The San Francisco Chronicle, as one
might expect, has the most detailed write-up:
San Francisco police are investigating the possibility that one of the
victims in the fatal tiger mauling on Christmas Day climbed over a
waist-high fence and then dangled a leg or other body part over the edge
of a moat that kept the big cat away from the public, sources close to the
investigation said Wednesday.
The minimal evidence found at the scene included a shoe and blood in an
area between the gate and the edge of the 25- to 30-foot-wide moat,
raising questions about what role, if any, the victims might have had in
accidentally helping the animal escape.
The three victims, all young men from San Jose, were visiting the zoo
together. They were all present just outside the tiger's grotto when the
tiger escaped, killed 17-year-old Carlos Sousa Jr. with a savage slash to
the throat, and injured the other two. The names of the survivors, who are
brothers ages 19 and 23, have not been released.
The injured victims fled, leaving a trail of blood, which police believe
the tiger followed for 300 yards up a zoo pathway. As the tiger cornered
and attacked one of the brothers, four police officers arrived, distracted
the animal and shot it dead.
[...]
Zoo director Manuel Mollinedo said it was also likely that the animal was
provoked.
"Somebody created a situation that really agitated her and gave her some
sort of a method to break out," Mollinedo said. "There is no possible way
the cat could have made it out of there in a single leap. I would surmise
that there was help.
"A couple of feet dangling over the edge could possibly have done it."
Sources said pinecones and sticks that were found in the moat might have
been thrown at the animal. Those items could not have landed in the grotto
naturally, they said.
However, police Sgt. Neville Gittens maintained that there was no reason
to think that the victims were taunting the tiger.
One wonders what Sgt. Gittens has been smoking. For that matter, one
wonders what the kids had been smoking. I probably ought to stop
calling them "victims" now -- as far as I can tell the only innocent
victim in this story is Tatania.
Additional articles in the Chron are here, [editorial] here, here [Outrage at City Hall], and here. The opening quote in the latter article just about sums it up:
"She was everything that a tiger is supposed to be," said big-cat expert
Ronald Tilson. "She was essentially shot and killed for being a tiger."
It also recounts an alleged incident in 1997 where the tiger leaped across
the moat and got a paw onto the dirt on the other side before slipping
off. Not verified, at this point, but a leg over the side could have been
all the help she needed.
More news: LA Times, BBC, Times Online, Seattle Times, Star-Telegram [has map], NY Times [points out that New Yorkers are in much more danger from
neighbors with exotic pets]:
While tigers kept in zoos are typically well secured, there are other
settings in which the animals have been a menace, or worse. In October
2003, Roy Horn of the magic and tiger-training team of Siegfried and Roy
was mauled by a 400-pound white tiger during a show in Las Vegas. Mr. Horn
had worked with the tiger for years, but is still undergoing
rehabilitation and walks with a cane.
Just a day after the attack on Mr. Horn, New Yorkers had their own walk on
the wild side when a 400-pound Bengal tiger and a five-foot-long caiman
were discovered in an apartment in Harlem.
The police were alerted after the owner of the apartment, Antoine Yates,
called to say he had been bitten by a pit bull. When they arrived,
officers talked to neighbors who complained about large amounts of urine
and a strong smell coming from the apartment.
To subdue the tiger, a police sniper rappelled down the side of the
building and, as the tiger roared in the background, fired tranquilizer
darts through an open fifth-floor window.
Keeping tigers in such confined spaces might be rare, and even cruel, but
plenty of Americans feel comfortable keeping these animals in their
backyards. Several years ago, there were more tigers in private hands in
Texas than in all the nation's accredited zoos, according to Palmer
Krantz III, the chairman of the board at the Association of Zoos and
Aquariums.
Stupid primates, indeed.