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Killer whale attacks SeaWorld trainer

Man, 39, suffers broken foot after being pulled underwater twice

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SHEETS SHAMU
Man hurt as killer whale attacks
Nov. 30: A trainer is injured during a show at SeaWorld Adventure Park in San Diego after a killer whale grabbed his foot and pulled him underwater. NBC's Peter Alexander reports.

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updated 1:57 p.m. ET Nov. 30, 2006

SAN DIEGO - A killer whale that dragged a trainer underwater during a show at SeaWorld Adventure Park, breaking his foot, may be allowed to perform again, park officials said Thursday.

“Animals who have been involved in incidents like this in the past have been allowed to continue performing,” SeaWorld San Diego spokesman Dave Koontz said.

Park trainers were examining the whale, a female orca named Kasatka, and trying to determine what made her grab her trainer, Ken Peters, Koontz said.

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The animal involved in the incident was misidentified in initial reports as Shamu, the show name given to SeaWorld's popular performing orcas.

Peters, 39, remained hospitalized with a broken foot after the whale grabbed him and twice held him underwater during a show. He had a fractured metatarsal in his left foot but was in good spirits, Koontz said.

Peters was hurt around 5 p.m. Wednesday during the final show of the day at Shamu Stadium, a 36-foot-deep tank.

The show’s finale called for Kasatka to shoot out of the water so Peters could dive off her nose. The whale is about 17 feet long and weighs well over 5,000 pounds.

As several hundred spectators watched, the whale and trainer plunged underwater, where Kasatka grabbed Peters by the foot and held him for less than a minute before surfacing, Koontz said.

“The trainer was being pinned by the whale at the bottom of the pool,” Karen Ingrande told KGTV-TV.

When they came up, Peters tried to calm the animal by rubbing and stroking its back but it grabbed him and plunged down again for about another minute.

The crowd “began to realize there was not something right and the whale was down again under the water. Again they were splashing the water to try to get the whale to come to the surface,” Ingrande said.

The whale finally released him and Peters was able to surface and swim away. Other trainers stretched a net between him and Kasatka, Koontz said.

He emerged from the tank with one leg of his wet suit torn.

“He tried to stand up on the stage and that’s when we realized there was something wrong with his leg and his foot. He was just white as a ghost,” spectator Sherri Justice told KFMB-TV in San Diego.


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