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Mountain lion dies in surgery after being shot by police in California

Mountain lion dies in surgery after being shot by police in California
A young male mountain lion, which officials say was shot by police earlier in the day in Hollister, California, awaits emergency surgery in the radiology room at the Oakland Zoo in Oakland, California, US, on Aug 26, 2022.
PHOTO: Reuters

A young mountain lion shot by police died in surgery at a California zoo on Friday (Aug 26), a zoo spokesperson said, after the animal was startled by a tranquiliser dart and jumped at an officer in a suburban neighbourhood.

Oakland Zoo veterinarians received the lion, estimated to be a year old, shortly before midday and prepared it for emergency surgery, said zoo spokesperson Erin Harrison.

A resident of Hollister, about 100 miles south of San Francisco, had spotted the lion on their front porch and called police at about 4.42am (4.42pm Singapore time), the Hollister Police Department said in statement.

When California Department of Fish and Wildlife officers tried to tranquilise it, the lion ran out of a bush toward a police officer, officials said.

"Fearing for the life and safety of the officer, two officers fired their rifles at the mountain lion," the police statement said.

"We could not place the life of the animal above human life, which is why the officers fired their rifles at the scene."

The lion jumped a nearby fence into a side yard where it was tranquilised again.

Officers found a "pass-through bullet wound to its torso," said Mike Perin, spokesman for the Department of Fish and Wildlife.

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"We did not consider the mountain lion to be a public safety threat. It had not acted aggressively," he said, noting that the goal was to return the animal to its habitat.

Zoo officials said the lion weighed about 75 pounds (34kg).

"He's beautiful, in great condition, well fed, everything good. Probably just a young guy questing for turf, like they do at that age," Dr. Alex Herman, vice president of veterinary services at the zoo, said.

Prior to surgery, Dr. Herman was optimistic but conceded the risk.

"A lot of animals die from injuries like this," she said.

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