of Occupational Safety and Health faulted the zoo,
which beefed up the pen where big cats are kept.
The zoo
released a short statement late Wednesday morning expressing sympathy for the
three victims and saying it hoped to reopen on Thursday. Zoo director Manual Mollinedo thanked employees and police for their work in
handling the emergency.
“The
situation required that the tiger be killed. There is an ongoing police
investigation, and the zoo will also mount its own internal investigation,” the
statement read.
The three
men were attacked around closing time Tuesday on the east end of the 125-acre
zoo grounds near Ocean Beach, Gittens said. The
officers who hunted down and shot the 300-pound animal were alerted through a
911 call placed by a zoo employee.
The San
Francisco medical examiner had not been able to identify the dead man,
investigator Tim Hellman said Wednesday. The man did not have any
identification and no one had called asking about him, according to Hellman.
The two
injured men, ages 19 and 23, were upgraded to stable condition Wednesday at San
Francisco General Hospital after undergoing surgery to have their wounds
cleaned and closed, said surgeon Rochelle Dicker. They suffered deep bites and
claw cuts on their heads, necks, arms and hands.
Dicker
said they were shaken up emotionally and would remain hospitalized for the day,
but that because of their youth they would make a full recovery.
“They are
in good spirits. They look absolutely fantastic,” she said.
The zoo’s
director of animal care and conservation, Robert Jenkins, could not explain how
Tatiana escaped. The tiger’s enclosure is surrounded by a 15-foot-wide moat and
20-foot-high walls, and the big cat did not leave through an open door, he
said.
“There
was no way out through the door,” Jenkins said. “The animal appears to have climbed
or otherwise leaped out of the enclosure.”
Police,
who had been alerted by a 911 call from a zoo employee, responded to the scene
just after 5 p.m. A group of four officers came across the body of the first
victim. The first attack happened right outside the Siberian’s enclosure when
they entered the dark zoo grounds, Gittens said.
The
second victim was about 300 yards away, in front of the Terrace Cafe. The man
was sitting on the ground, blood running from gashes in his head and Tatiana
sitting next to him.
The cat
attacked the man again, Gittens said. The officers
approached the tiger with their handguns. Tatiana moved in their direction and
several of the officers fired, killing the animal.
Only then
did they see the third victim, who had also been mauled.
Although
no new visitors were let in after 5 p.m. Tuesday, the grounds had not been
scheduled to close until an hour later, and 20 to 25 people were still in the
zoo when the attacks happened, zoo officials said. Employees and visitors were
told to take shelter when zoo officials learned of the attacks.
“This is
a tragic event for San Francisco,” Fire Department spokesman Lt. Ken Smith
said. “We pride ourselves in our zoo, and we pride ourselves in tourists coming
and looking at our city.”
There were
five tigers at the zoo — three Sumatrans and two Siberians. Officials initially
worried that four tigers had escaped, but soon learned only Tatiana had
escaped, Mannina said.
On Dec.
22, 2006, Tatiana reached through the bars of her cage and grabbed a keeper,
Lori Komejan, biting and mauling one of her arms and
causing deep lacerations, according to court records. The zoo’s Lion House was
temporarily closed during an investigation.
California’s
Division of Occupational Safety and Health blamed the zoo for the assault and
imposed an $18,000 penalty. A medical claim filed against the city by Komejan was denied.
Last
February, a 140-pound jaguar named Jorge killed a zookeeper at the Denver Zoo
before being fatally shot. Zoo officials said later that the zookeeper had
violated rules by opening the door to the animal’s cage.
After
last year’s attack, the zoo added customized steel mesh over the bars, built in
a feeding shoot and increased the distance between the public and the cats.
Tatiana
arrived at the San Francisco Zoo from the Denver Zoo a few years ago, with zoo
officials hoping she would mate with a male tiger. Siberian tigers are
classified as endangered and there are more than 600 of the animals living in
captivity worldwide.
Associated
Press writers Louise Chu and Terence Chea in San
Francisco and Daisy Nguyen in Los Angeles contributed to this report.
On the
Net:
San
Francisco Zoo: http://www.sfzoo.org/