APD Shot and killed buddy's dog

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bci21984
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Re: APD Shot and killed buddy's dog

#121

Post by bci21984 »

speedsix wrote:
VoiceofReason wrote:
speedsix wrote:
VoiceofReason wrote:
Beiruty wrote:I am more concerned why the Police officer has to draw on unarmed person who is not a threat or even aggressive or non-compliant. That would be an aggravated assault if done by a civilian. That officer has be sent to for long time re-training and long time office desk duty to cool down and learn to control his fear. He behaved like scared bat squirting out from a cave.
Was there a weapon involved in the initial report? If so I can understand the officer drawing his sidearm.

How would you know the subject was “unarmed” until you have searched him? I agree the officer probably overreacted but none of us were there and don’t know all of the details. It is easy to criticize when one is sitting safely in front of his/her keyboard and take all the time he/she wants to think about what he/she would do in a situation we don’t know all the facts about.


...those of us who HAVE spent several years on the streets usually consider what's in the subject's HANDS to determine whether or not to draw and cover them...more often it's handled as you posted earlier...then search him/her if/as the situation calls for it...the fact that the officer greatly overreacted is not in dispute, with the facts we are given here...where one is sitting when coming to these conclusions makes little difference to the conclusions drawn...Beiruty's concerns are valid and well supported by the supplied facts...the dashboard audio tells us a lot...
I HAVE spent time on the streets with a Sherriff’s Department. If I were dispatched to a domestic disturbance call and the caller reported a gun or knife involved, I would draw on someone that came around the corner of a house, approaching me. To do otherwise is betting your life that he/she does not have a small gun or large knife in their hand just out of site behind their leg, in their pocket, in the belt in the small of their back etc. After patting them down then we could talk. If he was more than 15 feet from me I would just put my hand on my gun and order him against a wall so I could pat him down.

I once took custody of a male subject from a DPS officer and transported him to the county jail so the DPS officer could answer another call. When I got him to the jail and told him to empty his pockets, he laid a large buck knife on the counter. I had assumed the DPS officer had searched him before handcuffing him. I had assumed the subject was unarmed so I didn’t search him myself before taking custody. I never made that mistake again.

My point is that none of us were there and we don’t know what the original report was or how close to the officer the subject or the dog was. The dashboard audio may tell a lot but without the video it may leave out a lot also. Earlier in this thread people were condemning the officer for going to the wrong address when they didn’t know he was dispatched to the wrong address.
...if you introduce a reported weapon, of course that would justify at least low ready...however there was NO report of a weapon...the 911 caller said clearly there was NO weapon involved, and also described the man in the argument/altercation as a hispanic with salt and pepper hair...none of that translates to justification for drawing one's weapon and aiming at a man unless he's seen to have a weapon in his hands..especially when he's nowhere close to the description given...there's no defense for this guy on that....
because dispatchers are never wrong.


http://digitaltexan.net/2012/austin-loc ... icle31830/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;[/quote]
THE 2ND AMENDMENT: They didnt use the freedom of speech to defeat the british, They SHOT them.

arod757
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Re: APD Shot and killed buddy's dog

#122

Post by arod757 »

My sister and I were just speaking about this. She commented to me about how she was glad this didn't happen in my home, as she would be afraid that I'd be in jail for returning fire on that police officer after seeing him gun down my Aussie.

I'd like to think I would have more restraint than that, but I'm not so arrogant as to dismiss the possibility. I carry 24/7, and the speed in which events played out make me wonder if my first reaction would be to draw and return fire on the man that just took a shot at my dog. Unless I'm mistaken, the Castle Doctrine allows you to defend yourself and your property. But what if in all the chaos and confusion, you defend your property against a police officer that's at the wrong address? I shudder at the thought.
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Re: APD Shot and killed buddy's dog

