Crime & Safety

Authorities Aim to Kill Coyote that Attacked Toddler

Police believe a coyote that clamped down on a child's neck poses an ongoing threat because it is desensitized to humans.

A coyote attacked a toddler at a park in a subdivision in northern Irvine this weekend, and police were on the lookout for the wild animal today.

It was shortly before 6 p.m. on Friday when a 3-year-old was approached and bit by a coyote at the intersection of Equinox and Silverado, said public information officer Farrah Emami of the Irvine Police Department.

She was attacked at Silverado Park, in the northern part of Irvine, not far from Portola Parkway at Ridge Valley -- just south of the interchange of toll routes 133 and 241.

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The girl was with her mother, who managed to scare the wild animal off, Emami said.

News of the attack was first reported by the Orange County Register.

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The toddler suffered superficial bruises to her neck and no skin was broken, meaning she did not require a series of rabies shots, said Lt. Kent Smirl of the California Department of Fish and Wildlife. She was briefly hospitalized, then released, he said.

Coyote sightings are common in the area, but physical contact with humans is very rare and unusual, Emami said.

The wild animals tend to avoid crossing paths with people, but feeding them or leaving food outside for them gets them habituated to humans, Smirl said.

“The biggest thing is don’t feed them,” he said. “Every time we have an occurrence like this it’s because someone was feeding them.”

Once the coyote from Friday’s attack is tracked down, it will be put to sleep, Smirl said.

“That’s why a fed coyote is a dead coyote,” he said. “A coyote of this nature is dangerous because he’ll come back and do it again.”

If a human is to encounter a coyote, Smirl advises acting “big and bad,” meaning to make yourself loud, scream at the animal and even throw rocks at them to scare them away.

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