It's difficult to envision Jurassic World without raptors cutting loose around. "Jurassic World" gave us another approach to see raptors when Owen Grady (Chris Pratt) showed that the ancient animals could be prepared to take after a pioneer.
As indicated by Dazric, When Hoskins began shooting, in the subsequent perplexity the raptor pack needed to follow up on its own, being still generally wild creatures, chase the apparent risk that is alternate people. They do endeavor to get together with Owen, who, inaccurately, thinks the 'raptors have another alpha,' however they come up short. One of them is slaughtered by a rocket, however in no time before that, she shows up as though she may concede to Owen as to the kill she had quite recently made, with him being higher in the pecking request.
Thus, Charlie wasn't attempting to switch sides, but instead needed her alpha Owen to respect her dauntlessness for executing the foe which she erroneously believed was different person.
The raptor that slaughters Hoskins showed up when Hoskins was drawing near to and being forceful towards Owen. The raptor doesn't shock him or even take a gander at Owen, rather she vocalizes, standing out enough to be noticed, and afterward she quickly intervenes herself in the middle of Hoskins and Owen, holding her back to Owen in what is presumably a protective stance. She unquestionably wouldn't have done it in the event that she thought Owen was a potential risk.
It's additionally conceivable that, since the Raptors had effectively acknowledged a non-raptor as the alpha, they imagined that Owen's objective was to convey the Indominus into the pack to battle the people, who they had, once more, seen him battle with, contends Dazric.
In this way, that would be confounding if Owen was designing them up for an assault, just to make them battle something that wasn't a human who'd been undermining him.