A Texas woman who worked as a caregiver and was found dead outside of the home of the elderly couple she looked after, was attacked and killed by wild hogs, authorities have revealed.
Christine Rollins, 59, was discovered with 'animal related injuries' outside the home in the rural area of Anahuac, Texas on Sunday morning.
On Monday Chambers County Sheriff Brian Hawthorn announced that the autopsy results showed the cause of death was 'exsanguination due to feral hog assault'.
'There were a lot of things related to the death that didn't add up. Some of it were animal bites,' Hawthorne said at a press conference Monday.
'My detectives and the criminal investigation team felt like [feral hogs] was what it was but we couldn't come close to announcing until we had the cause of death from the medical examiner's office,' Hawthorne added.
Rollins was on the property of the elderly couple she looked after that spanned 10 to 12 acres. Authorities say 'the feral hogs have taken over some of their family land.'
Sheriff Hawthorn said the hog assault is a 'very rare incident' and less than six of such deaths have been reported in the U.S.
Dead Texas caregiver was attacked and killed by wild hogs
Texas caregiver Christine Rollins, 59, was attacked and killed by feral hogs on Sunday outside a home in Anahuac, the Chambers County Sheriff's Office announced Monday.
