In the legal world, it'd be called circumstantial evidence. On March 3, one of the Los Angeles Zoo's koalas went missing. Down the road from its enclosure, a tuft of its hair was found. About 365 metres farther down, zookeepers made a grisly discovery: bloody marsupial parts. Something must have been able to carry it that far, park employees figured. So they examined the park's trap cameras - surveillance devices with motion sensors - in an effort to spot the culprit. Though the attack wasn't recorded, they did find still photos of the likely perpetrator: P-22, Griffith Park's most famous mountain lion. Zoo officials don't know how the mountain lion is getting in and out of the sprawling Los...
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