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Florida Man, 47, Gored by Bison in Yellowstone National Park

Florida Man, 47, Gored by Bison in Yellowstone National Park

Yahoo09-05-2025

A man was injured after he was attacked by a bison in Yellowstone National Park on Sunday, May 4, the National Park Service (NPS) said in a Wednesday, May 7, news release.
Around 3:15 p.m., the man, 47, was gored by a bison after he approached it too closely in the Lake Village area of the Yellowstone National Park. The location of the incident, which includes dining and lodging, is where bison are commonly found in the park.
The man, who was from Cape Coral, Fla., sustained minor injuries and was treated by emergency medical personnel. The NPS is investigating the incident.
This is the first reported incident of a person injured by a bison in 2025. There were two reported incidents in 2024, the first of which occurred in April. The animal attacked a 40-year-old man after he kicked the bison. He was arrested and charged with four counts, including disturbing wildlife. Shortly after, in June 2024, an 83-year-old woman was seriously injured after a bison gored her near Yellowstone Lake.
Bison are known to defend their space if they feel threatened. Additionally, bison have injured more people than any other animal in Yellowstone. 'They are unpredictable and can run three times faster than humans,' per the NPS news release.
American bison are the largest animals in North America. According to the U.S. Department of the Interior, they can weigh up to 2,000 pounds, reach heights of six feet, jump high fences and are strong swimmers.
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The NPS advises park visitors to stay more than 25 yards away from all large animals, which include bison, elk, bighorn sheep, deer, moose, and coyotes. The park also states people should keep a distance of at least 100 yards from bears and wolves.
'Wild animals can be aggressive if people don't respect their space,' the NPS said in the news release. 'If wildlife approach you, move away to always maintain these safe viewing distances.'
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Trump has rejected police reform. States and localities must take the lead.
Trump has rejected police reform. States and localities must take the lead.

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Trump has rejected police reform. States and localities must take the lead.

Five years after a Minneapolis police officer brutally murdered a handcuffed George Floyd by kneeling on his neck for over nine minutes, prompting worldwide protests against wrongful police killings of Black people, the Trump administration has taken a giant step back from police reform. The Justice Department announced in May that it is abandoning agreements reached with police departments in Minneapolis and Louisville, Ky., mandating reforms designed to reduce killings, brutality and other police misconduct. The Justice Department is conducting a review to determine if it should drop similar agreements with about a dozen other police departments. On top of this, the Justice Department will end civil rights investigations of alleged criminal conduct by the Louisiana State Police and police departments in Memphis, Mount Vernon, N.Y., Oklahoma City, Phoenix and Trenton, N.J. 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Because only 14 percent of the American population is Black, the number of people killed by police annually averaged 6.1 per million of the Black population, compared with 2.5 per million of the white population. There are, of course, times when police must use deadly force to prevent the killing of others. But this wasn't the case with Floyd and many others killed by police. Floyd, who was unarmed, was only suspected of using a counterfeit $20 bill to buy cigarettes. As a Black man like Floyd, I have experienced the unfair and harsh treatment some officers give to people who look like us. I've been stopped on the road and detained in front of my home by police several times when doing nothing wrong. I've been ordered out of my home and car to lay on the ground, had guns pointed at me, been handcuffed and been threatened with arrest. I don't think I would be treated this way were it not for the color of my skin. Most police officers never beat, shoot or kill anyone. They risk their lives to keep us safe and deserve our gratitude. But it is naive to believe that officers can do no wrong, that we live in a colorblind society or that there is no such thing as systemic racism. In the wake of the Trump administration's rejection of its duty to protect us all from police misconduct, the job of implementing needed reforms must go to state and local governments that oversee police agencies. Here are some actions they should take. Increase police funding to implement reforms: After Floyd's murder, some progressives adopted the slogan 'defund the police.' That was a mistake. Police departments need more federal, state and local government funding to better train and pay officers and to put more officers on the street to do police work the right way. More funding will make it less likely that police engage in the kind of unlawful violence that killed Floyd and too many others. 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Israel says it retrieved the body of a Thai hostage taken to Gaza when the war began
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Here's what to know about American Samoans in Alaska who are being prosecuted after trying to vote
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What is the Alaska case about? The investigation began after Tupe Smith, a mom in the cruise-ship stop of Whittier, decided to run for a vacant seat on the regional school board in 2023. She was unopposed and won with about 95% of the vote. That's when she learned she wasn't allowed to hold public office because she wasn't a U.S. citizen. Smith says she knew she wasn't allowed to vote in federal elections but thought she could vote in local or state races, and that she never would have voted if she knew it wasn't legal. She says she told elections workers that she was a U.S. national, not a citizen, and was told to check a box saying she was a citizen anyway. About 10 months later, troopers returned to Whittier and issued court summonses to her husband and nine other American Samoans. While Smith appeals the charges against her, the state filed charges against the others in April. 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