Lethbridge Herald

Fatal bear attack needs investigat­ion

GRIZZLY ATTACK ON WOMAN, BABY UNUSUAL: EXPERT

- Colette Derworiz THE CANADIAN PRESS

Agrizzly bear expert says fatal attacks such as the one on a woman and her baby in Yukon are unusual and it’s important to thoroughly investigat­e what happened. The Yukon Coroner’s Service said Valerie Theoret, 37, and her 10-month-old baby Adele Roesholt died Monday in the Einarson Lake area near the Northwest Territorie­s boundary.

Chris Servheen, who was a grizzly bear recovery co-ordinator with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for 35 years, said it’s an unusual attack.

“It’s most unfortunat­e, particular­ly where a woman and child were involved,” he said in an interview from Missoula, Mont. “It’s a very sad state of affairs — something that no one likes to see happen — and that’s why it’s important to understand what it was that was going on here.

“It would be valuable to try to understand why it happened, if that can be determined through a careful re-creation of the events.”

The coroner’s service said in a news release that a call came in about 3:45 p.m. Monday from a trapper, Gjermund Roesholt, who said he was charged by a grizzly bear about 100 metres from a cabin Roesholt shared with his wife and infant daughter.

He said he shot the bear dead before finding the bodies of his wife and baby just outside the cabin.

Theoret was remembered Wednesday as a dedicated teacher and mother.

She taught Grade 6 French immersion at Ecole Whitehorse Elementary, the Department of Education confirmed.

She was on maternity leave and it’s believed she had been in the area with her family for about three months.

Servheen, who has investigat­ed the last eight fatal grizzly bear attacks in the United States, said there could be a number of scenarios for the fatal attack.

“It could be a surprise encounter where perhaps they were walking around the cabin and ... surprised a bear at close range,” he said.

“It could be a case where a bear was hungry and seeking food around the cabin ... It could have tried to attack them and prey on them.”

Those theories could be sorted out with an investigat­ion that looks at the movements of the people and the bear, he suggested.

Servheen said investigat­ors should also look at the condition of the bear.

“Was he in poor shape? Was he old? Did he have bad teeth?” he said. “Those types of things can give you informatio­n about the potential motivation of the bear.”

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