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Title: Programmed to kill: The growing epidemic of cops shooting dogs
Source: Intellihub/Rutherford Institute
URL Source: https://www.intellihub.com/programm ... pidemic-of-cops-shooting-dogs/
Published: Oct 6, 2016
Author: John Whitehead
Post Date: 2016-10-06 07:13:27 by Deckard
Keywords: None
Views: 9171
Comments: 22

“In too much of policing today, officer safety has become the highest priority. It trumps the rights and safety of suspects. It trumps the rights and safety of bystanders. It’s so important, in fact, that an officer’s subjective fear of a minor wound from a dog bite is enough to justify using potentially lethal force, in this case at the expense of a 4-year-old girl. And this isn’t the first time. In January, an Iowa cop shot and killed a woman by mistake while trying to kill her dog. Other cops have shot other kidsother bystanderstheir partnerstheir supervisors and even themselves while firing their guns at a dog. That mind-set is then, of course, all the more problematic when it comes to using force against people.”—Journalist Radley Balko

Almost two years after the firestorm that took place in Ferguson, Missouri, when a white police officer shot an unarmed black teenager and militarized police descended in a brutal show of force to quell local protests, not much has really changed for the better.

Unarmed Americans are still getting shot by police with alarming regularity.

SWAT teams are still bursting through doors, terrorizing families and leaving lives and property shattered. In one incident, a Kansas SWAT team erroneously raided the home of two former CIA analysts after police observed family members shopping at a gardening store and found loose-leaf tea (mistaken for marijuana) in the family’s trash can.

And the military industrial complex is still making a killing (literally and figuratively) at taxpayer expense from the transformation of small-town police forces—“kitted out with Marine-issue camouflage and military-grade body armor, toting short-barreled assault rifles, and rolling around in armored vehicles”—into extensions of the military.

What has changed is the extent to which Americans—easily distracted by all of the political mumbo jumbo being bantered around—seem to have stopped paying attention or being outraged about revelations of government corruption, wrongdoing and outright abuse.

Part of this ignorance can be attributed to the failure of the mainstream media to report on what’s really taking place in the American police state. As The Huffington Post reports, “The media has turned its sights to the heated presidential election, burning through the oxygen that had given life to stories about police brutality and reform.”

Another part of this apathy can be chalked up to a widespread desensitization to police violence, thanks to the growing availability and accessibility of surveillance and camera footage. As Salon points out, “the increased visibility of trauma and death at the hands of cops” has resulted in “the deadening of our collective senses.”

And yet another part of this indifference seemingly stems from the fact that we just don’t value human life as much as we should. How many Americans seem unconcerned about the carnage inflicted on civilians worldwide as a result of the nation’s bloody, endless wars abroad? As The Washington Post makes clear, the end result of ignoring these civilian casualties and burying memories of war’s destruction is more wars, more blowback, and more innocent blood on our hands.

If there’s one area where Americans do seem to still get outraged, it’s in relation to their pets, who occupy a sizeable place in their hearts, homes and wallets.

According to newspaper editors, “stories about animal abuse often generate more responses from upset readers than articles about violence directed toward humans.” Reports from police agencies support the claim that “shooting a dog brings more heat down on an agency than an officer-involved shooting of a human.”

Prepare to be outraged.

A dog is shot by a police officer “every 98 minutes.”

The Department of Justice estimates that at least 25 dogs are killed by police every day.

The Puppycide Database Project estimates the number of dogs being killed by police to be closer to 500 dogs a day (which translates to 182,000 dogs a year).

Because not all police departments keep track of canine shootings, these numbers vary widely. However, whatever the final body count, what we’re dealing with is an epidemic of vast proportions.

Incredibly, in 1 out of 5 cases involving police shooting a family pet, a child was either in the police line of fire or in the immediate area of a shooting.

The so-called “dangerous” breeds of dogs aren’t the only ones that are being killed in encounters with police either.

Journalist Radley Balko has documented countless “dog shootings in which a police officer said he felt ‘threatened’ and had no choice but to use lethal force, including the killing of a Dalmatian (more than once), a yellow Lab , a springer spaniel, a chocolate Lab, a boxer, an Australian cattle dog, a Wheaten terrier, an Akita… a Jack Russell terrier… a 12-pound miniature dachshund… [and] a five-pound chihuahua.”

