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‘Help Me, Help Me’: Hiker Finds Yellowstone Grizzly Attack Victim, Calls 911
Cowboy Times ^ | 5/5/26 | Andrew Rossi

Posted on 05/05/2026 9:54:17 AM PDT by sopo

A Maryland man was the first to come across one of two hikers seriously hurt in a Monday afternoon Yellowstone National Park grizzly attack, hearing the man call for help before coming across the man “tore up pretty bad.”

“I was hiking up Mystic Falls Trail when I saw bear prints in the mud,” Craig Lerman told Cowboy State Daily on Tuesday morning. “I kept walking a little further and saw a bloody hat with a watch torn off.”

Lerman, from Baltimore, was hiking on the Mystic Falls Trail when he was the first person on the scene after the grizzly attacked a pair of hikers.

Lerman kept hiking until he found the first victim, a severely injured 28-year-old man, lying on the trail.

“He heard me coming and started saying, ‘Help. Help me,’” Lerman said. "At first, I thought it was a prank or joke. Kids playing games. But when I got close to him, I knew this was a serious matter.”

According to Lerman, the man was “tore up pretty bad” with cuts all over his face, back, legs, and stomach with “flesh next to him.” The man had already managed to call 911 on his blood-covered phone.

“I called 911 from my phone and took over the call from there,” Lerman said. “I was scared the bear was going to come back around, so I just kept my head on a swivel.”

The dispatcher told Lerman to focus on keeping the man conscious and to turn him onto his side so he didn’t choke on his own blood, while responders coordinated a response.

“He kept talking to me the entire time,” Lerman said. “I ended up giving him my T-shirt (because) he said he was cold and wet, so I just laid it over him and reassured him help was on the way.”

The official first responders were two National Park Service rangers who reached the scene on foot, he said. Soon after, a helicopter arrived with more personnel to evacuate both bear attack to the Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center.

“I never saw the other guy,” Lerman said. “He was 14, and I believe that was his brother, but I don’t know that. His mom was there, but not on that trail. She was on the phone with him, trying to keep him calm.”

Lerman described the experience as “scary, brutal,” and “not something I’ve ever seen before.”

‘One Or More Bears' Yellowstone officials reported Tuesday morning that the incident occurred on the Mystic Falls Trail near Old Faithful. The victims may have been attacked by “one or more bears.”

National Park Service emergency services personnel responded to the victims, and the incident “remains under investigation,” the agency report. No additional information was provided.

Pastor and former Idaho Falls resident Travis Guse shared information he received about the incident on Facebook. He was contacted by David Jenkins, an associate pastor at Lake Church in Arlington, Texas.

“Two (men) from his church were up in Yellowstone with their mom when they were mauled by a grizzly bear,” Guse wrote. “The kids were life-flighted to the hospital in Idaho Falls, and the hospital still had my contact on file from when I was a pastor there over a decade ago.”

When Cowboy State Daily reached out to Guse, he confirmed he had made the post but declined to comment further.

Jenkins confirmed that the victims are members of the church’s congregation and had been taken to Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center for treatment. He also declined to comment further.

Cowboy State Daily reached out to Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center to get an update on the victims’ condition, but hadn’t received a response by the time of publication.

Stimulus, Response This is the first human-grizzly incident in Yellowstone in 2026 and the second to result in injury in the last five years.

The previous incident happened in September 2025 when a man hiking on the Turbid Lake Trail near the northeastern shore of Yellowstone Lake was attacked by a grizzly and suffered injuries on his arm and chest.

Based on what he could see at the scene, Lerman believes there were two grizzlies in the vicinity of the Mystic Falls Trail on Monday. He based his assumption on the two sets of footprints he observed on the muddy trail.

“There were two sets from a bigger and smaller bear,” he said. “The conclusion was that it was a mom protecting her cub, but that’s an assumption.”

Sow grizzlies with cubs usually emerge from hibernation in late April.

Mothers are fiercely protective of their cubs and will attack with little to no provocation, which can lead to serious and potentially lethal attacks on humans in spring and early summer.

In May 2024, Shayne Patrick Burke was attacked by a mother grizzly while hiking on Signal Mountain in Grand Teton National Park. He survived but was seriously injured.

NPS personnel and officials with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service usually categorize these attacks as defensive rather than aggressive.

That means it’s unlikely the grizzly responsbile for this attack will be removed from the park’s population, but there’s been no official information other than that the investigation into the incident is ongoing.

Lerman didn’t know the status of either victim but hopes they are recovering at the Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center.

“I’d like to eventually know if they survived,” he said.

Andrew Rossi can be reached at arossi@cowboystatedaily.com.


