Her medication was administered in muffins coated in syrup. ![]() in South Lake Tahoe, California, where because of her burned paws she was initially provided with a ramp to reach her sleeping loft. Two days later she was transported by Pilots N Paws, a volunteer pilot organization, to Lake Tahoe Wildlife Care Inc. She was treated by a veterinarian for extensive burns and sores on her elbows he described her burns as the worst he had ever seen, and Rich Beausoleil, the departmental bear and cougar specialist who took charge of her (and fed her yogurt and dog food), also later said, "That was the worse case I’ve ever seen". (Normal weight for her age would have been about 80 pounds (36 kg).) She was hiding under a horse trailer and was unable to run away fast because of her injuries. The next day, an officer with the Washington State Department of Fish and Wildlife captured her with a catch pole at about 39 pounds (18 kg) she was too small to tranquilize. She accepted apricots, dog food, and water from Love, who also spent time with her that night after he heard her crying. With third-degree burns on her paws, she was dragging herself on her elbows. She appears to have been killed by a hunter.Īs a cub about one and a half years old, Cinder was discovered by Steve Love on his property on French Creek in the Methow Valley on July 31, 2014, two weeks after the wildfires. She was rehabilitated and released and became an emblem of the region's will to recover. He was arrested Friday and held on $1 million bond.Cinder (January 2013 – October 2017) was a bear found badly burned as a cub after the Carlton Complex fire in Washington state, United States. Andrew Sorensen allegedly sold John Eisenman’s teenage daughter while he was dating her.Ī neighbor contacted police and told them that Eisenman had admitted to killing someone and hiding their body in the trunk of a car, the article said.Įisenman admitted under questioning to confronting Sorensen last November and killing him, according to the report. Kross later reportedly explained to investigators that the couple’s underage daughter had been sex-trafficked by Sorensen, and she and Eisenman drove to Seattle to rescue her last year. Inside was a man with his ankles and hands bound, tape over his mouth and multiple puncture marks on his clothing, according to the article.Įisenman opened the door when police tried to contact Kross, the registered owner of the 1991 green Honda Accord, and told cops the car had been stolen in 2020, the Spokesman-Review reported. ![]() The vehicle apparently belonged to Eisenman’s fiancée, Brenda Kross, the report said. John Eisenman allegedly killed Andrew Sorensen, who is accused of selling his teenage daughter to a sex-trafficking ring in Seattle, Washington. Officers only discovered Sorensen’s corpse after Spokane residents reported an abandoned car on their street that was covered in mold and emitting a foul odor, the Spokesman-Review reported Tuesday. “Eisenman subsequently assaulted the victim by hitting him in the head with a cinder block and then stabbed him repeatedly, causing his death,” cops wrote in a statement. He was able to rescue the girl and bring her back to Spokane, police said.Ī month later, the dad allegedly confronted Sorensen and abducted him, tying him up and putting him in the trunk of a car. 22, police in Spokane said Monday.Ĭops said Eisenman learned back in October 2020 that his underage daughter was sold into a Seattle-area sex-trafficking ring, apparently by Sorensen, her then-boyfriend. John Eisenman, 60, of Spokane, was charged with first-degree murder in the death of 19-year-old Andrew Sorensen, whose rotting body was found in the trunk of an abandoned vehicle on Oct. Late Cash App founder’s family pleads for donations, says assets are being held as ‘evidence’Ī Washington state father was arrested for allegedly killing a man who he claimed had sex-trafficked his teenage daughter. ![]() Nurse accused of killing 2 patients ‘felt bad for their quality of life’: cops Sister of PA cold case victim breaks silence on Bryan Kohberger ‘connection’ How a case of mistaken identity landed a vengeful ice cream man in prison for life
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