UPDATE: JULY 6 AT 2:20 P.M.
All roads into Ovando have been reopened, according to the Powell County Sheriff’s Office. However, the bear has not been found.
The sheriff’s office says they received a call around 3:30 a.m. that a woman was being pulled out of her tent by the bear.
The woman was alone in her tent, but there were other people in the campground.
UPDATE: JULY 6 10:55 A.M.
A security camera belonging to a local business recorded video of the grizzly bear Monday night, according to Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks.
FWP said the bear also got into a chicken coop.
FWP biologists, conflict specialists and game wardens are in the area of the deadly attack Tuesday to look for the bear.
HELENA Mont. (AP) — A grizzly bear attacked and killed a person who was camping in western Montana early Tuesday, after previously wandering into the campsite, the Powell County sheriff said.
The attack happened between 4 a.m. and 5 a.m. in the area of Ovando, a town of fewer than 100 people about 60 miles (97 kilometers) northwest of Helena, said Greg Lemon, a spokesperson with Montana Fish Wildlife and Parks.
“There was an earlier contact with the bear prior to the event,” Sheriff Gavin Roselles said. “The bear basically came back into the campsite. It wandered into a campsite a couple different times.”
A team of law enforcement and wildlife specialists has been assembled to track down the bear, officials said.
An initial report said the victim had been riding a bicycle at the time of the attack. That is not the case, Roselles said.
The identity of the victim was not immediately released and further circumstances surrounding the attack were under investigation.
“Our first concern is the community’s well-being. The next step is to find the bear,” Lemon said.
Officials did not say exactly where the attack occurred, but Roselles said there were other people camping in the vicinity of the attack.
Lemon said his understanding is that the victim was part of a group on a bike trip.
Leigh Ann Valiton, who owns the Blackfoot Inn and a general store, said the people of Ovando were “absolutely devastated” by the fatal attack.
Grizzly bears have been getting into increasing conflicts with humans in the Northern Rockies as the federally protected animals expand into new areas and the number of people living and recreating in the region grows.
In April, a backcountry guide was killed by a grizzly bear while fishing along the Yellowstone National Park border in southwestern Montana.
Ovando is on the southern edge of a huge expanse of wilderness that stretches to the border of Canada and is home to an estimated 1,000 bears — the largest concentrations of the bruins in the contiguous U.S. The area includes Glacier National Park.
In 2016, an off-duty U.S. Forest Service law enforcement officer was fatally mauled in the region after he collided with a grizzly while mountain biking in the Flathead National Forest.
Grizzly bears involved in attacks on humans are killed if they are considered a continued public safety threat. But bears involved in non-fatal attacks are often spared in the cases of surprise encounters or if they are protecting their young.
An estimated 50,000 grizzlies once inhabited western North America from the Pacific Ocean to the Great Plains. Hunting, commercial trapping and habitat loss wiped out most by the early 1900s.
Grizzly bears have been protected as a threatened species in the contiguous U.S. since 1975, allowing a slow recovery in a handful of areas.
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Brown reported from Billings.
By AMY BETH HANSON and MATTHEW BROWN Associated Press
Credit to: MontanaRightNow.Com
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