#123

Post by mamabearCali »

bci21984 wrote:"So it is not very likely at all that they would not react to pepper spray." I can only assume that your participation in this forum is based on your possession or intent to possess a firearm that is carried for defense of self and if applicable the defense of others, should the situation arise. If that is the case, "it is not very likely" that you will ever use said firearm. But then again you know. NEVER base your survival on "it is not very likely". Again, playing what if's, what if the officer previously in his career was injured by a dog and had attempted to pepper spray the said previous dog with no effect. Is the officer going to risk injury a second time in a serious bodily injury/possible death situation by spraying a dog that might not react to the pepper. No, he is not. Also, with the unknowns of the situation and already having his service weapon drawn, is the officer in a split second decision making time frame going to holster his weapon and draw whichever less lethal device he's going to use to subdue the charging/barking/growling dog. I cant speak of your familiarity with working dogs but they are very quick and agile. My boxer can make it (in full sprint) up the stairs of my house in 3 steps. He can jump the privacy fence in my back yard. I have seen heelers jump onto the backs of cattle and cross the herd to get to the other side. The officer simply wouldnt have had time to react, transition and re-engage. If he wouldve attempted he would have been defenseless against the dog and wouldve had to try to defend himself after the attack had begun. He was able to stop the perceived threat before the attack began. Bottom line: The officer was put in fear of his life and sever bodily injury due to circumstances out of his control.
My knowledge of dogs is with my pets through the years (shepherds, beagles, basset hounds, a Bernese mountain dog and good old fashioned mutts) and some amount of study of the smelling capability of dogs (nasal sensitivity). I do know that a barking dog is entirely different than a charging dog. Perhaps in all the training police officers have they should receive some with dogs as they are sure to encounter them. The electrical company around here trains their people on how to deal with dogs (they go in and through people's back yards all the time) they don't have the option of shooting the dog, and they have a near flawless record on dog bites. I just simply find the number of times I hear "cop shot dog" to be on the unacceptable side. I want everyone to go home with the same number of holes in them they left with, but if the power company can have less than one dog bite a year and they go into hostile dog situations on a regular basis it is suspect to me that the police cannot minimize the number of dogs shot.

bci21984 wrote: I wouldnt expect you to be able to understand the functions of "Use of force" as it pertains to police work as we receive HOURS upon HOURS of training in the matter, much in the same fashion I couldnt expect myself to understand the functions of the complexities of the work you are trained to do. It would be unfamiliar territory for both us. Heres a model that helps break it down. As far as youre examples, if an officer gives you a lawful command, such as "stand up, and turn around, youre under arrest", and you answer with "go away and leave me alone" (in not so nice terms) the officer is legally justified in pepper spraying you based on the use of force continuum. Does it always happen that way, no it doesnt. Is it legal and justifiable, yes it is. If a person spits at me (in Tx its a felony) it could be to temporarily blind me, so that they can easier assault me or it could be to infect me with whatever communicable disease they have. (yes, it actually happens) This scenarior is a little more in depth. If the spit is precursored with "im gonna (insert bodily harm intended)" then the action would be "assualtive" and the legal and justifiable response would be deadly force. Again, does it always happen that way, no, but it would be legal and justifiable. "The suspect who was known to have extensive criminal history pertaining to assault on police, interferring with police, and weapons charges stated to me, "Im going to kill you" and then spat in my face. The spit was followed by the suspect attempting to punch me with his right fist. I was in fear that the suspect would cause me great bodily harm or follow through with his threat of death. I backed away from the suspect and gave loud clear commands to "get on the ground" and "youre under arrest". I wiped the suspect's saliva from my eyes and could see that he was still approaching me in a combative/assaultive stance. The suspect had his left hand in his pocket and was refusing to follow my commands. I drew my service weapon and fired at the suspect. He fell to the ground, I continued my loud clear commands and the suspect refused to follow them. I covered the suspect until back up arrived." is different than "he spat in my face and I shot him."

Seems reasonable, and the stair steps is a good illustration. Thanks for the instruction. The initial way I took it was entirely different than how you explained it.
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ScooterSissy
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Re: APD Shot and killed buddy's dog

#124

Post by ScooterSissy »

bci21984 wrote:... The officer was placed into a dangerous possibly life altering/ending situation in a matter of seconds and made a decision that allowed him to go home with the same number of holes he went to work with...
I' ve seen this as a "justification" a couple of times now. Here's a counter though.

The owner of the home, the citizen who was helping pay the officer's salary, didn't even leave his property, yet was left with what he considered a family member that that did have more holes than he started the day with. And that home owner did nothing that justified his pet dying.

