Coyote injures 2 toddlers in separate attacks in Scottsdale, Arizona: Officials

Both toddlers were reportedly treated for minor injuries and released.

ByEmily Shapiro ABCNews logo
Friday, March 24, 2023
Video shows toddler being attacked by coyote in Scottsdale, Arizona
Just half a mile away from that incident, another toddler was on a playground near an elementary school when he was also attacked by a coyote, according to an urban wildlife specialist.

Scottsdale, ARIZONA -- Arizona officials are searching for a large coyote that reportedly injured two toddlers in separate attacks in Scottsdale this week.



Kelly Pirozzi told ABC News she was standing in her driveway on Wednesday when the coyote approached and bit her 21-month-old son on the arm in a shocking moment caught on her surveillance camera.



Surveillance cameras captured the moment a coyote attacked a toddler in Scottsdale, Arizona.
Kelly Pirozzi


Surveillance cameras captured the moment a coyote attacked a toddler in Scottsdale, Arizona.
Kelly Pirozzi


The coyote knocked the toddler down, and once the boy started crying, the animal released his arm from its grip, Pirozzi said.



She then rushed her son into the house. Pirozzi said he's OK and only suffered minor bite marks.



"It happened so quickly," she said.



Surveillance cameras captured the moment a coyote attacked a toddler in Scottsdale, Arizona.
Kelly Pirozzi


Just half a mile away from Pirozzi's home, another toddler was on a playground near an elementary school on Saturday when he was attacked by a coyote, according to Darren Julian, an urban wildlife specialist with Arizona Game and Fish.



Officials believe the same coyote was involved in both attacks.



His injuries were also minor, with "showings of scrape marks on his stomach," Julian told ABC News.



Julian said coyote attacks are rare. He said this week's incidents were the first in the Phoenix area since 2017.



But as officials search for the animal, Julian warned that parents should be "extra vigilant" -- even in their own backyards.



Arizona's Game and Fish Department said in a statement that this "coyote shows little fear of people and may have been illegally fed in the past."



The Game and Fish Department said it's patrolling the area with help from Scottsdale police. The department asks anyone who spots a coyote to immediately call 623-236-7201.



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