The two brothers who survived a tiger attack at the San
Francisco Zoo on Christmas day were denied claims seeking unlimited financial
damages by the San Francisco City Attorney’s office, documents reveal.
A 250-pound Siberian tigress, named Tatiana that managed to
escape its grotto December 25, fatally mauling Carlos Sousa Jr., 17, attacked claimants
Paul Dhaliwal, 19, and Kulbir Dhaliwal, 24 before being shot by police. The
brothers contend that they suffered serious injuries and emotional harm during
the attack.
On March 26, Attorneys Mark Geragos and Shepard Kopp filed
the claims, seeking unspecified financial compensation, on behalf of the
Dhaliwal brothers.
A letter signed by City Attorney Dennis Herrera and dated
May 8, states there is “no indication of liability on the part of the City and
Country” in the incident. Therefore, the claims are denied.
The letter also directs the Dhaliwal brothers to file a
claim with the San Francisco Zoological Society, the nonprofit organization
that operates the zoo, the San Francisco Chronicle reports.
The brothers now have six months to file a lawsuit against
the city, said Matt Dorsey, a representative for City Attorney Dennis Herrera. “This
is sort of a procedural hoop. It would be really unusual for any case where
there is a question of comparative fault or liability to be settled in a claim,”
he said.
Geragos stated a lawsuit will be filed.
Zoo representative Lora LaMarca declined to comment on the
brothers’ claims because of the upcoming lawsuit.
After the tiger attack, Paul Dhaliwal was arrested on
unrelated charges that he stole two Nintendo Wii controllers at Target stores
in
They had other troubles with the law. On Sept. 7, both brothers were charged with public intoxication and resisting arrest, two misdemeanors. Paul Dhaliwal, the now alleged thief, was also charged with misdemeanor battery on a police officer.