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View Full Version : Momma Bear shot dead at Fun Spot


fatlazyless
05-08-2007, 03:34 PM
Today's www.citizen.com and www.cmonitor.com both have front page lead articles about a nursing momma bear that was incorrectly shot dead by a Laconia cop. Probably, the cop regrets doing this, very very much.

So, what's a good remedy for the situation? I suggest the Laconia PD holds bake sales every Saturday from now to Christmas to pay for the baby bears' scholarship to www.clarkstradingpost.com and a 35 year life of earning bear-sized soft ice cream cones. Wild NH bears live an average seven years. From the Fun Spot to Clark's (home for orphaned Booboo bears)..... not the average NH bear's life, correctimondo Yogi!

Lin
05-08-2007, 04:24 PM
Thanks for the info. That's a sad situation. I agree with the fish and game officer though, we have the same problem in our town with a police department that is unfamiliar with horses and cows let alone wildlife. We do training with the police officers and have supplied simple catch kits in many of the cruisers. Good thing Clark's is around.

secondcurve
05-08-2007, 06:38 PM
It is sad, but I think he simply made an honest mistake. It is not easy being a police officer. Folks expect that they should never make mistakes despite all the varied situations they experience. You try standing 15-feet from an agitated bear. It can be unnerving. Imagine if the bear was wounded and he chose not to shoot and someone was injured. I think that despite the outcome this was a job well done by the officer.

Sunrise Point
05-08-2007, 07:14 PM
I agree with Second Curve. Police officers are expected to be able to deal with anything that comes up. Their first priority is to protect the public.

I doubt that the Police Academy or any subsequent training made mention of how to deal with bears.

I am sorry it happened.

Pineedles
05-08-2007, 07:24 PM
"Probably, the cop regrets doing this, very very much."

That's a supposition on your part. I assume you were being facetious, but I agree that it is difficult to be confronted with one of these beasts and not be afraid. Police officers are trained to handle the most dangerous species, mankind! It's too bad that the bear was killed, but put yourself in the officer's position. Can all of you honestly say that you wouldn't have shot?

jkjoshuatree
05-08-2007, 09:08 PM
The police department should educate the officers more thoroughly in situations like these. There are way too many "John Wayne" types out there.

I'm not saying he's one of them, but a lot of times it's, "shoot now and ask questions later."

Any mention of what's going to happen to the cubs??

SAMIAM
05-09-2007, 07:54 AM
Same thing happened in Meredith a few years ago.A bear about the size of a golden retriever strayed too close to town and naturally the police blew him away.Of course,it was "to protect the children"Seems like they are eager to shoot something.

MAXUM
05-09-2007, 09:16 AM
I think the cop did the right thing.

Plain and simple, the police don't have the training to deal with wildlife, but then again this was a matter of public saftey and a little bit of self defense. What's the police to do? Having a bear in a very public location is a problem for public saftey. If the bear seems to be exhibiting strange behavior assumptions have to be made and I'm glad he errored on the side of caution Since bears don't talk and he could not ask momma bear "gee what's wrong with you" , or "you wouldn't happen to be a momma bear protecting a couple of cubs would you?" and there was no F&G officer available to assist it's not like he had a whole lot of options. As a hunter I have come across bears in the woods, typically they are just as afraid of you as you are of them and they run away avoiding confrontation. As written- the bear's behavior was unusual and unless you get right on top of them, roll them over and spread thier legs, from a distance there is no way to easily distinguish male and female bears.

It's really easy to arm chair QB situations like this, but I for one have a whole lot of respect for law enforcement and it's a tough job. I'll give the officer involved the benefit of the doubt and say unless otherwise proven, he used his judgement and did the right thing under the circumstances.

GTO
05-09-2007, 09:27 AM
I'm familiar with the Funspot area but not the exact location the bear was shot. Did the officer have to actually take a few steps into the woods to see the bear? Or was the bear in plain view of the parking lot and could potentially be a risk to patrons.

