Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Drunk Man Arrested After Breaking Into Zoo's Bear Exhibit And Trying To Drown Elderly Bear

Drunk Man Arrested After Breaking Into Zoo's Bear Exhibit And Trying To Drown Elderly Bear
@wnuckers / Twitter

First thing's first, this did not happen in Florida.

Instead, we are taking a trip to beautiful Poland for today's bit of bonkers news.


A 23-year-old man is facing some hefty fines as well as a painfully-learned lesson in sobriety after drunkenly picking a fight with a bear at a zoo.

Yeah.

You read that correctly.

The man faces fines (that could go upwards of seven thousand dollars) and other punishments after the zoo incident, which was caught on camera by other guests of the Polish park. That video, which some have described as truly surreal, is making rounds on social media.

The video starts with the man standing on some stones with a large brown bear a few feet away from him. He appears to be wringing out his clothing.

The bear makes a half-hearted charge towards him and he takes a few steps forward before jumping into the safety moat around the animal's enclosure. Presumably this is how the man got into the bear's enclosure in the first place. An old man and young boy casually watch because, like we said, surreal.

That's way beyond the barrier, sir.

@wnuckers / Twitter

The bear seems confused (or maybe impressed?) by this and watches as the man splashes around in the water. Eventually, he makes it to an area near a landing that the bears use to enter and exit the water.

Bear watches intently from above the man's head.

@wnuckers / Twitter

Until...

@wnuckers / Twitter

This is the point where things could go REALLY wrong. Unarmed humans realistically stand little-to-no chance against a brown bear on land.

They stand even less of a chance in water.

When the bear dives in, she miraculously swims right past the man! Or at least she tries to.

She almost brushes by him before the man spins himself around, grabs the animal by her fur and starts fighting with the bear. The bear, honestly, does a whole lot of nothing in return except seem a bit confused and agitated.

He hits, pushes and grapples with her and at one point even shoves and holds the bear's head under the water.

The bear just sort of ... floats there?

It looks as if the bear is trying to get away from him rather than what you'd expect which would be a human trying their darndest to GTFO.

Not this guy.

They say the universe takes pity on the foolish, and this man is certainly a case for that old saying. He and the bear eventually just let one another go.

She never fights back. She never even growls. She just swims away.

The man climbs onto the rock formation on an artificial island within the enclosure.

Zoo officials are able to lead the bear away and the man is rescued.


We mentioned fools finding favor before, and as luck would have it the bear on exhibit that day happened to be 39-year-old Sabina. Sabina happens to be an elderly retired circus bear who is quite used to people.

Zoo spokeswoman Anna Karczewska made it very clear that Sabina would have been very capable of seriously injuring him had she chosen to, but she was not the aggressor here. She was the victim. She drove the point home further by calling the incident "a human attack."

Evidently, this bear has a history of being attacked by humans and found this incident quite traumatizing. She hid for hours afterwards.

We're not going to lie, attacking a bear in general looks pretty bad. But the possibility that this dude just jumped in there and attacked a scared old granny-bear with PTSD just makes it so much worse.

Yeah, this guy's not popular right now.








The court of public opinion isn't the only place this guy is totally losing.

He was charged with animal cruelty and disturbing the peace. Authorities also hit him with a fine for not wearing a face mask under the country's pandemic response guidelines.

He was sentenced to community service by the courts and still faces substantial fines. He has also given up alcohol.

The zoo has decided this is the proverbial nail in the coffin for this particular enclosure, which is sometimes used as a sort of live-billboard for the zoo. As such, it is not actually inside of the zoo.

It's on public ground about a half mile outside the gates.

The enclosure, meant to attract the public, unfortunately has done it's job too well and has been the scene of numerous "break-ins" by humans. Zoo officials had planned to move the bears away from that area and close it up anyway, but have made that move sooner rather than later.

More from Trending

Screenshot of Molly Ringwald; Donald Trump
@mollyringwald/Instagram; Win McNamee/Getty Images

Molly Ringwald Urges Fans To Speak Out Against ICE And 'Fascist' Trump In Powerful Video

Actor Molly Ringwald—best known for her roles as a member of the "Brat Pack" in films like Sixteen Candles and The Breakfast Club—denounced President Donald Trump and ICE, telling fans she "can’t stay silent and neither should you."

Ringwald, speaking out mere days after ICE agents murdered ICU nurse Alex Pretti in Minneapolis, told her followers in a post on Instagram that she had previously "been so proud to be an American but right now this is a fascist government.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots of Liam Conejo Ramos receiving pilot wings
@johnquinones/Instagram

5-Year-Old Boy Abducted By ICE Gets Wings From Pilot On Flight Home To Minneapolis In Sweet Viral Video

5-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos, who was taken to an ICE detention facility in Texas along with his father, finally returned home to Minneapolis on Sunday and received his pilot wings thanks to Delta Air Lines pilots on the flight from San Antonio.

Ramos and his father were abducted by ICE agents on their way home from preschool in the Minneapolis area last month; Ramos is the fourth student from the Columbia Heights School District to be swept up in the Trump administration's nationwide immigration crackdown.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Carlson in pink jacket and Carlson from interview
MPR News

Woman In Pink Jacket Who Filmed Alex Pretti's Murder Speaks Out In Emotional Interview

Stella Carlson, better known online as the "woman in the pink jacket" who recorded the murder of ICU nurse Alex Pretti by ICE agents in Minneapolis, is urging Americans not to let ICE "intimidate" them.

Calls for an investigation have intensified from across the political spectrum after analysis of multiple videos showed ICE officers removing a handgun from Pretti—a weapon that authorities said Pretti was permitted to carry but was not handling at the time—before fatally shooting him.

Keep ReadingShow less
A photo of purse with "See you later" and a waving hand
Photo by Junseong Lee on Unsplash

People Break Down The Real Reason They Stopped Liking Someone But Never Told Them

Not every relationship is a forever deal.

Sometimes it's best to just let people go.

Keep ReadingShow less
Jordin Sparks; Halle Berry
Gary Gershoff/Getty Images; Kate Green/Amazon MGM Studios/Sony Pictures Entertainment/Getty Images

Fans Defend Jordin Sparks After She Publicly Asks Halle Berry To Read Her Screenplay About Menopause

You miss one hundred percent of the shots you don't take, and singer Jordin Sparks put that philosophy into action at the end of January.

Halle Berry has been a household name in Hollywood for the last few decades, and now in the middle of her life, she's loudly advocating for increased representation and awareness around women's health and women's experiences, especially what happens to a woman's body during perimenopause and menopause.

Keep ReadingShow less