flintknapper wrote:
Well heck, why not.......lets do this one more time.
I do not "insist" the dog approached tail wagging, tongue out, or otherwise, please re-read my posts. I am suggesting that it is an equally plausible event to it charging the children "growling and snarling" and for good reason.
Well ok, then. You think it's "equally plausible". I think there is maybe a 1% probability. You see this police officer doesn't have a history of hunting dogs either, as far as we are aware, so we should probably assume he is a normal reasonable person to begin with unless we have evidence otherwise, and the chances of a normal reasonable person just shooting a friendly dog are extremely small. IMHO of course.
Why is there a "high likelihood" that the dog was behaving in a threatening manner? The facts overwhelming support the dogs normal demeanor as NOT being aggressive or troublesome.
The high likelihood is because the dog's behavior prompted a police officer to shoot it, and his account of the situation supports this as a good shooting. The dog's "normal demeanor" is completely irrelevant, since the dog was not shot while undertaking its normal demeanor.
Did you read any of the testimony the girls and others gave?
You mean the ones that say things like "I can't believe they let some guy carry a gun stuffed down his shorts and just go blasting away"? Like I said many times, I think the testimony of the dog owners is completely unreliable, because they clearly have a strong case for bias.
Here are some pointed questions for you, please answer all of them for me...(and with something more than "I don't know" please).
1. Why would a group of dogs doing something they had done before (playing in the water many dozens of times) suddenly become violent and aggressive and pin a couple of boys against a fence?
Because they did. You expect me to time-travel, read the mind of some dog 250 miles away, and answer this question with something other than "I don't know"?
2. Why would these vicious and uncontrollable animals not have attacked the ducks or the squirrel that were close by, seems like a more likely target? Could it be because they are not aggressive.
uhh, because they were busy attacking the children? again who knows!
3. Do you think it is possible that someone that is afraid (maybe terrified) of dogs might see the animal as nothing but a big head with teeth coming (completely missing the non aggressive posture), is that possible?
Sure anything's possible. That type of person would be a complete moron for going to a public park to begin with. So I would say this is JUST AS LIKELY as it is that the dog was not actually behaving aggressively. Let's say 1% chance this was happening, and 1% chance the dog was being friendly, and 98% chance the people (including the children) were responding normally to the animal and the animal was in fact being aggressive, to the surprise of the owner and her friends.
4. What is the "likelihood" that these dogs have encountered other children in the park before (excellent huh), why didn't they attack them? Why didn't they attack a grown up, another dog, anything, nothing at all in all this time they have been in the park (dozens of times)? Aren't you just a little curious, or has your own experience perhaps resulted in the "bias" you accuse me of?
The only "bias" I have here is that a police officer encountered events that prompted him to take the serious step of shooting a dog, so it would be extremely unlikely for there to have been no cause.
Every dog that ever bites or attacks a person does so one time for the first time. It's not like they are puppies and from day 1 they constantly bite everyone they encounter. And as far as we know, this dog may have indeed bitten or attacked other people, dogs, etc. and the victims or witnesses are just not coming forward. Only the dog would know who they are, if they were not witnessed by the owner of the dog during any such attack. So the real answer to this question is not only the dreaded "I don't know", but also "we don't know".
So, how does this work for you? The discussion here (at least on my part) has not challenged the officers right to have a firearm, I fully support that. Are you saying that the paper has purposely misrepresented either side? Looks like they have reported everything they can get their hands on.
Looks like! Now we also can read the minds of reporters as well as bullet-resistant dogs.
The fact is: The girl (and numerous on line posters) have responded to the event. The officer is laying low and has contributed nothing further, Zero, Zilch. How is the paper at fault for that, tell me?
Are you suggesting that the paper's report was unbiased?
If you were in the officer's position, and the following had occurred:
1. you shot a dog that you believed was attacking your children
2. your lawyer told you not to say anything to anyone about it
3. the newspaper report was heavily biased against the very idea of even carrying a gun, much less using it
4. whatever you might say would likely not get reported without additional bias
would you go on the record and say something to the press?