TOPICS: Travel
KEYWORDS: grizzly; grizzlyattacked; hikers; yellowstone
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To: EnderWiggin1970

If the wind is blowing, bear spray is ineffective.

State and federal biologists and other officials generally advocate for bear spray over firearms.

But talk to hunters. Some carry both, but all of them have a sidearm specifically for bears.

Funny how hunters always know more than government officials.


21 posted on 05/05/2026 12:33:32 PM PDT by reasonisfaith (What are the personal implications if the Resurrection of Christ is a true event in history?)
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To: reasonisfaith

If you are talking gale-force winds, and the bear is not downwind. But I would disagree about “if the wind is blowing” if you mean to imply any kind of wind will automatically render it ineffective. Even in high wind conditions (and we do get that a lot in WY) I’d still expect the bear spray to work and be able to put it in the bears face, just at a reduced range.


22 posted on 05/05/2026 12:40:52 PM PDT by EnderWiggin1970
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To: EnderWiggin1970

The wind gusts out there in grizzly country are random and unpredictable.

There are bullets available that don’t bounce off the bear’s skull, even at an angle. These bullets are made to drill into the skull.


23 posted on 05/05/2026 12:43:51 PM PDT by reasonisfaith (What are the personal implications if the Resurrection of Christ is a true event in history?)
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To: PGR88

“ Does Yellowstone allow guns for protection?”

No.

But I have a story to go with the answer. When I was 18, my Dad took the whole family on a horseback trip to Elizabeth Lake in Glacier NP. We rode across the park boundary past a sign that said, among other things, “no firearms”.

About a half mile down the trail and around a bend the horses stopped. The guides dismounted, pulled rifles out of their bags, and put them into the empty saddle holsters.

That night around the fire, I got up the nerve to ask.

“Better to be judged by 12 than carried by 6”

Words to live by.


24 posted on 05/05/2026 12:50:31 PM PDT by Jim Noble (Assez de mensonges et des phrases)
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To: PGR88

Surprisingly yes Yellowstone does allow guns subject to which state you are in within the park.

So yeah I would take a pistol and make sure my partner was at least carrying spray.


25 posted on 05/05/2026 12:55:24 PM PDT by DarrellZero
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To: sopo

There are certain places I would never hike. I don’t hike anyway, but if I did.


26 posted on 05/05/2026 1:24:39 PM PDT by roving
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To: mikey_hates_everything

I’ve read black bear attacks are more frequent than grizzly bear attacks. Maybe that’s true years ago. With all the grizzly control out here in the Yellowstone area. We have more grizzlies and more people. Ya do the math viola! These things happen. I was an avid elk hunter in my younger years. There were certain areas you were more alert in than others. Now days on the southeast side of Idaho you better have your head outa your butt. We got grizzlies and they eat elk too.


27 posted on 05/05/2026 1:42:05 PM PDT by Equine1952 (MM1SS SASOBe)
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To: Equine1952

What I’ve heard of Grizzlies, they will chop you up for the fun of it. Almost as bad as Polar Bears. Black bears are mostly afraid of humans, dogs and loud noises but when it’s a momma and her cubs, all bets are off. I saw all the elk in Estes Park, wouldn’t want to mess with those or moose. They’ll ruin your day. Don’t have either in WV to be concerned about. Just flocks of wild turkeys that might get rowdy if you catch them in a bad mood.


28 posted on 05/05/2026 1:50:36 PM PDT by mikey_hates_everything
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To: mikey_hates_everything

Grizzlies don’t do anything for fun. They defend themselves and they hunt for food. Coming out of winter sleep they are generally hungry and cranky. If you startle one they defend themselves and retreat most times. It’s the defend themselves portion that gets people tore all to hell. Throw a cub in the mix? The brakes are off. My main experience is fall elk hunting. I don’t hike unless it’s for meat. The spring hiking cross threads folks with cranky bears. Nothing new here. Yellowstone ain’t a petting zoo. The country, the weather, the wild life, and the water can and will kill you if you’re careless or just plain stupid. I wouldn’t trade this country for anything. But I damn sure respect what it can do. Be safe


29 posted on 05/05/2026 2:08:57 PM PDT by Equine1952 (MM1SS SASOBe)
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To: PGR88

.38 special to put you out of your misery 44mag,454 casull 500 smith to subdue griz


30 posted on 05/05/2026 3:17:59 PM PDT by 2nd Amendment
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To: DarrellZero

Most people go with a Glock 10mm....


31 posted on 05/05/2026 5:31:09 PM PDT by Aut Pax Aut Bellum (I sure am getting what I voted for!)
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