Man Killed Running with Bulls in Spain
Rogue Bull Deals 1 Fatal Goring, Wounds 9 Others During Pamplona Festival
-
Play CBS Video Video Bull Attacks Crowd During Run CBS News Raw: A bull that got separated from the pack attacked the crowd during the fourth run of eight held at the San Fermin festival in Pamplona, northern Spain.
-
Revelers run on Estafeta Street during the third run beside a San Fermin's banner with El Ventorrillo fighting bulls at the San Fermin festival, in Pamplona, northern Spain, July 9, 2009. (AP Photo/Alvaro Barrientos)
-
Photo Essay Running of the Bulls The San Fermin festival attracts thousands of visitors for nine days of revelry, bull runs and bullfights.
-
Fast Facts Spain Learn about the people, economy and history.
- Stories
- Bull Run Racks Up More Injuries
For a bull, this one was on the smallish side, at just over a ton. And its name, Capuchino, sounded harmless enough, like coffee with frothy milk.
But of the things that can go wrong when hordes of humans sprint with thundering beasts at Spain's most storied fiesta, the light brown bull did one of the most dangerous on Friday, straying from the pack, spooking and charging at anything that moved.
The rogue bull gored a young Spaniard in the neck, the first fatality in nearly 15 years at Pamplona's running of the bulls. The victim was killed almost instantly as he scurried for cover under a wooden barrier, sliding under it feet-first.
Had he dived headfirst, the experienced bull runner and son of a Pamplona native would probably still be alive.
At least nine people were injured in the fourth of eight planned runs, illustrating the festival's extraordinary drawing power and global lure: two were Americans in their 60s, one of whom suffered a blow to the chest, one a Londoner aged 20, and another a young man from Argentina.
The party went on despite the death, the 15th since record keeping began in 1924. The running of the bulls - made famous by Ernest Hemingway's novel "The Sun Also Rises" - has never been suspended just because someone has died in the mad, half mile (850-meter) dash from a holding pen to the city's bull ring.
There, the same six bulls that run in the cool of the morning over cobblestone streets face off against matadors and the prospect of almost certain death in the afternoon. Ironically, on Friday, Capuchino was scheduled to go first.
A minute of silence was to be observed in memory of the late Spaniard, identified as Daniel Jimeno Romero, 27, from Alcala de Henares, a town outside Madrid. On the social networking site Netlog, where condolences were being posted Friday, he described himself as a glassmaker who loves soccer and snowboarding.
Friday's run got ugly quickly. Capuchino was running at the head of the pack at a hill leading up from the holding pen. The bulls go very fast at that point because their front legs are shorter than their hind ones, allowing them to run better on an incline than on level ground. Herders with sticks chased them, to keep them going.
But 1,130-pound Capuchino, about 200 pounds lighter than the biggest of the group, tripped over some runners and ended up lagging behind.
The bulls run with six steers meant to keep them in a tight pack, and tend to mind their own business as long as they stay together. But a bull that gets separated is more likely to get frightened and aggressive, and that is what happened Friday, leading to chaos.
"As the bull approached, it attacked runners seeking refuge at the fence," said Roberto Sanz, 43, a veteran Pamplona runner who was near Jimeno Romero when he died but did not witness it.
Amateur video footage shows Jimeno Romero, wearing white pants and a brown-and-white striped shirt, trotting backward as he faced the oncoming bull and stumbling when other runners go down. He tried to squeeze under the fence, and was halfway there, when Capuchino caught him with a single swipe of his right horn.
Jimeno Romero began bleeding profusely and was tended to quickly by medics as he lay with his eyes half open.
Later, when Capuchino reached a stretch right outside the bullring, he started charging right and left, and ran back the wrong way several times. Runners sprinted to wooden barriers along the route for safety as the bull attacked. Herders tried in vain to guide it into the ring, yanking on the animal's tail to turn it around.
This went on for a minute and a half, which is an eternity at the San Fermin festival. Fast runs - the whole sprint - can end in just over two minutes.
At one point the bull picked one man up with its horns and flipped him into the air as if he were a toy, then kept going after him as he lay curled up on the ground, covering his face. He got up and ran away, and was apparently not seriously hurt.
"It was a light bull. Its charges were not particularly strong but it moved very fast from left to right," one of the bull herders, Humberto Miguel, told The Associated Press. "Of the whole pack, it was the one that gave us the most trouble."
The bulls used in Friday's run, from a ranch called Jandilla, have a reputation for being fierce at San Fermin. They hold the record for the most gorings in a single run - eight, one day in 2004.
