Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Hope Raised That Tests Could Provide Clues To Deadly Yukon Grizzly Attack

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Nov, 2018 12:19 PM
    WHITEHORSE — Tests will be performed on the body of a grizzly bear to try to find out why it killed a woman and her 10-month-old daughter in Yukon earlier this week.
     
     
    Environment Yukon spokeswoman Roxanne Stasyszyn says it's hoped the examination will offer some clues about what motivated the grizzly to attack Valerie Theoret and her baby on Monday near their cabin northeast of Mayo.
     
     
    The 37-year-old woman's partner was returning to the cabin and was charged by the bear, but he shot and killed it before discovering the bodies.
     
     
    Experts have offered a number of theories for the attack, ranging from the mother accidentally surprising the grizzly at close quarters to the possibility that the bruin was injured, ill or intended to attack and prey on the victims.
     
     
    Stasyszyn says Environment Yukon, the coroner's service and the RCMP continue to investigate.
     
     
    A memorial for Theoret and her baby, Adele Roesholt, was scheduled for Thursday at the Association franco-yukonnaise in Whitehorse.
     
     
    Theoret taught French immersion at a local elementary school and was active in the association and the Whitehorse community.
     
     
    A retired bear biologist has said, under most conditions, bears in the North are normally hibernating by now, but Stasyszyn says it's not unusual to see active bears in November, December or even January.
     
     
    "The climate impacts that, and we are having quite a mild winter at the moment, so it's not unusual to see bears out at this time," she said.
     
     
    Stasyszyn did not comment on when or where the examination, called a necropsy, will take place, but she said Environment Yukon is committed to providing more details as soon as the investigation concludes. (CKRW, The Canadian Press)

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Montreal Waitress Who Refused Sexual Advances From Boss Awarded $52,000

    Montreal Waitress Who Refused Sexual Advances From Boss Awarded $52,000
    A waitress who was harassed after refusing sexual advances from the owner of a Montreal restaurant has been awarded $52,000 by a Quebec labour relations tribunal.

    Montreal Waitress Who Refused Sexual Advances From Boss Awarded $52,000

    Liberals Write Off $6.3 Billion In Loans, Including $2.6 Billion To Automaker

    Liberals Write Off $6.3 Billion In Loans, Including $2.6 Billion To Automaker
    OTTAWA — The federal government says it won't collect $6.3 billion in loans, a figure fuelled by the write off of a nearly decade-old automaker bailout that the Liberals say had no hopes of being recouped.

    Liberals Write Off $6.3 Billion In Loans, Including $2.6 Billion To Automaker

    Jail Recommended For Police Officer After High-Speed Crash Kills Boy

    Jail Recommended For Police Officer After High-Speed Crash Kills Boy
    A provincial police officer who crashed into a car at high speed and killed a 5-year-old boy during a surveillance operation will likely be sentenced to jail time.

    Jail Recommended For Police Officer After High-Speed Crash Kills Boy

    Ultra-Low-Cost Carrier Wow Air Rolls Out New Route Between Vancouver And Iceland

    Ultra-Low-Cost Carrier Wow Air Rolls Out New Route Between Vancouver And Iceland
    Vancouverites looking for low-cost flights to Iceland will soon have a new option when discount airline Wow Air adds a route out of the West Coast.

    Ultra-Low-Cost Carrier Wow Air Rolls Out New Route Between Vancouver And Iceland

    Doctors See Spike In Limb Paralysis In Kids, Following Viral Infections

    Doctors See Spike In Limb Paralysis In Kids, Following Viral Infections
    Cases of a rare polio-like condition have begun turning up in some Canadian children, following reports of dozens of cases in the U.S. in recent weeks.

    Doctors See Spike In Limb Paralysis In Kids, Following Viral Infections

    Alleged Serial Killer Bruce McArthur Waives Right To Preliminary Hearing

    Alleged Serial Killer Bruce McArthur Waives Right To Preliminary Hearing
    Alleged serial killer Bruce McArthur was ordered Monday to stand trial on eight counts of first-degree murder after he waived his right to a preliminary hearing in a rare legal move.

    Alleged Serial Killer Bruce McArthur Waives Right To Preliminary Hearing