Essentially, police can shoot your dog for any reason or no reason at all.

What’s more, the general consensus from the courts thus far has been to absolve police from charges of wrongdoing. Conversely, while police routinely receive little blowback for shooting family pets, shooting a police dog can land you in just as much trouble as if you shoot a human being: for instance, a teenager who shot and killed a police dog received a 23-year prison sentence.

Outraged yet?

Not to worry. I’m just getting warmed up.

Spike, a 70-pound pit bull, was shot by NYPD police when they encountered him in the hallway of an apartment building in the Bronx. Surveillance footage shows the dog, tail wagging, right before an officer shot him in the head at pointblank range.

Arzy, a 14-month-old Newfoundland, Labrador and golden retriever mix, was shot between the eyes by a Louisiana police officer. The dog had been secured on a four-foot leash at the time he was shot. An independent witness testified that the dog never gave the officer any provocation to shoot him.

Seven, a St. Bernard, was shot repeatedly by Connecticut police in the presence of the dog’s 12-year-old owner. Police, investigating an erroneous tip, had entered the property—without a warrant—where the dog and her owner had been playing in the backyard, causing the dog to give chase.

Dutchess, a 2-year-old rescue dog, was shot three times in the head by Florida police as she ran out her front door. The officer had been approaching the house to inform the residents that their car door was open when the dog bounded out to greet him.

Yanna, a 10-year-old boxer, was shot three times by Georgia police after they mistakenly entered the wrong home and opened fire, killing the dog, shooting the homeowner in the leg and wounding an investigating officer.

Payton, a 7-year-old black Labrador retriever, and 4-year-old Chase, also a black Lab, were shot and killed after a SWAT team mistakenly raided the mayor’s home while searching for drugs. Police shot Payton four times. Chase was shot twice, once from behind as he ran away. “My government blew through my doors and killed my dogs. They thought we were drug dealers, and we were treated as such. I don’t think they really ever considered that we weren’t,” recalls Mayor Cheye Calvo, who described being handcuffed and interrogated for hours—wearing only underwear and socks—surrounded by the dogs’ carcasses and pools of the dogs’ blood.

In another instance, a Missouri SWAT team raided a family home, killing a 4-year-old pit bull Kiya. Believe it or not, this time the SWAT raid wasn’t in pursuit of drugs, mistaken or otherwise, but was intended “to check if [the] home had electricity and natural gas service.”

Mind you, these are not isolated instances.

There are websites, community action organizations and Facebook groups that do nothing but publicize dog shootings by police, and there are a lot of them. One filmmaker, Andrea B. Scott, has even put together a documentary to raise awareness about the epidemic.

Clearly, our four-legged friends are suffering at the hands of a police state in which the police have all the rights and the citizenry (and their “civilian” dogs) have little to none.

As always, we have to dig down deep to understand why is this happening.

Are family dogs really such a menace to police? Are law enforcement agents really so fearful for their safety—and so badly trained—that they have no recourse when they encounter a dog than to shoot? Finally, are police shootings of dogs really any different than police shootings of unarmed citizens?

First off, dogs are no greater menace to police than they are to anyone else. After all, as the Washington Post points out, while “postal workers regularly encounter both vicious and gregarious dogs on their daily rounds… letter carriers don’t kill dogs, even though they are bitten by the thousands every year. Instead, the Postal Service offers its employees training on how to avoid bites.”

Second, these dog shootings epitomize a larger, societal problem with law enforcement agencies prioritizing an “officer safety” mindset that encourages police to shoot first and ask questions later. We’d have a lot fewer police shootings (of dogs and unarmed citizens) if police weren’t quite so preoccupied with “officer safety” at the expense of all else.

As commentator William Norman Grigg pointed out, “A peace officer is paid to assume certain risks, including those necessary to de-escalate a confrontation… A ‘veteran’ deputy with the mindset of a peace officer would have taken more than a shaved fraction of a split-second to open fire on a small male individual readily identifiable as a junior high school student, who was carrying an object that is easily recognizable as a toy—at least to people who don’t see themselves as an army of occupation, and view the public as an undifferentiated mass of menace.”

