An unsettling video shows a group of people carelessly ripping bear cubs out of a tree to snap some selfies in North Carolina. The group of about six people was caught on video Tuesday pulling ...
Disturbing footage has emerged out of North Carolina showing a group of people hauling a tiny bear cub out of a tree before ...
The North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission says the video, recorded Tuesday, shows the group of people at an apartment ...
A now-viral video taken earlier this week shows a group of people outside an North Carolina apartment complex yanking two black bear cubs out of a tree to take selfies with them. The video shows a ...
This story appears in the August 2011 issue of National Geographic magazine. On a drizzly autumn morning on the coast of British Columbia, a shadowy figure lumbers down to shore. A black bear has ...
It's that time of year again. Spring has sprung, the birds are chirping, and humans are exhibiting dangerous and irresponsible behavior around wildlife. But instead of one of the country's ...
Video shows the irresponsible actions of a group of people in North Carolina. One of them was bitten by a cub, a wildlife ...
1:06 Group of people filmed pulling bear cub from tree File this under: “A good way to get yourself killed.” An investigation is underway after a group of people (with an apparent death wish ...
Principal James Marsh didn’t know a dangerous visitor was lurking on campus Monday morning as he rushed around to get the school day started. Marsh had arrived at Zela Elementary School in rural ...
A group of people were caught on video in Asheville pulling bear cubs out of a tree -- all to take a few selfies. In the video, the group is seen pulling the cubs from a tree then holding one of ...
RALEIGH, North Carolina — Wildlife officials are trying to identify several people who were seen on video pulling bear cubs from the limbs of a tree in order to take selfies. The North Carolina ...
An incident in which a group of irresponsible people pulled black bear cubs out of the trees to take selfies is under investigation, according to the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission.