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Hello Summer!
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- Nov 1, 2005
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At least you weren't mauled by a tiger! 
SAN FRANCISCO -- The director of the San Francisco Zoo and the city's police chief said today that they still don't know how a tiger managed to escape its enclosure on Christmas Day, mauling one person to death and seriously injuring two others. But at a late-morning news conference just outside the zoo property, zoo director Manuel Mollinedo said he would bring in outside experts to re-evaluate the safety of the outdoor enclosures for lions and tigers.
The Siberian tiger, Tatiana, was shot and killed by police officers responding to the incident Tuesday. Asked why the tiger was not put down after it attacked a zookeeper last year, Mollinedo pointed out the difference between that incident and the one on Tuesday. That incident occurred in the tigers' indoor facility during feeding time. "This incident is totally separate and apart in an open area," he said.
As for the zoo's approach in response to the mauling last year, he said, "We never considered putting the tiger down. The tiger acted as a normal tiger does." Extensive modifications were later made to that area, said Mollinedo, a former director of the Los Angeles Zoo. The zoo remained closed today, and Mollinedo said that if a decision was made to open it tomorrow, the lion and tiger areas would remain off limits.
The outdoor enclosure from which the tiger escaped features a 20-foot-wide moat and an 18-foot-wall, Mollinedo said. When a reporter mentioned suggestions that Tatiana may have exhibited warning signs, the zoo director said he had never seen the tiger in the lower area of the enclosure, near the moat, but had often seen her sunning in the upper area. "She seemed well adjusted and was not pacing," he said.
This afternoon, the San Francisco medical examiner's office identified the deceased as Carlos Sousa, 17, of San Jose. No other information was immediately available. San Francisco Police Chief Heather Fong said at the morning news conference that the first report that a tiger was loose and that possibly people had been injured came in to fire dispatch at 5:07 p.m. Tuesday, and police were dispatched a minute later. She said police found the fatally injured person outside the tiger enclosure and then found the tiger a few hundred yards away at the Terrace Cafe. She said officers saw the tiger sitting by an injured person, and then saw the tiger begin to attack that person.
The four officers present first yelled at the tiger, not wanting to shoot for fear of injuring the person. But when the tiger turned toward the officers, they fired at the animal and killed it. Fong said she did not know how many shots had been fired. Fong said officials conducted three searches of the zoo up until midnight Christmas Day, to make sure there were no other victims and no other tigers on the loose. A California Highway Patrol helicopter searched with spotlights and flares. The San Francisco Fire Department used a helicopter with thermal imaging capability, which can identify bodies on the ground. Police officers walked the grounds, searching. "We're confident there are no additional victims," she said. She also said no one had called in looking for missing people who might have been at the zoo Christmas Day.
Fong said the zoo has been declared a crime scene until it is determined whether the tiger escaped on its own or got any sort of human help. She said police were looking at all statements and evaluating physical evidence. In the mauling incident a year ago, a zookeeper was feeding Tatiana when the tiger grabbed the keeper's hands in its claws and was pulling her. A second keeper freed the one who was mauled. Horrified visitors were watching when it happened, and the almost-daily public feedings were suspended.
The zoo's director of animal care and conservation, Robert Jenkins, said he could not explain the escape. "There was no way out through the door," Jenkins said. "The animal appears to have climbed or otherwise leaped out of the enclosure."
The San Francisco medical examiner had difficulty identifying the dead man because he did not have any documents with him and no one had called about him, said Tim Hellman, an investigator with the medical examiner's office. The two injured men, ages 19 and 23, suffered deep bites and claw cuts on their heads, necks, arms and hands. They were in stable condition today at San Francisco General Hospital after undergoing surgery to have their wounds cleaned and closed, surgeon Rochelle Dicker said.
"They are in good spirits. They look absolutely fantastic," she said.