Many other folks were witnesses until just moments before the shooting, the dog owner for one. The officer and his children were obviously witnesses, but we haven't heard a peep out them. But somehow, because the girls were unaware that they were breaking any laws/ordinances their testimony is inadmissible, can only be inaccurate and unreliable in your mind...and nothing they say should be trusted or have any weight. How very convenient.
No, I guess it is very inconvenient for the police officer that nobody else witnessed the event, because it does not offer him any other witness to corroborate his story. Now all of the other witnesses are not actually witnesses to the event, and the dog owner is unreliable as a witness, even if she were a witness, simply because she is the dog's owner. The fact that she also has an unfounded fear of guns and is ignorant to the leash law simply enforces this.
IF these people had ACTUALLY WITNESSED the event, and not some time before the event, but the real event, THEN they could be evaluated as witnesses. But they did not witness it. We have only one adult witness.
It is my fervent hope not to have to use deadly force against man or beast, but I will without hesitation if there is clear and present danger of a nature requiring that kind of action. I hope the same for you and everyone else here.
Why then are you so unwilling to begin with the idea that this officer acted exactly as you would?
If ever I am unfortunate to be involved in a deadly force shooting, I expect and welcome the full scrutiny of my peers. I will have every confidence that they will judge correctly....because I do not intend to employ such force unless their is an obvious and reasonable need.
Obvious to whom? There are no other witnesses in this case.
This all really reminded me of the events surrounding my own run in with my next-door-neighbor's pit bull, and how I had wished that the police officer had shot it rather than believing the insane owner when she swore the dog was perfectly friendly and under control.
If the lady did not witness this event then it is understandable that she had doubts, what is so hard to fathom about that. [/quote]
Are you talking about my neighbor? She had witnessed her dog attacking people many times! She had pressured neighbors whose children had been bitten to not call the police. She went into hysterical crying fits with the idea that her precious dog was going to be taken away. So even though she knew full well that the dog was dangerous, she would not allow it to be dealt with. So here we have at least one dog owner who was completely irrational, so that's why I am saying it's just as POSSIBLE that this dog owner is also irrational, just like you say it is POSSIBLE that the children who were being attacked had a phobia of dogs. Sure, anything is POSSIBLE. So that's why we have to seek the account of a reasonable person who witnessed it, in this case, the shooter.
I would have shot, and hopefully killed, a dog whose owner, family members, and other dog-character-witnesses would have sworn up and down was a perfectly good dog, just trying to be friendly.
Here we would have had a circumstance closely paralleling the one we have been discussing. By shear numbers (of witnesses), we might have say..... 15 people whose experience with this dog has been nothing but good. Versus ONE person who says it was not. Why is it unreasonable to have "questions" when we see this type of disparity and why does it upset you and others so....when I apply it to this case (which seems to have more holes in it than that).
Because those 15 people did not actually see the event.
You might ask, why would the person who alleged the attack make up something like that. And an excellent question that would be. If the case went to court...how would we determine your trustworthiness (since I assume your children were not bitten and there is no other evidence to speak of). If it comes out that in the past you have told your neighbors that "if they don't keep that blankity blank pit-bull in their yard then they will be burying it", if it turns out that you posted "you'll get your rifle out and hunt them down even they are doing nothing" on the INTERNET for all to see, etc....then I fully expect a jury to suspect that you are just "laying" for the dog, or have an unnecessary and unreasonable fear of them.
none of this speculation is relevant to this case.
If on the other hand, you are a dog owner, are not overly afraid of dogs (watchful though), have been around dogs before, haven't instilled in your children any phobias, and have not had any harsh dealings with your neighbors then I'd say If I were on the jury....I'd sure listen to you.
So there it is! The test for whether you are a reasonable person is if you are a dog owner!
So I guess my question is: Which one of these scenarios best describes the officer (maybe something in between).
Howabout this scenario. He's just a normal regular guy, just like you and me. He has normal and regular expectations of how dogs should behave and has normal and regular reactions to seeing an apparent attack on his children, and has the normal high standard for responding to such an attack by firing his gun.
Because it would be most normal to expect the guy to be normal.
[/quote]
I don't belong to PETA.
I figured this would come up!
BTW my nutso neighbor did belong to PETA.
I'm sick of arguing about this.