Third, these dog killings are, as Balko recognizes, “a side effect of the new SWAT, paramilitary focus in many police departments, which has supplanted the idea of being an ‘officer of the peace.’” Thus, whether you’re talking about police shooting dogs or citizens, the mindset is the same: a rush to violence, abuse of power, fear for officer safety, poor training in how to de-escalate a situation, and general carelessness.

That paramilitary focus has resulted in a government mindset that allows SWAT teams and other government agents to invade your home, break down your doors, kill your dog (the dog always gets shot first), wound or kill you, damage your furnishings and terrorize your family.

This is the same mindset that sees nothing wrong with American citizens being subjected to roadside strip searches, forcible blood draws, invasive surveillance, questionable exposure to radiation and secret government experiments, and other morally reprehensible tactics.

Unfortunately, this is a mindset that is flourishing within the corporate-controlled, military-driven American police state.

So what’s to be done about all of this?

In terms of our four-legged friends, many states are adopting laws to make canine training mandatory for police officers. As dog behavior counselor Brian Kilcommons noted, officers’ inclination to “take command and take control” can cause them to antagonize dogs unnecessarily. Officers “need to realize they’re there to neutralize, not control… If they have enough money to militarize the police with Humvees, they have enough money to train them not to kill family members. And pets are considered family.”

Frankly, police should also be made to undergo classes annually on how to peacefully resolve and de-escalate situations with the citizenry. While they’re at it, they should be forced to de-militarize. No one outside the battlefield—and barring a foreign invasion, the U.S. should never be considered a domestic battlefield—should be equipped with the kinds of weapons and gear being worn and used by local police forces today. If the politicians are serious about instituting far-reaching gun control measures, let them start by taking the guns and SWAT teams away from the countless civilian agencies that have nothing to do with military defense that are packing lethal heat.

Finally, there will be no end to the bloodshed—of unarmed Americans or their family pets—until police stop viewing themselves as superior to those whom they are supposed to serve and start acting like the peace officers they’re supposed to be. Ultimately, this comes down to better—and constant—training in nonviolent tactics, serious consequences for those who engage in excessive force, and a seismic shift in how the law enforcement agencies and the courts deal with those who transgress.

As I point out in my book Battlefield America: The War on the American People, when you’re trained to kill anything that poses the slightest threat (imagined or real), when you’ve been instructed to view yourself as a soldier and those you’re supposed to serve as enemy combatants on a battlefield, when you can kill and there are no legal consequences for your actions, and when you are deemed immune from lawsuits holding you accountable for the use of excessive force, then it won’t matter what gets in your way. Whether it’s a family pet, a child with a toy gun, or an old man with a cane—you’re going to shoot to kill.

Via Rutherford Institute

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 6.

#3. To: Deckard (#0)

On May 19, just before 7:30 p.m. Gary Jones was enjoying a peaceful evening at home on Francis Street. And then that was disturbed.

“I heard the most terrible screams I ever heard,” he said. He ran outside, down the block and around the corner to Perry Street, where he saw Rachael Hyam being put on a stretcher and loaded into an ambulance. Her dog, Charley, a mini-poodle puppy, was in the hands of a neighbor who was taking it to Brookline Animal hospital. Other neighbors were consoling a young dog walker. And someone was holding a brown Rhodesian ridgeback mix to keep him from escaping - or attacking - again. Jones' wife was in shock. Emergency crews arrived quickly, but neighbors and Hyam were not happy with how the incident was handled by the police – though police, and the town's lawyer said they followed protocol.

Now, four months later, Jones wants to make sure residents are aware when what he calls vicious dog attacks happen in their neighborhood and that every police officer knows how to respond to a dog attack call. To that end, he's filed a Town Meeting warrant, which will be considered next month.

