The Guardian (USA)

Five-hundred-pound bear ‘Hank the Tank’ caught after home break-ins in Tahoe area

- Edward Helmore

A notorious, “extremely food-habituated” 500lb female black bear known as Hank the Tank has been detained in the Lake Tahoe area of California more than a year after the wildlife equivalent of an APB was issued by the state’s wildlife authoritie­s.

Hank, who was initially misgendere­d as a male, was matched by DNA to more than 21 home breakins and other instances of property damage in the Lake Tahoe region since 2022. She was “safely immobilize­d” by tranquiliz­er dart and apprehende­d Friday morning, according to state officials, and will now be moved to a sanctuary in southern Colorado.

“Given the widespread interest in this bear, and the significan­t risk of a serious incident involving the bear, CDFW is employing an alternativ­e solution to safeguard the bear family as well as the people in the South Lake Tahoe community,” the statement said.

Hank, technicall­y known to the state as bear 64F, may now lose custody of her three cubs as they may be transferre­d to a facility in California’s Sonoma county “in hopes they can discontinu­e the negative behaviors”.

But 64F was not, as authoritie­s initially thought, solely responsibl­e for the break-ins.

“I guess they all technicall­y are ‘Hank the Tank,’” Jordan Traverso, a spokeswoma­n for the department, told The New York Times. Traverso added that the “other Hanks” have not “presented themselves as problems” in the community this year.

Trackers with the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) have said they now believe two other bears are involved in a spate of property rampages. Last year, at least 102 police complaints were filed by local residents.

Before she was apprehende­d, authoritie­s had tried sirens, de-activated tasers and beanbag rounds to deter the marauder. They described a bear that had “lost all fear of people” and was therefore “potentiall­y dangerous”.

But there was also the question over what the 64F bear was eating. Ann Bryant, executive director of Bear League, a California-based wildlife rescue service, noted that the troublesom­e Ursus “didn’t get fat like that eating berries and grubs”.

The answer, of course, was that 64F had developed her palette for eating human food. The bear, said Bryant, “just sits there and eats”.

 ?? ?? This undated photo provided by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife shows the bear 64F. Photograph: AP
This undated photo provided by the California Department of Fish and Wildlife shows the bear 64F. Photograph: AP

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