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Colorado man shoots bear inside his home with his .40-caliber pistol

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Leroy N. Soetoro

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Aug 22, 2022, 2:43:02 PM8/22/22
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https://www.foxnews.com/lifestyle/colorado-man-shoots-bear-home-40-
caliber-pistol

Last weekend, Colorado homeowner Ken Mauldin got a huge shock — one that
quickly had him jumping into action to protect his family.

The Steamboat Springs, Colorado, homeowner awakened to hear his wife
screaming, "There’s a bear in the house!" as the Associated Press
reported.

The couple's three children were sleeping just one floor down in the
couple’s split-level home.

Mauldin’s wife, Kelly, was first awakened before dawn by the family’s
barking dogs, the AP noted.

BLACK BEAR EUTHANIZED AFTER ATTACKING FAMILY AT TENNESSEE CAMPGROUND,
INJURING MOTHER AND DAUGHTER

"She walked to the door of the couple's bedroom and found herself staring
at a male black bear weighing about 400 pounds — about 10 feet away in the
dining room," said the outlet.

Mauldin grabbed his 40-caliber pistol, "took his wife’s place at the door"
and shot once, aiming for the center of the bear’s body.

Mauldin thinks his first shot did hit the bear, he told the AP, but the
bear then charged him — and Mauldin continued firing.

The bear got as close as five feet from Mauldin — then turned toward the
stairs leading to the home’s front door.

FLORIDA WOMAN ATTACKED BY BEAR IN HER OWN DRIVEWAY WHILE WALKING HER DOG

The bear "crashed through a banister" as Mauldin emptied the gun, and
"slid down the stairs, mortally wounded," the AP reported.

"My only thought was protecting my family and putting that bear down,"
Mauldin said.

The bear lay on the floor of the lower level of the home "breathing and
heaving" between Mauldin and the three children.

None of the family members were injured.

Mauldin called 911.

Police and state wildlife officers arrived a short time later and
determined that the bear was dead, they noted.

The officers were impressed by its size, Justin Pollock, a Colorado Parks
and Wildlife officer for 21-years, told the AP.

"I deal with bears a lot and I’d say this was a big bear," Pollock told
the outlet.

"Bears are very smart. Once they learn that it’s easy to access food in a
certain area, they are going to keep doing it," said a Colorado Parks and
Wildlife spokesperson.

Colorado law allows people to shoot bears if they feel threatened, Rachel
Gonzales, a spokesperson for Colorado Parks and Wildlife, told the AP.

WISCONSIN COUPLE STABS, FATALLY SHOOTS BLACK BEAR THAT ATTACKED THEM IN
THEIR HOME

"Bears are very smart," Gonzales also told the outlet.

"Once they learn that it’s easy to access food in a certain area, they are
going to keep doing it."

A commenter recently posted on the Colorado Parks and Wildlife Facebook
page, "Had one [bear] make a visit last night. And the night before, along
with every night this past week. They're out more this year than the last
[three years]."

"We are in a situation now where we have town bears that have lost all of
their natural fear of humans," said Mauldin of Steamboat Springs.

"In my mind that’s what we have to address."

TEXAS ALLIGATOR STUNS VIEWERS ON FACEBOOK WITH ITS STEALTHY, SLIPPERY
MOVES

A little bear knowledge may help someone who suddenly encounters the wild
animal.

Bears can be as small as four feet long and weigh about 60 pounds (the sun
bear).


They can also be as big as eight feet long and weigh more than 1,000
pounds (the polar bear), according to National Geographic.

"Bears have excellent sense of smell," the publication notes.

"They’re typically solitary, except for mothers with cubs."

Black bears and grizzly bears can go for 100 days or so without eating or
drinking, National Geographic also pointed out.

They live off the fat that they build up during the summer and fall.

"Bears have a better sense of smell than dogs and love humans' food," the
site reports, saying the "main strategy" to avoid run-ins is to "minimize
any scents or attractants on your body, campsite or property."

"If you're a hiker, be more careful about various kind of scents and
things that you would have on you," such as food, deodorant and even
chewing gum, Dave Garshelis, bear project leader at the Minnesota
Department of Natural Resources, told the outlet.

For his part, Colorado homeowner Mauldin told the AP he hopes the bear
break-in at his home sparks greater awareness among others to prompt
"something good from something so terrible that happened."

The Associated Press contributed reporting to this article.


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