Advertisement

Kelly Ann Walz killed by her pet black bear

Share

This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts.

A woman was killed by a captive 350-pound black bear as she cleaned its cage Sunday night, officials said Monday as they revealed her husband, an exotic pet dealer, was operating with an expired license.

Kelly Ann Walz, 37, was pronounced dead at the scene, according to Tim Conway, an information and education supervisor with the Pennsylvania Game Commission.

Advertisement

Michael Walz’s license to keep and sell exotic animals expired in June of 2008, Conway said. He called the lapse a technicality.

Walz, who has been licensed since 1994, reported to authorities in 2007 that he kept a lion, cougar, jaguar, tiger, black bear, leopard and two servals on the property in Ross Township, a rural area in the Pocono Mountains, about 20 miles northeast of Allentown.

Kelly Ann Walz went into the bear’s 15-by-15-foot steel and concrete cage about 5 p.m. Sunday, throwing a shovelful of dog food to one side to distract the bear while she cleaned the other side, Conway said. At some point the bear turned on her and attacked.

Her children and the neighbor’s children saw the attack and summoned help, and the neighbor shot and killed the bear while it was atop Walz, Conway said.

‘Why this woman chose to go in the same area that the bear was in is beyond me. It’s a fatal mistake,’ he said. ‘These things are not tame animals, they’re wild animals.’

Owners of wild animals typically have a two-section cage, allowing them to isolate the animal behind a locked gate while they clean the other part, Conway said.

Advertisement

Michael Walz is listed in state corporation records as the president of World of Reptiles Inc. The business was created in 1988.

A man who answered the phone at a listing for Michael Walz said the family did not want to comment.

-- Associated Press

In the photo above, a black bear, not the one who killed Kelly Walz, estimated to weigh 200 lbs crosses a city street Thursday, July 30, 2009 in Eau Claire, Wis. (AP Photo/Eau Claire Leader-Telegram, Steve Kinderman)

Advertisement