The attack

Jones’s wife told him how while walking their dog, Yogi, she ran into Hyam. She asked if she could pet Hyam's dog and the two got into a conversation. At some point, she saw a brown dog running toward them from behind Hyam. She told Hyam to turn around because of the dog. The ridgeback mix seemed to run straight for Charley and attacked, she said. Hyam reached down and picked up her puppy, holding him to her chest, but the bigger dog continued trying to get at Charley. She tried pushing the attacking dog away and made her way up the walkway of the home where they had been standing.

With both Hyam and Jones screaming at the dog, which kept biting and lunging at her neck, neighbors came out to see what was going on.

Paul Nguyen who lives across the way grabbed a shovel whacked the big dog to distract it. Then Nguyen and another neighbor, Nancy Michael, pulled the dog off Hyam. Eliot Gilwan restrained it, while someone else called the police. Neighbors seem to be in consensus about how the attack unfolded. Someone took photos of Hyams injuries, but the TAB was not able to obtain those images. The Brookline police chief and the town counsel both acknowledged the seriousness of the attack at a recent meeting at town hall.

Call to 911

The first call came to Brookline dispatch at 7:29 p.m. Dispatch simply noted in the log there was a dog attack on Perry Street by a loose dog and the woman had some “cuts.” Seven minutes later another call came in reporting the attack. Officer Robert Mayer responded because the Animal Control officer –there’s only one in town – doesn’t work evenings. Mayer told the chief that, when he arrived, the scene was chaotic, but there was no aggressive dog in sight. There were signs of an incident, and neighbors directed him to where Hyam was laying down, holding her dog.

Fallon Ambulance and the fire department provided first aid and put Hyam into the ambulance.

The officer spoke with the boy who was walking the dog accused of attacking Hyam. The teen told the officer the ridgeback mix had broken free of his leash several times that day, causing him to chase it through yards. According to the police report, the boy said the ridgeback had begun to attack another dog before setting on Charley and Hyam. When the officer later called the owner of the dog, she told him she’d never had any problems with either of her dogs or the dog walker.

‘What do we do about this dog?’

Jones said when the police officer arrived he ordered everyone to leave. “What are you going to do about this violent, mad dog?," Jones said he asked the officer.

He said the officer told him he wasn’t the animal control officer, so it wasn’t his responsibility. Neighbors said he didn't call for backup, and he didn't take interview statements at that time.

“The officer left us in the neighborhood to control that dangerous dog,” he said. “It’s a big concern in our neighborhood. It was a terrible incident where Rachel was almost killed. And the indifference of the police is what disturbed us.” Jones said he was confused with why the dog that had just attacked a neighbor was permitted to return home, though Brookline Police Chief Daniel O’Leary said that’s what Brookline’s law allows and, although he's not the Animal Control Officer, all officers should know that regulation.

Town Counsel Joslin Murphy said a police officer can detain a dog, but that's left up to the their judgment "There are several mitigating factors. If there was no one available to restrain the dog, if the dog were in the act of being menacing or aggressive that might be a circumstance for an officer to impound the dog. Of course the point is to make sure the dog is properly restrained," she said.

The officer on duty filed his report and turned the case over to the Animal Control Officer, per protocol, who then conducted interviews.

Following the police investigation, the police ordered the dog be muzzled every time it left the house for 180 days, as per town bylaw. But Jones and other neighbors say that wasn’t enough.

Kill the dog?

Jones is trying to bring the issue before Town Meeting and Hyam’s husband is requesting a dangerous dog hearing before town officials, petitioning to put the dog down.

“We haven’t had a hearing on a dangerous dog in a long time,” said O’Leary adding that the last such hearing might have been more than a decade ago, even though there are a number of dog bites reported on a weekly basis. “It seemed to me this woman was injured more severely than what we see with a normal dog bite call.”

Still, he said, although residents wanted the officer to take the dog away or shoot it, that’s not how the law works. “There’s a process you have to go through to remove a dog like that. We still have to follow the protocol – which is just what the animal control officer did,” he said.

There are some factors the police have to investigate that might influence how the dog is handled, he said, including that the dog ran away from a dog walker, not the owner and that this was a first time offense for the dog in Brookline. A dangerous dog hearing is the next step, he said. An official, most likely Alan Balsam of the health department, will hold a hearing per the request of residents, and listen to both sides of the story to determine whether the dog should be deemed officially “dangerous.” Murphy said he can recommend a number of things at the end of the hearing, including euthanasia.

