CHIMP VICTIM HANGING ONTO LIFE
The Connecticut woman viciously attacked by a 200-pound chimp who inexplicably went bananas remains in critical condition this afternoon and faces “life-changing, if not life-threatening injuries” to her face and hands, officials said. The chimpanzee, named Travis, was shot dead by police in Stamford after the violent rampage Monday left a friend of its owner badly mauled. Sandra Herold, who owned the 15-year-old chimp, wrestled with the animal after it attacked her friend, Charla Nash, 55.

. . .

“There was no provocation that we know of,” said Conklin. “One thing that we’re looking into is that we understand the chimpanzee has Lyme disease and has been ill from that, so maybe from the medications he was out of sorts. We really don’t know.” After the 3:30 p.m. attack, Travis ran away and started roaming Herold’s property until police arrived - setting up security so medics could reach the critically injured woman. But the chimpanzee returned and went after several of the officers, who retreated into their cars. Travis knocked the mirror off a cruiser before opening its door and starting to get in, trapping the cop. That officer shot the chimpanzee several times. “The animal had cornered him,” Conklin said. “He had no other recourse.”

The wounded chimpanzee fled the scene, but Conklin said police were able to follow the trail of his blood down a driveway, into the open door of the home, through the house and to his living quarters, where he died of his wounds. Herold and two officers also suffered minor injuries. Cops had dealt with the chimp in the past - including an incident in 2003 when he escaped from his owners’ car in downtown Stamford for two hours. At the time, officers used cookies, macadamia nuts and ice cream in an attempt to lure him, but subdued him only after he became too tired to resist.

At the time of the 2003 incident, police said the Herold assured them that the chimpanzee - who was toilet trained, dressed himself, took his own bath, ate at the table and drank wine from a glass - was not a threat to others. Colleen McCann, a primatologist at the Bronx Zoo, said chimps are unpredictable and dangerous even after living among humans for years. “They are unpredictable, and in instances like this you cannot control that behavior or prevent it from happening if it is in a private home,” she said.