Mountain lion attack kills 1, injures 1 in Washington state - Los Angeles Times
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Mountain lion attack kills 1, injures 1 in Washington state

Police from the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife confer with the King County medical examiner's office on a remote gravel road above Snoqualmie, Wash., following a fatal cougar attack on Saturday.
Police from the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife confer with the King County medical examiner’s office on a remote gravel road above Snoqualmie, Wash., following a fatal cougar attack on Saturday.
(Alan Berner / Associated Press)
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One man was killed and another seriously injured when they encountered a cougar Saturday while mountain biking in Washington state, officials said.

Authorities said the two men were on a morning bike ride in the foothills near North Bend when the attack occurred. The town is about 30 miles east of Seattle.

The mountain lion ran into the woods, after which officers with the Washington Department of Fish and Game later tracked it down, shot and killed it, said Capt. Alan Myers of the state’s Fish and Wildlife police.

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The 31-year-old survivor was taken to a hospital in Seattle. He was initially listed in serious condition but was alert and talking; his condition was later upgraded to satisfactory, the Seattle Times reported.

A search and rescue team was dispatched to recover the other man’s body.

KIRO-TV reported that the injured man called 911 shortly before 11 a.m. and shouted, “Can you hear me? Help!” before the call cut off.

Authorities found the cougar standing over the body of the dead biker, the station reported.

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It wasn’t immediately clear if the two victims were biking together or separately.

In the last 100 years in North America, roughly 25 fatalities and 95 nonfatal cougar attacks have been reported, the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife said, but there was only one other fatal attack in the state.

More attacks have been reported in the western United States and Canada over the last 20 years than in the previous 80 years.

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