That's the rub. I'm sorry if this offends some of the LEOs, and trust me, I'm not anti-LEO by any means, but if the ultimate goal of an LEO is to ensure that he goes "home with the same number of holes he went to work with", then he is in the wrong line of work.

The citizen who is doing nothing wrong deserves the first consideration, the LEO is there to protect him.
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VMI77
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Re: APD Shot and killed buddy's dog

#125

Post by VMI77 »

mamabearCali wrote:
bci21984 wrote:"So it is not very likely at all that they would not react to pepper spray." I can only assume that your participation in this forum is based on your possession or intent to possess a firearm that is carried for defense of self and if applicable the defense of others, should the situation arise. If that is the case, "it is not very likely" that you will ever use said firearm. But then again you know. NEVER base your survival on "it is not very likely". Again, playing what if's, what if the officer previously in his career was injured by a dog and had attempted to pepper spray the said previous dog with no effect. Is the officer going to risk injury a second time in a serious bodily injury/possible death situation by spraying a dog that might not react to the pepper. No, he is not. Also, with the unknowns of the situation and already having his service weapon drawn, is the officer in a split second decision making time frame going to holster his weapon and draw whichever less lethal device he's going to use to subdue the charging/barking/growling dog. I cant speak of your familiarity with working dogs but they are very quick and agile. My boxer can make it (in full sprint) up the stairs of my house in 3 steps. He can jump the privacy fence in my back yard. I have seen heelers jump onto the backs of cattle and cross the herd to get to the other side. The officer simply wouldnt have had time to react, transition and re-engage. If he wouldve attempted he would have been defenseless against the dog and wouldve had to try to defend himself after the attack had begun. He was able to stop the perceived threat before the attack began. Bottom line: The officer was put in fear of his life and sever bodily injury due to circumstances out of his control.
My knowledge of dogs is with my pets through the years (shepherds, beagles, basset hounds, a Bernese mountain dog and good old fashioned mutts) and some amount of study of the smelling capability of dogs (nasal sensitivity). I do know that a barking dog is entirely different than a charging dog. Perhaps in all the training police officers have they should receive some with dogs as they are sure to encounter them. The electrical company around here trains their people on how to deal with dogs (they go in and through people's back yards all the time) they don't have the option of shooting the dog, and they have a near flawless record on dog bites. I just simply find the number of times I hear "cop shot dog" to be on the unacceptable side. I want everyone to go home with the same number of holes in them they left with, but if the power company can have less than one dog bite a year and they go into hostile dog situations on a regular basis it is suspect to me that the police cannot minimize the number of dogs shot.

bci21984 wrote: I wouldnt expect you to be able to understand the functions of "Use of force" as it pertains to police work as we receive HOURS upon HOURS of training in the matter, much in the same fashion I couldnt expect myself to understand the functions of the complexities of the work you are trained to do. It would be unfamiliar territory for both us. Heres a model that helps break it down. As far as youre examples, if an officer gives you a lawful command, such as "stand up, and turn around, youre under arrest", and you answer with "go away and leave me alone" (in not so nice terms) the officer is legally justified in pepper spraying you based on the use of force continuum. Does it always happen that way, no it doesnt. Is it legal and justifiable, yes it is. If a person spits at me (in Tx its a felony) it could be to temporarily blind me, so that they can easier assault me or it could be to infect me with whatever communicable disease they have. (yes, it actually happens) This scenarior is a little more in depth. If the spit is precursored with "im gonna (insert bodily harm intended)" then the action would be "assualtive" and the legal and justifiable response would be deadly force. Again, does it always happen that way, no, but it would be legal and justifiable. "The suspect who was known to have extensive criminal history pertaining to assault on police, interferring with police, and weapons charges stated to me, "Im going to kill you" and then spat in my face. The spit was followed by the suspect attempting to punch me with his right fist. I was in fear that the suspect would cause me great bodily harm or follow through with his threat of death. I backed away from the suspect and gave loud clear commands to "get on the ground" and "youre under arrest". I wiped the suspect's saliva from my eyes and could see that he was still approaching me in a combative/assaultive stance. The suspect had his left hand in his pocket and was refusing to follow my commands. I drew my service weapon and fired at the suspect. He fell to the ground, I continued my loud clear commands and the suspect refused to follow them. I covered the suspect until back up arrived." is different than "he spat in my face and I shot him."

