Updated

The Orange County Sheriff's Department released witness statements Monday detailing the death of a SeaWorld trainer by the orca, Tilly.

The killer whale managed to escape workers' frenzied efforts to corral it with plastic nets while it swam pool-to-pool, according to witness statements.

After the massive whale was finally trapped last Wednesday, it refused to unclench its teeth and let go of Dawn Brancheau, according to the investigative reports released by the Sheriff's Office. Its jaws were eventually pried open.

Click Here to Read Testimony From Witnesses

"The whale would not let us have her," another trainer, Jodie Ann Tintle, told investigators after the attack.

Investigators have said that the 40-year-old trainer died from multiple traumatic injuries and drowning.

In the new investigative reports, Brancheau's co-workers describe the swiftness of the attack and the furious response that came after alarms sounded around the pool. Employees who were at other pools, behind computers or emptying coolers of fish rushed to the scene.

The reports released Monday include the first extensive accounts from employees who witnessed the attacks at the park in Orlando.

Jan Topoleski, whose job is to monitor trainers' safety during shows, told investigators he saw Brancheau lying on the deck face-to-face with the 22-foot-long, 12,000-pound whale and communicating with him right before the attack. He said the whale, named Tilikum, bit Brancheau's hair and pulled her into the pool in a span of about two seconds. He sounded an alarm and grabbed safety equipment.

Susanne De Wit, a 33-year-old tourist from the Netherlands, told investigators her group had just walked to a window for a photo when she saw the attack. The attack occurred in front of about 20 visitors who had stuck around after a noontime show.

"Suddenly I saw (the whale) grabbing the trainer ... and pulling her down in the water," she said. "It was scary. He was very wild, with the trainer still in the whale's mouth, the whale's tail was very wild in the water."

Tanner Grogan, who scrambled to help other employees unfurl nets to corral Tilikum, said the whale at one point let go for several seconds, but snatched Brancheau again by the foot before anyone could react. The plastic, weighted nets -- similar to temporary fencing used at construction sites -- were unrolled and dropped in the water to help direct the whale to a pool with a hydraulic lift.

It's not clear how long it took workers to finally trap the whale in that pool and lift him from the water. One witness said it seemed like 10 minutes. Another said it could have been as long as 30 minutes.

Even after the whale was lifted out of the water, Brancheau still could not be freed until the whale's jaws were pried open. The trainer was pronounced dead by paramedics on the deck by the pool.

"Tilly was not giving up Dawn," said Robin Ann Morland, another SeaWorld worker.

Fox News' Serafin Gomez and the Associated Press contributed to this report.

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