Weirs guy
05-09-2007, 11:07 AM
As someone with kids who lives just down the hill from Funspot I say kudos to the cop (which is a very rare statement from me in the first place).

fatlazyless
05-09-2007, 12:07 PM
Apparently, there will be no police report and little info is coming out. If the officer approached to within 15 feet of the unawares bear without alerting the bear of his/her presence, that is extremey close. Could be it was 15 yards and not 15 feet? 15' is way too close for a bear approach. Bears will advise an approaching person to stay away by making loud woofing sounds. Similar to a dog but more breathy and less barky....like 'woooof woooof officer, you are in my space, please stay the H away!' Next step is for the bear to make lunges with an abrupt stop in an effort to scare the threat away. After 400 years, the NH wild bear knows to be scared of people.

So, after approaching the bear from a distance and armed with a high power hand gun, a whistle, mace, baton, and maybe a taser, the officer could have blow the whistle in the approach and most likely the momma bear would join her cubs up the large pine tree.

If you saw a bear apparently sleeping at the base of a tree, would you walk to within 15' holding a handgun or first make noise to alert it in an effort to get it to go away?

ps... decided to jump in the lake, cool off, and do a kinder rewrite. Hey, with today's 85 high, the lake was doable for 10 minutes.....a polar bear dip!

Mink Islander
05-09-2007, 12:58 PM
I hear the officer involved has been reassigned to enforce the dog prohibition at the Alton docks. Dohhhh.. Live free or die, die, die. blam blam blam...

Sorry. Having an FLL moment....

SAMIAM
05-09-2007, 02:05 PM
Where is Rattlesnakehunter when you need him......for once I agree with him!

wildwoodfam
05-09-2007, 02:17 PM
I agree with Second Curve. Police officers are expected to be able to deal with anything that comes up. Their first priority is to protect the public.

I doubt that the Police Academy or any subsequent training made mention of how to deal with bears.

I am sorry it happened.


:rolleye1: I wonder WHAT the training for New Hampshire - and any area with a large wildlife population consists of? Wouldn't it make sense that if the police officers are to be assigned to duties in areas where wildlife is located that a piece of their training would be wildlife management and public safety? Urban police are trained in specialty areas - cities with gangs have simialr training for their police - makes sense.

Its a sad situation, but one probably avoided if there was training. Also - officers are required to make split decisions - and mistakes SHOULDN'T happen in these situations. I am not a police officer, but come from a family of law enforcement professionals...none of them had luckliy ever made a mistake while on the job. Mistakes in law enforcement can cost lives, including their own.

wildwoodfam
05-09-2007, 02:23 PM
"Probably, the cop regrets doing this, very very much."

That's a supposition on your part. I assume you were being facetious, but I agree that it is difficult to be confronted with one of these beasts and not be afraid. Police officers are trained to handle the most dangerous species, mankind! It's too bad that the bear was killed, but put yourself in the officer's position. Can all of you honestly say that you wouldn't have shot?

I can say I wouldn't - and in fact did not shoot the bear. A good sized Black Bear who decided to wander about the campus of a school I taught at a few years back. I made a heck of a lot of noise, blew an airhorn and the bear took off, outta my yard and away into the woods, running from the 100 or so students who were standing there (caught on the path crossing to go to classes.)

I am not saying the police had any other choice - I was not there, nor were any of us writing about this. I do think its too bad. Given that this is New Hampshire and not downtown Boston, the appearance of a bear should not be that surprising, and yes, I'll repeat what I said earlier, police should be trained in emergency situations dealing with wildlife.

kjbathe
05-09-2007, 02:57 PM
The smart move would have been to blow the whistle, again and again.

