Watch CBS News

Officials criticize family for “reckless behavior” after sea lion grabs girl

Sea lion grabs girl
Sea lion grabs young girl from dock, pulls her underwater 00:37

Officials have criticized the family of a young girl after a viral video showed a sea lion pulling her into the water from a dock in Richmond, British Columbia.

Robert Kiesman, chair of the Steveston Harbour Authority, told Canada's CBC News that there are several signs warning tourists not to feed wild sea mammals. 

"You wouldn't go up to a grizzly bear in the bush and hand him a ham sandwich, so you shouldn't be handing a thousand-pound wild mammal in the water slices of bread," Kiesman said.

He went on to say that the family displayed "totally reckless behavior" by allowing the young girl to sit on the ledge of the dock following the first time the sea lion snapped at her.

sea-lion.png
The moment a young girl was pulled into the water by a sea lion. Michael Fujiwara/YouTube

Peter Wallerstein, director of the Marine Animal Rescue project in Los Angeles County, told CBS Los Angeles that sea lions are simply unpredictable.

"That was a big sea lion that grabbed that girl into the water. They're unpredictable and have a wild streak." said Wallerstein, who rescues mostly distressed sea lions.

Michael Fujiwara, a university student in Richmond who filmed the incident, said a family was feeding the animal bread crumbs before it pulled the young girl underwater. 

"They were pretty shaken up," Fujiwara told CBC News. "Her family were just in shock."

Giant blue whale dwarfs ship 00:40

Bruce Okabe, CEO of Tourism Richmond, said in a statement to CBS News on Sunday that the incident was an "isolated occurrence."

"Interactions with wild animals should always be approached with caution. We hope she wasn't injured," Okabe said.

Danielle Hyson, a trainer at the Vancouver Aquarium, told The Vancouver Sun that the sea lion had displayed warning signs just moments before the incident.

"You saw him kind of initially lunge out of the water and give a little huff," Hyson said. "That's what we would call an aggressive precursor. So he's letting the people know that he's starting to get frustrated. And in that situation, the people should have backed off right away."

View CBS News In
CBS News App Open
Chrome Safari Continue
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.