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Calif. opens inquiry into fatal grizzly bear attack



By GILLIAN FLACCUS, AP
24 April 2008 @ 11:02 pm EST

BIG BEAR LAKE, Calif. - State work safety officials opened an investigation Thursday into the death of an exotic-animal trainer who was killed while wrestling a 700-pound grizzly bear for a promotional video, authorities said.


Grizzly Attack
A sign is seen at the entry to the Predators in Action compound near the city of Big Bear Lake, Calif. on Wednesday, April 23, 2008. On Tuesday 39-year-old Stephan Miller was killed during a training session with a bear at the facility. (AP Photo/Phil McCarten)
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The state Department of Industrial Relations will investigate a Los Angeles company called eSeekers Inc. that employed the victim, Stephan Miller, 39, for any health and safety violations, said Kate McGuire, the agency spokeswoman.

McGuire described the business as a Web browser company that was shooting video at Predators in Action, a center in the San Bernardino Mountains that provides trained animals for movies, TV shows and documentaries.

Stephan Miller died Tuesday after the 7 1/2-foot-tall bear, named Rocky, bit him on the neck. The victim was a cousin of Predators in Action owner Randy Miller.

An autopsy Thursday found that Stephan Miller died within minutes of neck injuries consistent with a single bite, said Sandy Fatland, a spokeswoman for the San Bernardino County coroner.

"If the coroner's report says there's only one bite, then it follows what the initial report was, which is that the person was bitten, not attacked," said Harry Morse, spokesman for the state Department of Fish and Game.

The difference is that the bear wasn't necessarily being aggressive, said Joel Almquist, who co-owns an exotic animal santuary called Forever Wild and has himself wrestled Rocky.

"Knowing the bear, taking little nip-type bites with the front teeth, every bear does that," he said.

McGuire said the state probe could take as long as six months. The agency could issue citations if violations are found, she said.

A colleague of Stephan Miller said he worked for ShareNow.com, a social-networking and file-sharing startup meant to compete with sites like Facebook and YouTube. ShareNow's chairman, Nigel Robertson, said eSeekers is the holding company for Beverly Hills-based ShareNow.com.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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