Swedish Wolves Kill Zookeeper Who Raised Them

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Swedish Wolves Kill Zookeeper Who Raised Them
"We do not know why the wolves attacked,' a police spokesman said."
By Everett Rosenfeld | June 18, 2012

An employee at the Kolmarden Wildlife Park in Sweden was killed Sunday morning by a pack of wolves she had helped raise.

Eight wolves reportedly attacked the woman after she entered their enclosure around 11 a.m., witnesses told the Independent. There are no reports about what precipitated the attack, but the victim entered the enclosure to “maintain contact with the wolves” — which a Kolmarden statement said she had been doing since they were pups.

The woman, who remains unidentified, reportedly followed standard zoo procedure, and notified her colleagues that she was visiting the wolves. When other Kolmarden employees could not reach her over the radio, they went to check the wolf enclosure, and discovered the victim already dead with no obvious evidence as to the origin of the attack, CNN reported.

“She was so badly hurt in the attack that she died of her injuries,” a police spokesman for the zoo’s district told Reuters. “We do not know why they attacked.”

Even after discovering the zookeeper’s body, officials had some difficulty safely recovering her remains. Newser reports that zoo staff were forced to make a human chain to move the wolves away from the body, and local papers claimed that the animals were given sedatives so that ambulance workers could enter the enclosure.

“You can’t just go into a pack of wolves. Police and ambulance staff couldn’t get close to the victim until later,” said Jan Tengeborg, emergency services coordinator in the nearby city of Norrkoping, according to the Independent.

The website for Kolmarden Wildlife Park declares that visitors can have wild encounters” at its facilities, including the opportunity to pet some of the wolves. A statement released by the zoo claims that the attack occurred ”beyond the public areas of Kolmarden.”

This is not the first attack at Kolmarden: A wolf in the public area bit a 15-year-old Swedish girl in her thigh after she panicked at the sight of it. Mats Höggren, zoological head of the park, told local news sources that when the girl acted scared, the animal’s natural reaction was to pounce.

After the most recent attack, Höggren announced that Kolmarden would be reviewing its safety policies — the zoo has not announced if it will consider putting down any of the wolves.

http://newsfeed.time.com/2012/06/18/swedish-wolves-kill-zookeeper-who-raised-them/
 
"you can take a girl out of the honky tonk but you can't take the honky tonk outta the girl. Think this applies here. You can take the animal outta the wild but you can't take the wild outta the animal.

I'd say the reason for the attack was something to do with them being wolves. I hate that for the woman and her family but I don't think they will ever learn
 
I read an article about attempts to domesticate zebras, after all the do sorta look like a horse. The attempts failed miserably. They may look like a horse but the genetic internals are much different. It wasn't a short journey for man's best friend to get to the top slot as a companion.

One takes a wild animal & seems to train & domesticate them. It only takes one slip to revert back to wild behavior, then you mean nothing to them. It just isn't possible to take these critters anywhere close to the loyalty of the average dog.
 
A "wild" animal raised by humans, with NO fear of man is a dangerous animal. Even a deer, epecially a Buck deer, will hurt you in an instant.

It's their protective instinct and nature. It has nothing to do with being evil or mean!

Shayne
 
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This is why the environmentalist mentality of raising ANYTHING that interacts with people is flawed. The nature of animals that are wild is that they are wild! Given a couple generations of being outside domestication, even little chihuahuas are dangerous! "Domesticated" dogs are dangerous if two or more get together. This lunacy of a wolf petting zoo? I know PRECISELY why she was attacked, and I was not even there! Those are some pretty stupid policemen....
 
As someone said domestic dogs will pack and become a real problem to livestock.A wild pack is really hard to do anything with.Believe it or not I have seen packs which used to be frequent around here put out what you would call sentries to watch for the approach of people.Tame hogs can go wild and do the same thing.My point is that even tame,domestic animals can revert to wild in one generation.
I had an uncle die when I was young that had a bunch of cattle on a mountain.It was up to me and my father to trap them.That was some adventure.We cut poles out of the mountain to build a corral and it took almost a year to get them to go in it.
 
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