... when Fatlazyless agrees to go on bear patrol armed with nothing else. :)

Kudos to the officer involved for taking the correct action, IMO, and for both Laconia Police and Fish & Game getting the rest of the story (http://www.citizen.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?Date=20070509&Category=CITIZEN_01&ArtNo=105090178&SectionCat=citizen0101&Template=printart) published in the Citizen's follow-up article -- too bad the Citizen didn't have all that information in the original story.

It's an unfortunate incident, but I'll side with people and police officers over the bear any day of the week.

Now I need to call my representatives about the implementation of a new mandatory wildlife training and certification program at the Police Academy (Tongue firmly in cheek and laughing at the mere thought of such a thing -- It's NH, police should have bear training... Now that's funny! :emb: )

MAXUM
05-09-2007, 04:17 PM
So, after approaching the bear from a distance and armed with a .40 cal, hi-power semi-automatic pistol, a loud whistle, mace spray, a baton, and maybe a taser, the officer goes and pulls the trigger.

The smart move would have been to blow the whistle, again and again.

A .40 cal is hardly "high powered". I love the dramatics. I'm actually surprised that the bear was killed with that round even at close range since LE can only use full metal jackets which do not have the expansion rate of a hollow point slug and are far less likely to deal a fatal blow.

If the bear feels either threatened or is not acting normal blowing a whistle is about as smart as yelling "shooooo bear shooooo", a fast way to get yourself mauled or killed. I can't even begin to address the lack of common sense it would take to get close enough to a bear to use mace, a baton or a taser effectively. :emb:

Coolbreeze
05-09-2007, 05:49 PM
What was the point of the officer getting that close anyway. What happenened to observing from a "safe distance". Was the bear sleepin in a schoool yard or the like? I am not goint to armchair qb this one. I would have shot if I was in his spot. Remind me not to fall asleep in the woods near there, I snore like a bear.

coley
05-10-2007, 01:08 PM
Does anyone know if there is a search on for the cubs and their well being??

Alton Mumma
05-10-2007, 01:21 PM
Does anyone know if there is a search on for the cubs and their well being??


"two (cubs) subsequently were located, captured and taken to a rehabilitator in Coos County"
- quote from the citizen article published May 9, 2007

SIKSUKR
05-10-2007, 02:12 PM
I saw the cubs on WMUR this morning.They look timid and confused as to where mom is.Kind of sad.

Pineedles
05-10-2007, 08:20 PM
The poor little cubs that are motherless will be taken care of by humans. The only species that has sympathy for the creatures that they kill. Sorry to be so graphic in my words, but the point needs to be made. A mother bear protecting her cubs against a group of human interlopers (a dad and his 2 kids on a camping trip) wouldn't stick around and take care of the human kids after it had slashed the torso of the dad leaving him bloody and dead on the forest floor. Sorry once again, for ending a thread with the plain truth.

Irish mist
05-10-2007, 08:44 PM
Good points Pineedles.

lakershaker
05-11-2007, 07:47 AM
As a matter of fact, all officers in NH are trained in handling wildlife situations. And from reading the articles, it sounds like the Laconia officer followed the protocol exactly. Fish & Game officers are the only police allowed to make the decision on whether to put down a game animal in the state, and in most cases they are the ones to actually do it. Due to the unfortunate circumstances with the father/son drowning (body recovery is also another F&G mandate), the CO couldn't get on-site. Given the information he received, he instructed the LPD officer to put the bear down.

Great job to all involved. It always amazes me how much Monday morning quarterbacking police officers in NH have to deal with. As others have pointed out, it is usually a thankless job most of the time, with a huge variety of situation to deal with on a daily basis.

And Maxum, LEOs can and do use expansion bullets - it is the military that is restricted to FMJ under the Geneva Convention.

GWC...
05-11-2007, 11:28 AM
As a matter of fact, all officers in NH are trained in handling wildlife situations. Given the information he received, he instructed the LPD officer to put the bear down.

Great job to all involved.
So, if someone is given misinformation about you and you end up dead, that would be okay?!

Sounds good to me...