To Hyam, there’s no question.

It took her weeks before she would leave her house after she returned home from the hospital. And now she won’t leave unless she’s got pepper spray and a baseball bat – just in case.

"It’s not that I hate that dog or I want that dog to die, but something is wrong with him," she said.

http://brookline.wickedlocal.com/news/20160927/dog-attack-prompts- brookline-neighbors-to-call-for-action.

Gatlin  posted on  2016-10-06   7:51:42 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: Gatlin (#3) (Edited)

Not relevant to the topic originally posted in the article.

No one is claiming that some dogs are not violent, so you can stop your egregious pontificating.

The point of the article is that cops are basically either cowards or sadists when it comes to their encounters with family pets - try and grasp that simple concept instead of going nolu spam on the thread, OK pumpkin?

First off, dogs are no greater menace to police than they are to anyone else. After all, as the Washington Post points out, while “postal workers regularly encounter both vicious and gregarious dogs on their daily rounds… letter carriers don’t kill dogs, even though they are bitten by the thousands every year. Instead, the Postal Service offers its employees training on how to avoid bites.”

Deckard  posted on  2016-10-06   8:02:13 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: Deckard (#4)

DALLAS — A deep growl came from the other side of Shaniqua Roland's front door.

She was pregnant at the time and headed to a doctor's appointment, but she knew she couldn't leave the house. Not with the dogs back.

For half an hour, as she tried to shoo them away, a pack of pit bulls snarled and snapped at her metal door. She thought of her sister, who'd recently lost a chunk of her calf in a dog attack. She'd see her doctor another day.

"It's crazy," Roland said, sighing. "I don't walk outside anymore. No way."

Across the low-income, predominantly black and Latino neighborhoods of southern Dallas, so many stray, sometimes vicious dogs roam the streets that many residents have given up on going outside with-out a bat or pipe for protection. Some carry pepper spray.

It’s been a problem for years, Roland said. The daughter she was pregnant with when trapped in her home is now 2.

But a tipping point came in May, when at least four dogs fatally attacked Antoinette Brown, 52, in an overgrown lot just across the street from Roland's home. The mauling was so vicious — fang marks dotted her body and a chunk of a biceps was missing — that a police officer compared it to a shark attack.

After that, Dallas officials hired a consulting firm, which released a report this summer estimating that nearly 9,000 loose dogs live south of Interstate 30 — the separation line in the largely segregated city.

Consultants drove around the city several days this summer and spotted strays of all sizes and breeds in southern Dallas. A few pit bulls, but also a small, fluffy gray dog and a sleek black one with white paws.

Councilman Casey Thomas, who grew up in and represents a swath of southern Dallas, said the area had been "plagued" by loose dogs for as long as he could remember.

"It's a huuuge problem," he said, stretching the vowel for emphasis. "People walking with sticks and golf clubs? That's a quality-of-life issue."

The problem is almost entirely in southern Dallas, a situation Thomas attributes to lower spay and neutering rates as well as a shortage of veterinary clinics in the poorer neighborhoods.

Residents say some of the dogs get left behind after people are evicted, with others dumped into the neighborhood by people from other parts of town.

Since Brown's death, Thomas said, Dallas Animal Services has rounded up strays and increased patrols in problem areas. The city also assigned a deputy police chief to tackle the problem.

During a news conference a few days after five Dallas policemen were fatally shot at a protest in July, Police Chief David Brown cited the loose-dog problem as one of many "societal failures" that police are now being asked to solve.

And there's no quick fix.

Essicka Wilson, 40, said she heard a desperate scream from outside her red-brick home in southern Dallas in July. "Stooooooop!" she heard a woman shout. "Get away!"

Another attack. This time the woman survived.

A few days after the mauling, the family of the woman who was bitten dozens of times told Dallas television station KFAA that she had been released from the hospital and would recover.

People shouldn't have to live like this, Wilson said, adding that she shouldn't have to worry about her children playing in the front yard or about what might happen to her Chihuahua named Abraham — Ham, for short — if other dogs sneak into her yard.