Seems reasonable, and the stair steps is a good illustration. Thanks for the instruction. The initial way I took it was entirely different than how you explained it.
It's amazing isn't it? ....letter carriers, deliverymen, repairmen, meter readers, all manage to routinely enter property where there are dogs, and they never shoot them --basically, because you can't run a business and get away with shooting people's dogs. The police shoot dogs for one reason....they can....there are no consequences, so they get away with it. If, for example, the city, or whatever government agency, had to cough up a cool million to animal rescue groups every time they killed a dog like this --due to their own negligence-- these kinds of dog killings would cease over night. Or take a chunk of change right out of the budget of the offending department.....the incentive of the police is shoot a dog rather than accept any risk of attack, however small, because it costs them nothing when they make a mistake.
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bci21984
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Re: APD Shot and killed buddy's dog

#126

Post by bci21984 »

ScooterSissy wrote:
bci21984 wrote:... The officer was placed into a dangerous possibly life altering/ending situation in a matter of seconds and made a decision that allowed him to go home with the same number of holes he went to work with...
I' ve seen this as a "justification" a couple of times now. Here's a counter though.

The owner of the home, the citizen who was helping pay the officer's salary, didn't even leave his property, yet was left with what he considered a family member that that did have more holes than he started the day with. And that home owner did nothing that justified his pet dying.

That's the rub. I'm sorry if this offends some of the LEOs, and trust me, I'm not anti-LEO by any means, but if the ultimate goal of an LEO is to ensure that he goes "home with the same number of holes he went to work with", then he is in the wrong line of work.

The citizen who is doing nothing wrong deserves the first consideration, the LEO is there to protect him.
THE 2ND AMENDMENT: They didnt use the freedom of speech to defeat the british, They SHOT them.

bci21984
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Re: APD Shot and killed buddy's dog

#127

Post by bci21984 »

Not sure what my iPhone is doing with these posts. Going home at the end of the day is priority #1 for every member of law enforcement. You intend on doing your job as best you can and returning home, do you not? Why is a police officer different. The supreme court has ruled that police have no legal requirement to protect citizens. It is done out of want. Police want to protect, but they also have to protect themselves. None of us will know exactly what that officer perceived. Ive said it before, what happened is tragic. There are checks and balances to his actions and his department will find him justified or in the wrong. We simply werent in his shoes. You dont know how you would react until faced with the situation.
THE 2ND AMENDMENT: They didnt use the freedom of speech to defeat the british, They SHOT them.

bci21984
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Re: APD Shot and killed buddy's dog

#128

Post by bci21984 »

VMI77 wrote:
mamabearCali wrote:
bci21984 wrote:"So it is not very likely at all that they would not react to pepper spray." I can only assume that your participation in this forum is based on your possession or intent to possess a firearm that is carried for defense of self and if applicable the defense of others, should the situation arise. If that is the case, "it is not very likely" that you will ever use said firearm. But then again you know. NEVER base your survival on "it is not very likely". Again, playing what if's, what if the officer previously in his career was injured by a dog and had attempted to pepper spray the said previous dog with no effect. Is the officer going to risk injury a second time in a serious bodily injury/possible death situation by spraying a dog that might not react to the pepper. No, he is not. Also, with the unknowns of the situation and already having his service weapon drawn, is the officer in a split second decision making time frame going to holster his weapon and draw whichever less lethal device he's going to use to subdue the charging/barking/growling dog. I cant speak of your familiarity with working dogs but they are very quick and agile. My boxer can make it (in full sprint) up the stairs of my house in 3 steps. He can jump the privacy fence in my back yard. I have seen heelers jump onto the backs of cattle and cross the herd to get to the other side. The officer simply wouldnt have had time to react, transition and re-engage. If he wouldve attempted he would have been defenseless against the dog and wouldve had to try to defend himself after the attack had begun. He was able to stop the perceived threat before the attack began. Bottom line: The officer was put in fear of his life and sever bodily injury due to circumstances out of his control.
My knowledge of dogs is with my pets through the years (shepherds, beagles, basset hounds, a Bernese mountain dog and good old fashioned mutts) and some amount of study of the smelling capability of dogs (nasal sensitivity). I do know that a barking dog is entirely different than a charging dog. Perhaps in all the training police officers have they should receive some with dogs as they are sure to encounter them. The electrical company around here trains their people on how to deal with dogs (they go in and through people's back yards all the time) they don't have the option of shooting the dog, and they have a near flawless record on dog bites. I just simply find the number of times I hear "cop shot dog" to be on the unacceptable side. I want everyone to go home with the same number of holes in them they left with, but if the power company can have less than one dog bite a year and they go into hostile dog situations on a regular basis it is suspect to me that the police cannot minimize the number of dogs shot.

