Los Angeles Times

Victim loved her job with big cats

Dianna Hanson was ‘living her dream’ as an intern at a feline haven. She was killed by a lion in her care.

- By Kate Mather and Diana Marcum

DUNLAP, Calif. — For Dianna Hanson, getting an internship at a remote feline conservanc­y in the hills east of Fresno was the culminatio­n of a lifelong love of big cats.

As a young girl, she drew pictures of tigers and told people she wanted to be a “pet store lady” or zookeeper. After graduating from college, she moved to Kenya to work at a wildlife conservanc­y. Then on Jan. 1, the 24-year-old and her father drove from Washington to this small Fresno County town where Hanson began a six-month internship at Project Survival’s Cat Haven.

“She was living her dream,” said her older brother, Paul Hanson. “She was living her destiny as far as being able to work with those animals. That was what she wanted in life.”

Hanson was killed at the park Wednesday, when a 4year-old male lion named Cous Cous attacked her. During the attack, another volunteer tried to lure the lion away from Hanson, to no avail. Sheriff ’s deputies arrived and fatally shot the animal. By the time rescuers reached Hanson, she was mortally wounded.

A preliminar­y autopsy suggested that Hanson died quickly from a fractured neck and “some suffocatio­n,” said Fresno County Coroner David Hadden. The

neck injury appeared to come from a swipe from the lion’s paw. The body had “numerous claw marks and bite damage” elsewhere, likely inf licted after the initial swipe, Hadden said.

Authoritie­s on Thursday continued investigat­ing the circumstan­ces of the attack. Hanson and the other volunteer were alone on the roughly 100-acre park when the attack occurred about 12:30 p.m., officials said. Friends of the workers said the routine was to feed the cats about noon, typically by putting food in a small enclosure, getting out and then letting the animals inside from a larger enclosure.

Details of the incident were sparse, but Hadden said Hanson’s body was found in the larger enclosure and it was his understand­ing that the lion had just been fed in the smaller enclosure when it “escaped.”

A necropsy on the lion was scheduled to be performed Thursday, said Jan- ice Mackey, a spokeswoma­n for California Fish and Wildlife. Officials were to collect samples from the lion, looking for any underlying conditions or health issues that might have contribute­d to the attack. Results are expected in a couple of weeks.

The U.S. Department of Agricultur­e is looking into whether there might have been any violations of the federal Animal Welfare Act. Cal/OSHA investigat­ors were at the park Wednesday and requested more informatio­n about employee procedures and training, said Peter Melton, an agency spokesman.

The last 10 federal inspection­s of the park found no violations, and a spokesman for the Department of Agricultur­e said no penalties or enforcemen­t actions had ever been issued.

At a brief news conference Thursday outside the park’s gates, sanctuary founder Dale Anderson said Cat Haven had been “incident free” since 1998.

“Our whole staff...,” he said, fighting back tears. “It’s devastatin­g.”

Project Survival’s Cat Haven houses lions, tigers, cheetahs and jaguars in enclosures on a boulderstr­ewn hillside about half a mile off the main road to Kings Canyon National Park. The nonprofit sanctuary, which raises money for conservati­on causes, gets about 10,000 visitors a year. According to the organizati­on’s website, Cat Haven raises big cats and “promotes the conservati­on and preservati­on of wild cats in their native habitat by educating visitors.”

Cous Cous, who was raised at the park since he was 8 weeks old, was one of Hanson’s favorite animals, her father wrote on his Facebook page Wednesday, the Frenso Bee reported.

Hanson had shown her father the lion when he helped her move to Dunlap in January.

Family members said Hanson was more fasci- nated than frightened by the felines and wanted to dedicate her life to preventing their extinction.

“She always had this desire to work with the big cats,” Paul Hanson said. “As she got older, her desire evolved into sharing the plight of a lot of these animals and work she could do to ensure their survival.”

Hanson shared her enthusiasm about her work on her Facebook page, which was filled with pictures of cats.

Several shots showed her posing with bobcats as well as tigers and other big cats. In a photo posted last month, she’s posing with two cheetahs on a table.

“You gotta love what you’re doing!” a friend wrote.

“Can’t complain,” she replied. diana.marcum @latimes.com kate.mather@latimes.com Mather reported from Los Angeles and Marcum from Dunlap.

 ?? Paul Hanson ?? AS A CHILD, Dianna Hanson drew pictures of tigers and told people she wanted to be a zookeeper.
Paul Hanson AS A CHILD, Dianna Hanson drew pictures of tigers and told people she wanted to be a zookeeper.
 ?? Mark Crosse
Fresno Bee ?? A SHERIFF’S DEPUTY closes a gate at Project Survival’s Cat Haven. As the lion was attacking Dianna Hanson, another volunteer tried to lure the animal away, to no avail. Deputies fatally shot the lion.
Mark Crosse Fresno Bee A SHERIFF’S DEPUTY closes a gate at Project Survival’s Cat Haven. As the lion was attacking Dianna Hanson, another volunteer tried to lure the animal away, to no avail. Deputies fatally shot the lion.

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