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WOLF ATTACKS ON HUMANS (domestic incidents)
1. In the 1970s, John Harris, a Californian,
toured the nation with “tame” wolves to promote public sympathy
for preserving wolves. In July, 1975, "Rocky," one of Harris'
wolves, attacked a one-year-old girl by biting her in the face.
The girl was brought close to the wolf for a picture, an action
encouraged by Harris.
2. In Maryland, a man kept a wolf in his
basement and this animal turned and savagely bit and clawed his
two-year-old son.
3. In New York City, a wolf bit a woman as it
approached her.
4. At a zoo in Idaho, a little girl walked up
to a cage housing a wolf and reached through the bars to pet
the wolf. The wolf bit the arm. The arm had to be
amputated.
5. Mr. Edward Rucciuti, former curator of
publications for the New York Zoological Society and author of
KILLER ANIMALS, personally witnessed a 12-year-old boy savagely
attacked in the Bronx Zoo. This boy climbed a high fence in
order to pet the wolves. The wolves (male and 2 females)
immediately attacked the boy, ripping at the boy's clothing and
flesh. The boy instinctively curled up in a ball, protecting
his head, chest and abdomen. He then crawled into the moat in
front of the exhibit with the wolves chewing his back and legs.
Once the boy made it to the water, the wolves ceased their
attack. The boy crawled out of the moat and collapsed. Mr.
Rucciuti was amazed that the boy was still alive due to the
severity of the bites.
6. San Diego Zoo (1971) A 15-year-old boy
climbed the fence and tried to take a shortcut across the
exhibit. He didn't know there were wolves in the exhibit and
tried to run when he saw them. The wolves grabbed him by the
leg attempting to drag him off. The boy grabbed a tree and hung
on. Two bystanders jumped in the enclosure and attacked the
wolves with tree branches. The wolves did not attack the two
men, but continued to maul the boy. Dragging the boy and
swinging their clubs, the boy was pulled out of the enclosure.
The wolves in the enclosure were all young animals and it was
thought that if the animals were mature, the boy would have
died before being rescued.
7. A few months after the attack on the boy
(#6), a man scaled the fence and swung his arms in the exhibit
to get the attention of the wolves and got it by being bitten
severely on both arms.
8. 1973 - Another boy tried to cross the same
compound and was attacked, a security guard shot and killed one
of the wolves, and the other fled as the boy was pulled to
safety.
9. 1975 - Small zoo in Worcester,
Massachusetts, a two-year-old lad was savagely bitten on the
leg when it slipped through an enclosure opening. The boy's
mother and 2 men could not pull the boy free. The wolves did
not stop ripping the boy's leg apart until a railroad tie was
thrown in the midst of the wolves.
10. 1978 -- A wolf bit a child in Story,
Wyoming. The wolf was penned at a local veterinary clinic for
observation. During that time, the wolf escaped its pen and
killed a young calf. Wyoming law prohibits the keeping of wild
animals as pets, so the animal was shipped to Ohio, where it
had come from. The owner of the wolf went to Ohio and brought
the wolf back to Wheatland, Wyoming. It was reported the wolf
attacked and killed a child in that area shortly
thereafter.
11. September, 1981 - A two-year-old boy was
mauled to death by an 80-lb, 3 year-old female wolf in Ft.
Wayne, Michigan. The boy wandered within the chain length of
the wolf.
12. August 2, 1986 (Fergus Falls, Minnesota) -
A 17-month-old boy reached and grabbed the fencing which kept
his father's pet wolves enclosed. One wolf immediately grabbed
the boy's hand and bit it off. The mother was at the scene and
received lacerations freeing the child from the wolf.
13. July 1988 (Minnesota Zoo) - A teenage
volunteer reached through the wire fence to pet a wolf and was
bitten. The wolf was put to sleep and tested for rabies –
negative.
14. May 15, 1989 - 2-year-old Timothy Bajinski
was bitten by a wolf hybrid in his mother's Staten Island, New
York backyard. Mrs. Bajinski has been charged with keeping a
wild animal.
15. May 1989 - Lucas Wilken was bitten by two
wolf hybrids in Adams County, CO (Denver Area).
16. June 3, 1989 - Three year old Alyshia
Berczyk was attacked and killed by a wolf in Forest Lake,
Minnesota. The wolf had bitten her severely and had injured her
kidneys, liver and bit through her aorta. Alyshia was playing
in a backyard when she got too close to the chained wolf that
grabbed her dress and pulled her down, attacking her.
17. July 1, 1989 (Kenyon, Minnesota) - Peter
Lemke, age 5, attempted to pet a chained wolf and was attacked.
He lost 12 inches of his intestine and colon, suffered a tear
in his stomach, and bite wounds on his arms, legs, buttocks and
neck. While being life-flighted to the hospital, Pete arrested
3 times but was saved by medical personnel. The Lemkes have
incurred over $200,000 in hospital bills. Pete has a colostomy
bag, but doctors are hopeful they can re-attach his colon and
get it to function normally in later surgeries.
18. September 3, 1989 - A wolf and a dog
entered a corral belonging to Leona Geppfart of Caldwell, ID
and attacked a 6-month-old 400-pound Hereford calf. Geppfart
attempted to scare the animals away and they turned on her and
she retreated to her house. A short time later, a law
enforcement officer arrived and as he approached the corral,
the wolf lunged at him. The officer stopped the animal with his
shotgun.
NOTE: This list of wolf attacks is by no means
exhaustive. They are simply listed to show that attacks have
occurred both in the wild and other settings.
About the Author: T. R. Mader is Research
Director of Abundant Wildlife Society of North America, an
independent research organization. Mader has researched wolf
history for more than 15 years and has traveled over 30,000
miles conducting research and interviews on environmental
issues.
For more information, contact:
ABUNDANT WILDLIFE SOCIETY OF NORTH AMERICA P.
O. Box 2 Beresford, SD 57004
That was interesting information concerning wolf attacks.
Man-In-A-Hurry staff always had certain killer
dogs on their danger radar list in suburbia America but we
never considered wolves, coyotes or mountain lions as a danger
to us. We do now in a big way. The scary part is wolves
silently attack out of nowhere. One second everything is okay
and the next second you are being attacked as lunch for the
pack.
Wolf attacks do and will happen again. Be
careful out there!
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