HomeWood
05-13-2007, 04:46 PM
The police department should educate the officers more thoroughly in situations like these. There are way too many "John Wayne" types out there.
You couldn't be more wrong. How do I know? I'm a police officer of six years. I have never ever met an officer who wants to be "John Wayne" or use his/her gun. It's the last thing we want to do, especially on another person. I had an incident a week and a half ago where I confronted a man with a stolen gun. I was ready to shoot because he wouldn't listen to my commands. I gave him one more second and he reached for the gun, but he threw it on the ground. I could have justifiably shot and killed him, but I am not "John Wayne" and used my judgement to wait one more second. I assume you're career is the furthest thing from law enforcement, so please don't talk as if you know anything about it.

As far as this officer shooting the bear, he did what he felt he had to do. Nobody on here was there, so don't Monday morning quarter back the situation. It's definately sad, but his human life is more important (lack of a better term) than the bears. I am an animal lover, so don't think that I have no compassion for the momma bear or her cubs.

shooter
05-13-2007, 09:27 PM
shoot first ask questions later , better safe than sorry .the cop did the right thing.
by the way I wonder if they donated the bear meat to the poor ? I hear the meat is quite tasty.

lakershaker
05-14-2007, 08:52 AM
So, if someone is given misinformation about you and you end up dead, that would be okay?!

Sounds good to me...

I thought we were talking about bears...

Weirs guy
05-14-2007, 11:05 AM
I personaly think a lot of NH police officers have inflated ego's, but its still not a job I'd want. Just remember folks, if most of us make a mistake at work someone ends up upset with us. If a LEO makes a mistake, someone/thing ends up dead.

SIKSUKR
05-15-2007, 09:32 AM
I personaly think a lot of NH police officers have inflated ego's, but its still not a job I'd want. Just remember folks, if most of us make a mistake at work someone ends up upset with us. If a LEO makes a mistake, someone/thing ends up dead.
I think that most don't.One that did,and one that I had trouble with ended up in a tradegy in Franconia on Friday.The Officer McKay death was horrible.Unfortunately,he was one of those type of police that a lot of locals disliked because of his attitude.Still,an awfull sad event.

Acres per Second
05-17-2007, 07:03 AM
The Weirs Times today has an article about the orphaned bear cubs. Here's a few excerpts that have not been previously seen here:

"They are being cared for by wildlife rehabilitator and bear researcher Ben Kilham" [who has] "rehabilitated 50 bear cubs which have been successfully released in the wilderness".

[The cubs are] "fed natural bear food gathered by his sister, Phoebe, which includes fresh greens from the forest floor, tree buds, and young leaves."

"Sandra Lawton of Funspot says that there have been many bears seen near Funspot in recent years and that she regrets that the open dumpster played a role in making the young cubs orphans.

"It just broke my heart to hear them crying when they came down the tree to find out what had happened to their mother. It's one of the saddest sounds I've ever heard".

"State law prohibits...inadvertant feeding of black bears...feeding increases the likelihood of human injury or property damage". (Sister Phoebe appears middle-aged and knockout-georgeous, btw, FLL).

A few cover details on the book that Ben Kilham wrote on Black bears:

http://www.theconnection.org/content/2003/12/10/1210bears173.jpg

http://bookweb.kinokuniya.co.jp/bimgdata/FC0805073000.JPG

But Black bears are an infinitesimal danger compared to the American West's Brown bears (The Grizzly Bear). Visitors to National Parks out West are shown photos of automobile doors folded in half by Brown (Grizzly) bears. Those who have photographed rare Grizzly cub triplets, or befriended solitary Grizzlies, have gotten eaten! Sure, you can run up a tree to escape the Grizzly adult, (Grizzlies can't climb trees), but you've got to be faster to the tree!

Black bears are famous for their grunts, their fake charges—and their far better nature towards people—but when a brown bear attacks property or people, the headlines just get remembered as "Bear". :(