bci21984 wrote: I wouldnt expect you to be able to understand the functions of "Use of force" as it pertains to police work as we receive HOURS upon HOURS of training in the matter, much in the same fashion I couldnt expect myself to understand the functions of the complexities of the work you are trained to do. It would be unfamiliar territory for both us. Heres a model that helps break it down. As far as youre examples, if an officer gives you a lawful command, such as "stand up, and turn around, youre under arrest", and you answer with "go away and leave me alone" (in not so nice terms) the officer is legally justified in pepper spraying you based on the use of force continuum. Does it always happen that way, no it doesnt. Is it legal and justifiable, yes it is. If a person spits at me (in Tx its a felony) it could be to temporarily blind me, so that they can easier assault me or it could be to infect me with whatever communicable disease they have. (yes, it actually happens) This scenarior is a little more in depth. If the spit is precursored with "im gonna (insert bodily harm intended)" then the action would be "assualtive" and the legal and justifiable response would be deadly force. Again, does it always happen that way, no, but it would be legal and justifiable. "The suspect who was known to have extensive criminal history pertaining to assault on police, interferring with police, and weapons charges stated to me, "Im going to kill you" and then spat in my face. The spit was followed by the suspect attempting to punch me with his right fist. I was in fear that the suspect would cause me great bodily harm or follow through with his threat of death. I backed away from the suspect and gave loud clear commands to "get on the ground" and "youre under arrest". I wiped the suspect's saliva from my eyes and could see that he was still approaching me in a combative/assaultive stance. The suspect had his left hand in his pocket and was refusing to follow my commands. I drew my service weapon and fired at the suspect. He fell to the ground, I continued my loud clear commands and the suspect refused to follow them. I covered the suspect until back up arrived." is different than "he spat in my face and I shot him."

Seems reasonable, and the stair steps is a good illustration. Thanks for the instruction. The initial way I took it was entirely different than how you explained it.
It's amazing isn't it? ....letter carriers, deliverymen, repairmen, meter readers, all manage to routinely enter property where there are dogs, and they never shoot them --basically, because you can't run a business and get away with shooting people's dogs. The police shoot dogs for one reason....they can....there are no consequences, so they get away with it. If, for example, the city, or whatever government agency, had to cough up a cool million to animal rescue groups every time they killed a dog like this --due to their own negligence-- these kinds of dog killings would cease over night. Or take a chunk of change right out of the budget of the offending department.....the incentive of the police is shoot a dog rather than accept any risk of attack, however small, because it costs them nothing when they make a mistake.

The service men you mentioned enter property for different reasons than police. I bet your next paycheck that if you took a service man and had him enter a yard under normal pretense, (during the day, homeowner gone) he would get a completely different response than if he entered yelling at the home owner in a commanding voice much like the officer did.
THE 2ND AMENDMENT: They didnt use the freedom of speech to defeat the british, They SHOT them.

