Albuquerque Journal

Did a wolf or coyote kill teacher?

Death in mysterious animal attack linked to canine DNA

- BY MARK PRICE THE CHARLOTTE OBSERVER

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — The death of North Carolina school teacher Brenda Hamilton in a mysterious animal attack last week has been linked to an unknown animal with canine DNA.

That includes the possibilit­ies of a wolf, coyote or vicious dog, says a release from the Beaufort County Sheriff’s Office.

As of Friday, the investigat­ors still had not announced a determinat­ion of what was responsibl­e for her death.

Little is publicly known about what played out Feb. 15 on Indian Run Road in Pantego.

The extent of 77-year-old Hamilton’s injuries has not been released, other than to say they were severe and she was in critical condition before dying at Vidant Pitt Hospital.

Hamilton was a high school English teacher at Pungo Christian Academy in Bellhaven.

Investigat­ors are collecting DNA from dogs in the area of the attack to determine whether one of them might have killed Hamilton as she took her morning walk.

There are red wolves in Beaufort County and plenty of coyotes, state officials told the Charlotte Observer. The county of about 50,000 people is remote and rural, located in a coastal area where the Pamlico River spills into the Pamlico Sound.

Still, if it was a coyote that attacked Hamilton, it would be the first time ever in North Carolina that the unruly coyote population has been linked to the killing of a human, said Jodie Owen, spokeswoma­n for the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission.

“In fact, there have only been two fatal attacks of coyotes in North America and both incidences involved coyotes that were heavily habituated to humans, i.e., being fed,” Owen told the Charlotte Observer.

However, there have been multiple non-fatal coyote attacks on humans in North Carolina, including two last year in Davie County involving children. In March, a 9-year-old girl was attacked on her porch..

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