Chilling photo captures woman’s final moments before fatal lion attack

Chilling photo captures woman’s final moments before fatal lion attack




Her face was torn apart': eyewitness recalls horrific lion park attack

“The lioness had half of the passenger’s shoulder in her mouth. It was too late for anyone to save her,” engineer Ben Govender told Rapport newspaper as well as British publications, the Daily Mail and Mirror.

Film editor Katherine Chappell, aged 29, was named as the victim of the attack that took place on Monday at the Lion Park outside Johannesburg. “Her face was torn apart, the right side of her chest was gone,” The Mirror quoted Govender as saying. The 38-year-old was travelling behind the vehicle driven by tour guide Pierre Potgieter in which Chappell was a passenger.

Govender told Rapport that it was Potgieter who opened his window first, and then Chappell.

He said initially it did not look as if this had bothered the lions. But then the lioness went up to the car and stood up on her hind legs. Govender snapped a photograph of this moment

He said the attack happened no more than 15 seconds later: “No one could think what would happen next.”

Govender said it appeared as if Potgieter could not drive away or get the window closed fast enough.

“It was frightening. After the first bite, the lion dropped down from the car with blood on her mouth and paw”.

He said the lioness then attacked Chappell again.

Potgieter tried to stop the bleeding by applying pressure to her wounds, but she died shortly after the ambulance arrived, according to a statement from his tour company, Kalabash Tours.

The Daily Mail reported that Chappell’s funeral is to be held on Sunday in Rye, New York City.

Kalabash Tours said that Potgieter, 66, had tried to fend off the lioness and in the process sustained injuries to his arm.

Besides physical injuries, Potgieter also suffered a heart attack during the incident. He was being treated in hospital.

Here is the story

Horrific new details have emerged of how a fearless safari guide risked his own life by repeatedly punching a raging lioness in the face as the animal fatally mauled tragic New Yorker Katherine Chappell.

Eyewitness Ben Govender described the heroic battle in an interview Saturday — the same day relatives and friends held a memorial service in Rye for the beautiful and “fearless’’ 29-year-old adventurer.

The lion attack took place Monday, after Chappell rolled down the window of her SUV to snap a better shot of the animal, which was lying on the ground.

Without warning, the lion stood up on its rear paws, balancing on the vehicle. Then it suddenly lunged forward and grabbed Chappell through the window.

“We saw the [guide] diving into the passenger seat and punching at the lioness,” recalled Govender, 38, an engineer and photographer.

The guide, Pierre Potgieter, 66, suffered a heart attack and is hospitalized after what he called “the worst experience’’ of his life.

Govender continued, “After the first bite, the lioness retreated from the car with blood dripping from her mouth and paw.’’

But the horror was far from over.

The animal staged a second, even more devastating attack.

“Her face was torn apart. The right side of her chest was gone,” Govender said of Chappell. “Nothing could have been done to save that woman.’’

Horrific new details have emerged of how a fearless safari guide risked his own life by repeatedly punching a raging lioness in the face as the animal fatally mauled tragic New Yorker Katherine Chappell.

Eyewitness Ben Govender described the heroic battle in an interview Saturday — the same day relatives and friends held a memorial service in Rye for the beautiful and “fearless’’ 29-year-old adventurer.

The lion attack took place Monday, after Chappell rolled down the window of her SUV to snap a better shot of the animal, which was lying on the ground.

Without warning, the lion stood up on its rear paws, balancing on the vehicle. Then it suddenly lunged forward and grabbed Chappell through the window.
 
“We saw the [guide] diving into the passenger seat and punching at the lioness,” recalled Govender, 38, an engineer and photographer.

The guide, Pierre Potgieter, 66, suffered a heart attack and is hospitalized after what he called “the worst experience’’ of his life.

Govender continued, “After the first bite, the lioness retreated from the car with blood dripping from her mouth and paw.’’

But the horror was far from over.

The animal staged a second, even more devastating attack.

“Her face was torn apart. The right side of her chest was gone,” Govender said of Chappell. “Nothing could have been done to save that woman.’

The lioness, Govander said, “had half . . . her shoulder in its mouth.’’

Chappell, a Hofstra grad who worked as a visual-effects artist on HBO’s “Game of Thrones” and big-budget flicks including “Captain America” and “Godzilla,” was in South Africa volunteering at a different wildlife preserve, relatives said Saturday during the service at the Graham Funeral Home.

Her boyfriend, Greyson Hoare, tearfully told the gathering of about 100 mourners that he had warned Chappell before she left to remember “she’s just a city girl, she has to be careful out there.”

Chappell’s sister, Jennifer Ringwald, delivered a eulogy, calling her “fearless.”

“Katie had an unbridled passion for everything under the sun,” Ringwald said. “Nobody who met her could ever forget her.”

“Her flaw was that she was a 5-foot-4, 90-pound woman, but deep down she believed she was a 6-foot-4, 250-pound man,” she said

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