ScooterSissy
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Re: APD Shot and killed buddy's dog

#129

Post by ScooterSissy »

bci21984 wrote:Not sure what my iPhone is doing with these posts. Going home at the end of the day is priority #1 for every member of law enforcement. You intend on doing your job as best you can and returning home, do you not? Why is a police officer different. The supreme court has ruled that police have no legal requirement to protect citizens. It is done out of want. Police want to protect, but they also have to protect themselves. None of us will know exactly what that officer perceived. Ive said it before, what happened is tragic. There are checks and balances to his actions and his department will find him justified or in the wrong. We simply werent in his shoes. You dont know how you would react until faced with the situation.
Sorry, I disagree.
If that is the #1 priority, then they should simply shoot in every single encounter that they view as mildly dangerous.
Yes, I intend on doing my job and return home, and I will answer why a police officer is different.

Because he chose a different job. He chose a job in which is first duty is to protect and serve. I would not not fault my neighbor for not risking his life to fight a fire at my house, but I would fault a fireman for doing so. That's the job he chose.

I've yet to see a decal on a patrol car that says "protect myself first, then protect and serve the citizens"

I also agree with much of what you say; this discussion board is not a judge or jury, we are here expressing our opinions based on what (little) we know of what happened. In this case, it's not about whether or not the policeman was "protecting" the citizen, so that supreme court ruling (as ridiculous as it was) doesn't really apply - it's about a policeman taking action against an innocent civilian who was doing absolutely nothing wrong on his own property.

In this instance, I initially thought that though it was a tragedy, it was the owner's fault since his dog wasn't on a leash (the laws in my city require that a dog be inside a building, behind a fence, or on a leash, regardless of where it's at). Then I read that city's law (it's in the thread), and it sounds as if the homeowner wasn't even doing something as minor as breaking that law.

I maintain that when an innocent man, who has done nothing illegal or even improper, that loses a pet to a shooting by a police officer, has been done wrong. In the case, listening to the audio, it sounds very much like the officer was way to quick to shoot.
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Re: APD Shot and killed buddy's dog

#130

Post by flintknapper »

bci21984 wrote:
This is a quote from the breed description of heelers, "Although not aggressive it was bred to bite, and owing to the strong attachment it forms to its owners can be protective of them and their possessions."
If you are as familiar with “heelers” as you claim to be…then you would know that “herding/stock dogs” are known for their “guiding nip”….if that is what you mean by “bred to bite” (not your words I understand, but YOU posted it). VERY different from a defensive bite! Heelers rarely “BITE”.
I grew up on a farm and have been around countless heelers, some as small as 25-30lbs, others 40-50.


As have I…and have been around both Blues and Reds and worked them on cattle many times. NONE of them were “human” aggressive…and I will put my experiences up against yours anytime.
Working dogs are mainly muscle regardless of the breed. 35-40lbs of "you’re not hurting my owner" muscle is match for anyone.
Yes, the “breed” is characteristically athletic, but each dog (individually) would need to be judged on its appearance and the merits of the situation, surely you would agree?
The officer was placed into a dangerous possibly life altering/ending situation
How so? The man he encountered did NOT fit the description of the suspect he was sent to investigate. It was reported to the officer that the alleged suspect was NOT armed and the person the officer did meet up with… immediately complied with his orders (showing hands).

I suppose you’ll argue that it was the officers “perception”. O.K. if officer “perception” is all that is needed…then I submit it is the public’s duty to scrutinize any event that looks out of place.

Otherwise…there remains no checks or balances (unless you consider Internal Affairs, which is basically the Fox guarding the Henhouse).
in a matter of seconds and made a decision that allowed him to go home with the same number of holes he went to work with.
Don’t you just love bumper sticker clichés? ;-)
The dog could have been deadly. So deadly force as a reaction is justified.
Really…….a “deadly” blue heeler, a smallish one at that…the PET of some city dweller, come on…this borders on being insulting.

Here are some FACTS:

In a period spanning the last 24 yrs. there has been only ONE fatality attributed to the Blue Heeler breed and that one was unwitnessed and alleged to have been carried out by THREE dogs.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fa ... ted_States" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
http://www.michigansthumb.com/articles/ ... 695329.txt" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

And then we have “attacks” by Blue Heelers that resulted in bodily harm from BOTH the U.S. and Canada over a period of 24 years:

THREE……..a whopping three reported events.

(Source: Dog attack deaths and maimings, US and Canada, September 1982 to November 13, 2006. Merritt Clifton.)