She said she has had nightmares about a pack of dogs descending on her as she walks to the car.

In her dream, she tries to sprint but her rheumatoid arthritis hobbles her. The dogs catch her.

"Dogs didn't used to be like that," she said, shaking her head. "So vicious."

But Rekka Melby of the Street Dog Project, a Dallas nonprofit group focused on rescuing animals from a neighborhood in southern Dallas, said it was "extremely rare" to find a ferocious dog on the streets. That certainly hasn't been true, she said, of any of the 45 dogs rescued since the group started in March, describing the canines instead as a bit skittish and eager for consistency.

"They just need to get in a home and they're fine," she said.

The group focuses on spending time in the neighborhood, talking to people about spay and neutering and helping with small tasks such as patching holes in fences dogs might use to escape.

"We're looking for people in the neighborhood who want to help the animals, and then they can pay it forward," Melby said.

Back at Roland's house, she had just gotten off the phone with city officials on a recent morning — the third time in as many days. She wanted Dallas Animal Services to know she had spotted more dogs.

Sometimes, in the quiet moments when no dogs are around, Roland sits on her porch staring across the street at the abandoned lot. There, tucked between a small white cross and orange tulips made of cloth, is a note to Antoinette Brown from her daughter.

"I really don't understand why this had to happen to my mom," it reads. "I just hope you're in heaven watching down on us. ... Happy Birthday, Mom."

http://www.chron.com/news/houston-texas/article/Vicious-stray-dog-attacks- leave-Dallas-9232201.php.

Gatlin  posted on  2016-10-06   8:07:22 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: Deckard (#5)

Police say an officer put four bullets into a dog after it attacked a man holding a baby in a Sandy Hill park then turned toward the fallen child.

But the owner of the dead dog is asking why non-lethal measures weren’t tried, and is offering a different version of the Friday night incident.

Patsy Stevens said the whole thing transpired so quickly she’s still trying to piece it all together.

She knows her son’s dog, Lance, a three-year-old Rottweiler-bull mastiff mix, broke free from her control, ran to a packed public park and grabbed onto a piece of a man’s clothing. She said the dog wasn’t acting like his usual self. But, she alleges she wasn’t given a chance to get the animal back under control before a police officer opened fire and put it down.

“It just all happened so fast,” said Stevens. “I had to ask the police, ‘Was this really necessary?’ And the police said, ‘Ma’am, this isn’t like Hollywood.'”

Police say the incident began shortly before 7 p.m. on Wiggins Private, near Mann Avenue and Chapel Street, when the dog slipped off its leash and attacked a man holding a child.

“The dog jumped at the man, who moved to act as a shield for the child,” said Staff-Sgt. Frank D’Aoust.

The man was bitten on the buttocks and the hand, and the baby fell to the ground, police say.

A constable on patrol came upon the scene and “noticing the dog turn towards the boy, attempted to distract the dog and placed himself in between the dog and the victim” police said in a statement.

Police said the dog’s apparent owner tried to collar the animal but was unsuccessful.

The dog made a movement toward the child on the ground and the officer fired four times, hitting the dog with each shot, according to police.

The man did not appear to be seriously injured but was taken to the Civic campus of the Ottawa Hospital for treatment. The baby boy suffered a bruise to his forehead from the fall.

Stevens said Lance had been cooped up all day in her family’s home in the 200 block of Wiggins Private. Stevens home is across the street from a basketball court which has a large communal area where Lance would go for walks. The area was busy Friday night, with between 25 and 30 people there, according to witnesses.

When Stevens opened the door, Lance bolted toward the park. The dog was too big for her to hold back, weighing well more than 100 pounds. It ran toward the people and, according to Stevens, that’s when one man in particular began to scream.

According to Stevens, the screams attracted the animal. A police cruiser was passing by just as Lance got to the park. According to Stevens, the officer slammed on the brakes and leapt from the car.

Stevens said she rounded the cruiser and saw what she describes as Lance tugging on a piece of the man’s clothing. The man was lying on the ground. Stevens said she wasn’t aware he was cradling a baby. The police officer immediately opened fire in the busy park, firing four bullets into the dog.

