New Jersey state troopers pull bear cub from interstate ditch, hand it off to wildlife officials

 April 6, 2026

A bear cub found alone in a ditch along I-78 in northern New Jersey is now in the care of state wildlife officials after troopers from the New Jersey State Police stepped in to rescue it Wednesday afternoon.

Troopers from the Perryville station responded shortly before 1:40 p.m. to milepost 12.2 on I-78 eastbound in Union Township, where the cub was found by itself with no mother in sight, Police1 reported.

The animal was safely secured and transported back to the state police barracks, then turned over to staffers with New Jersey's Environmental Protection Department, who took over its care.

How the cub ended up in a highway ditch remains unknown. So does how long it sat there before someone spotted it. Details on the bear's condition were not available as of Friday.

The Part of Policing Nobody Talks About

Stories like this rarely make the national news cycle. They don't generate outrage clicks. They don't fuel debates on cable panels. But they represent the kind of work that law enforcement officers across the country do every single day: respond to whatever the call demands, whether it's a violent felony or a stranded bear cub on the shoulder of a busy highway.

The troopers who responded didn't know exactly what they'd find. A lone bear cub near a major interstate poses real dangers, both to the animal and to drivers traveling at highway speeds. An animal darting into traffic on I-78 could cause a serious accident. The troopers handled it quickly and turned the cub over to the appropriate wildlife authorities. Clean, professional, unremarkable in the best sense of the word.

That's policing. Not the version you see on protest signs or in academic papers about "reimagining public safety," but the actual, on-the-ground reality of what officers encounter on any given shift. One hour it's a traffic stop. The next it's a domestic disturbance. The next it's a frightened bear cub in a ditch.

New Jersey's Bear Problem Is Real

New Jersey has one of the densest black bear populations in the country relative to its size, and encounters between bears and humans have been a recurring issue for years. The state's approach to bear management has swung back and forth depending on who occupies the governor's mansion, with bear hunts alternately approved and suspended based on political pressure rather than wildlife science.

A cub found alone alongside a major highway raises the obvious question: where is its mother? Cubs typically stay with their mothers through their first year. A cub separated from its mother on an interstate is a cub in serious trouble, and it's a sign that bear-human overlap in the Garden State isn't going away.

The broader issue is one of habitat management and honest policy. When bear populations grow and suburban sprawl continues, encounters are inevitable. Pretending otherwise, or letting animal rights activism override the recommendations of trained wildlife biologists, doesn't protect bears or people. It just produces more situations where a trooper has to pull a cub out of a highway ditch.

Credit Where It's Due

In an era when law enforcement officers face relentless scrutiny, diminished morale, and recruitment crises that threaten the operational capacity of departments across the country, it's worth pausing on the small moments that reveal character. Nobody was watching these troopers. There were no cameras rolling for a national audience. They got a call, responded, secured a vulnerable animal, and handed it off to the people equipped to care for it.

That's the job. It's not glamorous. It doesn't trend on social media. But it matters, and the men and women who do it deserve to be recognized for the full scope of what they handle, not just the fraction of incidents that generate controversy.

Somewhere in New Jersey, a bear cub is alive because a couple of state troopers showed up.

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