If we are to believe the events (as currently reported), the dog was NOT “charging” the officer, or he clearly would not have had time to shoot it. The dog was probably walking up to its master (while barking)…since the officer told the guy to “get his dog”.

Of course, when you’re being held at GUN POINT by an edgy officer, it would behoove you to remain still.

Every single “heeler” I have ever been around gave very distinct clues as to its frame of mind. Invariably they bark a lot before advancing. Anyone that has been around dogs much….can/should be able to read the body language of a dog that is about to bite.

The exception being Pit Bulls…who often fail to communicate their intention before attacking.
Also, certain breeds have a bite “style” (hold and shake) likely to produce serious wounds. But NOT heelers.

I’m just saying….I believe (these days) officers have it drummed into their heads that THEIR safety is the only thing that matters and that a certain “warrior” spirit is the only thing that will get them home each day (sigh…….).

The job can be dangerous…no doubt, but if you are unwilling to accept that (and a few bruises and bumps along the way) then maybe Law Enforcement isn’t really the best profession for some folks.

It is undeniable…. the growing divide of the “US vs. THEM” between the public and the police. Why is that?
Spartans ask not how many, but where!

ScooterSissy
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Re: APD Shot and killed buddy's dog

#131

Post by ScooterSissy »

flintknapper wrote:...I’m just saying….I believe (these days) officers have it drummed into their heads that THEIR safety is the only thing that matters and that a certain “warrior” spirit is the only thing that will get them home each day (sigh…….).

The job can be dangerous…no doubt, but if you are unwilling to accept that (and a few bruises and bumps along the way) then maybe Law Enforcement isn’t really the best profession for some folks.

It is undeniable…. the growing divide of the “US vs. THEM” between the public and the police. Why is that?
Thank you, this is the point I was trying to make. You did it better than I (at least, at the end there ;) )
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flintknapper
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Re: APD Shot and killed buddy's dog

#132

Post by flintknapper »

The supreme court has ruled that police have no legal requirement to protect citizens.

It is done out of want.
How unfortunate that an officer of the law does not understand what the S/C found.

There is no legal requirement for LEO to protect citizens "individually" but rather a DUTY to protect as a whole. NOT out want...or you could just wake up one day and decide you didn't need to do the job you get payed for because....well....you didn't want to!
Spartans ask not how many, but where!
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gigag04
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Re: APD Shot and killed buddy's dog

#133

Post by gigag04 »

Regarding firefighters not entering your home...

If everyone is out and the integrity of the structure is unknown, they will go defensive.

Risk a little to save a little, risk a lot to save a lot is what our fireboys have told me.

Flint, if you really think I just need to accept a beating now and again because it's part of the job, then you're out of touch with realty. Understanding and accepting risk is different than turning a blind, unprepared eye to it. It's like you write off an LEOs right to self defense because of his or her chosen profession. Wow.
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speedsix
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Re: APD Shot and killed buddy's dog

#134

Post by speedsix »

...there's nothing been presented to hint that dispatchers told him anything different than what the caller(on tape) said...that's just another "whatif"......if ignoring the known facts that the 911 tape provides seems to support your opinion, go for it...as the facts that we ARE given come together...it stinks like old fish!!!
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flintknapper
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Re: APD Shot and killed buddy's dog

#135

Post by flintknapper »

Flint, if you really think I just need to accept a beating now and again because it's part of the job, then you're out of touch with realty.
Nice try, you need never “accept” a beating, only understand that the competent carrying out of your duties might involve an occasional injury or some discomfort and the least amount of force necessary to effect the situation at hand is what defines “competency”. Please dispense with the sarcasm.
Understanding and accepting risk is different than turning a blind, unprepared eye to it.
No argument. So how do you make the leap from what I posted to this?

It's like you write off an LEOs right to self defense because of his or her chosen profession. Wow.
Nothing could be further from the truth, I have several friends that are LEO and 3 family members either past or present LEO. I hold them ALL to a high standard…owning to the powers invested in them, I happen to think that is reasonable and appropriate.

“Self Defense” is not forfeited as a matter of profession, but neither is the responsibility to exercise it in an appropriate manner, just so we are clear.
Spartans ask not how many, but where!
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