“He has never bit anyone before, but he is a hyper dog,” she said. “He hit him twice (with bullets) and Lance yelped so bad. Then came two more shots.”

Stevens said she wasn’t given the opportunity to try to calm Lance. She said she can’t understand why police didn’t deploy a Taser or other non-lethal measures, such as a baton.

She has been told Ottawa bylaw officers will be looking into the incident in the coming days.

Ottawa Staff-Sgt D’Aaoust also said that a review is “normally done” in any incident involving a police officer discharging a firearm.

http://ottawacitizen.com/news/local-news/ottawa-policeman-shoots-dog- after-it-attacks-man-with-baby.

Gatlin  posted on  2016-10-06   8:12:36 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 6.

#7. To: Deckard (#6)

GARNER - The Town Council here is expected to make some changes to its “dangerous dog” ordinance, after a Garner man called on them to provide stiffer penalties for dog owners whose dogs attack people and other dogs.

His son and grandson were attacked by their neighbor’s dog last June, sending both to the hospital.

Under the current ordinance, when a dog attacks someone or another pet on private or public property, and the officer determines there is evidence to support the claim, the animal will be classified as “dangerous.” The owner must then keep the dog in a “humane, secure enclosure,” and post a visible sign warning people that there is a dangerous dog at the home.

From there the penalties get stiffer if there are other incidents.

The proposed changes to the ordinance, however, won’t necessarily create stiffer penalties for first-time offenders, as the resident, Cleve Avery, suggested the council do. The changes instead close current loopholes in the ordinance, create stiffer penalties for dogs already declared dangerous, and would add another element to determine whether a dog is dangerous before it actually attacks someone.

Dogs can be declared “dangerous” in Garner for three reasons: If the dog attacks or bites someone and inflicts serious injury without provocation on public or private property, if it kills or injures a pet without provocation, or if it’s trained or kept primarily for dogfighting.

The council is expected to add “if the dog has approached a person on his or her property in a vicious or terrorizing manner.”

There have been six dog bites reported since 2014. Five incidents include the dogs biting other dogs, and the last incident involved the Averys being bitten.

Cleve Avery said his son, Gregory Avery, had walked a few doors down to his neighbor’s house to let her know that he would cut her grass. Gregory Avery’s son was with him.

Gregory Avery knocked on his neighbor’s door on Turner Street. As the neighbor opened her door, her dog darted out. The dog ran past Gregory Avery and toward the 6-year-old who was standing at the edge of the driveway. The dog attacked the 6-year-old biting him on the back of his head. Gregory Avery tried to get the dog off his son, and was also bitten. The young boy suffered puncture wounds to his head and buttocks.

Gregory Avery suffered lacerations to his legs. His injuries kept him out of work for a month.

Other changes in the ordinance include closing loopholes.

The current ordinance requires people to put signs in their yards that indicate there is a dangerous dog on the property. The rule was worded in such a way that someone could create a sign so small, that no one could see it. The council will now require “dangerous dog” owners to create a sign that is one foot by two feet or two square feet in area and create a minimum font size.

The council also may require “dangerous dog” owners to install microchips in their dogs, so if the dog is at large and is located, police would be able to determine whether the dog was declared dangerous. And if that dog was declared dangerous and at large, the owner would be assessed a penalty or have the dog confiscated.

The ordinance will also include language that requires “dangerous dog” owners to allow animal control officers to determine if the owner has completed or is maintaining the requirements to get the animal back. The changes will be voted on at a future town council meeting.

Council members made sure to emphasize that the changes to the ordinance will not be specific to a dog breed. Council member Gra Singleton said there was a idea years ago to look at banning pit bulls. But residents didn’t allow that idea to get far.

“The behavior of the owner has a lot to do with the behavior of the dog,” Singleton said.

“Amen,” council members Buck Kennedy and Kathy Behringer added.

http://www.newsobserver.com/news/local/community/garner-cleveland- record/article105291591.html.

Gatlin  posted on  2016-10-06 08:22:37 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 6.

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