The last fatal goring at the running of the bulls was that of 22-year-old American Matthew Tassio in 1995. Then, the problem was not a stray bull but a fatal mistake by Tassio: after falling, rather than stay on the ground and wait for the pack to pass over, he stood up and faced the animals. A bull's horn hit him right in the chest.
In 2003, a 63-year-old Spanish man, Fermin Etxeberri, was trampled in the head by a bull and died after spending months in a coma.
Fatalities are relatively rare and when one occurs, it serves as a reminder that amid all the street parties and revelry associated with San Fermin, running with fighting bulls is a life-risking exercise.
© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
- The idiots epitaph should read as follows.
Here lies Romero, he acted the fool, Capuchino got him, that's no bull! - Reply to this comment
- Interesting take on pamplona here: https://www.mindreign.com/en/mindshare/World-Politics-and-Current-Events/Stop-the-Running-of-the-Bulls-3f-No-Way-/sl34045952bp314cpp5pn1.html
gruesome photo of man's leg being impaled here: http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www.indiaonrent.com/forwards/m/mans-leg-gored-by-bull-with-photo/res/h6ldou.jpg&imgrefurl=http://www.indiaonrent.com/view/m/mans-leg-gored-by-bull-with-photo.html&usg=__SM5ytd3d3squ52BQcIh9bx6LUgE=&h=344&w=508&sz=54&hl=en&start=1&sig2=Dz429QspN79_MX-osNIr_g&um=1&tbnid=_OM2mDJ_Dx32GM:&tbnh=89&tbnw=131&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dpamplona%2Bbull%2Bman%2527s%2Bleg%26hl%3Den%26rls%3Dcom.microsoft:en-US%26sa%3DN%26um%3D1&ei=xmFXSq6PCoLCmQf8n7CuAQ - Reply to this comment
- I wish more people were killed...
- Reply to this comment
- Wonder if his headstone will read "Died Like A Real Man". Stupid and senseless way to die.
- Reply to this comment
- I always root for the bulls because the Spanish are so cruel to animals. It does take guts to do the event (liquor doesn't hurt). As one who has been chased by a bull I can tell you it isn't all that entertaining.
- Reply to this comment
- Yee-ha! I haven't laughed this hard since the pigs ate grampa!!
- Reply to this comment
- The bull was fined $300 and given 100 hours of community service with a year of probation. His lawyer is considering appeal.
- Reply to this comment
- If there wasn't a measure of risk the event wouldn't be as sexy. It's likely more people were killed in auto accidents just driving to the event over the last 15 years than have been killed in the event itself. Funny to see everybody get nutty about one death in 15 years. Trying adding up the number of deaths attributed to other events. Airshows, auto racing, mountain climbing, water & snow skiing, skydiving....etc.. This running of the bulls is relatively safe compared to some others.
- Reply to this comment
- Why is this NEWS? You mess around with a 2,000lb animal you will get killed.
- Reply to this comment
- I wonder if anyone got this on video?
- Reply to this comment
- death is still tragic even if poor judgement is used, but stupid comments such as the many that are posted; well the day of your demise i suppose we should all get a good laugh out of that!as for peta, have a cheese burger and relax and don't forget to go out side and get some sun. ps: perhaps a date with the opposite sex may help a bit as well
- Reply to this comment
- This bozo is certainly a candidate for a Darwin Award. Lets hope he hadn't reproduced yet.
- Reply to this comment
- Where is PETA?? You mean they are not over there protesting the inhumane treatment of the Bulls!!!! Gosh, a cause they are not present for. What is this world coming to???
- Reply to this comment
- Government supported, assisted suicide is insane. Participating in the event is more insane, if that's possible.
- Reply to this comment
- Hurray for the bull. Finally they got someone. You can't fix stupid. Let's hope that there are a dozen more just like him.
- Reply to this comment
- You play with the bull, you get the horn. That simple.
Spain is in a league of its own when it comes to traditions of torturing animals.
I'd like to hear someone defend the "tie firecrackers to a bulls horns and watch it freak out festival" or the "throw a goat off a church" festival. - Reply to this comment
- too bad more people didnt die. cause then i would hope that they realize this senseless tradition needs to stop. a man died because why???...stupidity. its nothing but a glorified animal cruelty show towards the end.
- Reply to this comment
- If you do something that stupid and temp fate, I'm sorry but you are just asking for it. It is one of the stupid evens I have ever heard of along with bull fighting.
- Reply to this comment
- Sorry, zero sympathy here. This asinine "custom" needs to be stopped and as long as people stupidly put themselves in danger, I don't see why we should be wailing in grief when someone gets killed. A true "no-brainer", folks.
- Reply to this comment




