Advertisement

63-year-old grandmother desperately calls 911 as bear attacks her

Click to play video: '63-year-old grandmother desperately calls 911 as bear attacks her'
63-year-old grandmother desperately calls 911 as bear attacks her
WATCH: Karen Osborne, a 63-year-old Maryland grandmother, was the first victim of a bear attack in the state in at least 81 years – Nov 21, 2016

HAGERSTOWN, Md. – A 63-year-old woman mauled by a black bear in Maryland’s first such attack in decades tried to fight off the animal before deciding it would be safer to lie still, her husband said Thursday at the hospital where she’s recovering.

“She said she punched him in the face a couple times,” Ronald Osborne said. “She’s a tough babe.”

He said Karen Osborne used her cellphone to call 911 after she was attacked Wednesday night in the driveway of their daughter’s rural home near Frederick, about 70 kilometres west of Baltimore.

READ MORE: Man shares dramatic video after surviving 2 attacks by grizzly bear

She was listed in good condition with a broken left arm and bite wounds on her head and torso that required more than 70 stitches, her husband said. He said she was in a lot of pain and didn’t want to be interviewed.

Story continues below advertisement

Maryland Department of Natural Resources wildlife specialists tracked and euthanized the 90-kilogram female bear under a policy mandating death for bears that attack people, said Candy Thomson, a Natural Resources Police spokeswoman.

Breaking news from Canada and around the world sent to your email, as it happens.

Paul Peditto, director of the DNR’s Wildlife and Heritage Service, said it was the state’s first recorded bear attack on a human in at least 81 years. He said the agency had captured and tagged the same bear last summer after she got into a chicken coop.

READ MORE: 10-year-old girl mauled by bear in Port Coquitlam

The Osbornes live next door to their daughter’s family in the Catoctin Mountains near Gambrill State Park. Ronald Osborne said Karen had gone outside with their leashed dog at about 9 p.m. to investigate constant barking from their daughter’s dog.

Peditto said the barking dog had apparently treed at least one of the bear’s three cubs. “And then when she saw another dog probably close to, or between, her and the cubs, she went into what we call a defensive attack,” he said.

He said the cubs, nearly a year old, can survive without their mother.

READ MORE: Bear safety tips: what to do if you spot a bear

The mother bear was familiar to area residents, said Tara Snuffin, the couple’s daughter.

Story continues below advertisement

“She’s been in the area forever. We all kind of love her,” she said. “We’re all very sad that this had to happen this way.”

The state’s growing bear population, estimated at more than 1,000 in 2011, prompted the state to expand hunting this year to Frederick County, where the attack occurred. Maryland ended a 51-year moratorium on bear hunting in 2004.

— Sarah Brumfield in Washington contributed to this story.

Sponsored content

AdChoices