Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Emory at Risk

To: Pamela Scully, Director, Emory University
          Center for Faculty Development and Excellence
      CFDE Executive Board
      James W. Wagner, President, and the President's Cabinet
      Stephen D Sencer, Emory University General Counsel and staff
      Kevin Riley, Editor, Atlanta Journal-Constitution
      Prosecuting Attorneys' Council of Georgia (PACGA)
      and members of the animal welfare community


During the Fall Quarter of the current academic year Emory University offered a course which placed the University at risk of significant financial loss. Furthermore, the University acted in a manner which jeopardized its standing as a good community member.

The course in question1 placed Emory University students, staff, and community members in close proximity to dogs known to cause a disproportionate number of disfiguring and fatal attacks. While there has been controversy among members of the animal welfare and public safety communities about the reasons for these attacks, the fact that pit bulls are involved in more attacks causing grievous bodily harm than all other breeds combined is undisputed.

Many of the attacks which resulted in large payouts, some in the millions of dollars, have been facial disfigurement attacks on children. There are known factors which lead to facial disfigurement attacks. Children are lower, almost at the level of the dog's face. Children (as well as adults) often show affection for the dog by placing their faces in close proximity to the dog. These can be perceived as provocative gestures by any dog, and especially must be avoided with any fighting breed. To encourage such behavior with a pit bull is to challenge the odds.

For an adult to sanction such behavior, and even to encourage it, is irresponsible. For a University to tolerate such high-risk behavior, or even to give tacit approval through vetting the course and offering funding, is to accept the resultant risk. Whether or not Emory determined that the risk this class presents is acceptable, the University should cancel the course for ethical reasons.

The public support for pit bulls is vast, for unaccountable reasons. Pit bull advocacy is unlike conventional animal welfare advocacy. In the words of well-known Canadian journalist Barbara Kay,
. . . this is the first time in the history of human-animal relations that a movement – the pit bull advocacy movement - has formed, not to promote the well-known virtues of a beloved breed, but to promote denial of a beloved breed’s well-known vices
Malcolme Gladwell and others have written about the stigma associated with owning a pit bull. Usually when an individual volunteers to become stigmatized, as pit bull owners do, there is good reason for it. It may be decades before we fully understand the cultural madness of pit bull advocacy.2 When we finally gain the collective courage to confront pit bull advocacy, we'll understand and overcome it.

For a University to take part in this advocacy, whether the support is indirect, inferred, or simply tolerated, is a high-risk strategy and it is questionable policy on many levels.

The Editors


* * * * *

Verdicts and Settlements:

$2.2 Million settlement in pit bull attack upheld by WA State Court of Appeals
   News-Tribune (Tacoma), August 13, 2013

Boy mauled in PA pit bull attack settles for more than $500,000
   Insurance & Financial Adviser; Oct 12, 2012

Forida Woman Vicki Bentley Awarded $643K for Pit Bull Attack
    Opposing Views, June 4, 2012

Jury returns $7,000,000 Verdict After Fatal Pit Bull Mauling

$1,124,093 – A five-year-old boy who was attacked by a neighbor’s pit bull while the neighbors were babysitting the boy. A portion of the boy’s cheek was torn off in the attack.

* * * * * 



Photo associated with Emory University
Fall 2013 Engaged-learning undergraduate course




Denver CO, Feb 8, 2012


Interactive map of Georgia fatal pit bull attacks



For full screen map and complete details, view
Georgia Fatal Pit Bull Maulings - DogsBite.org



* * * * *
Notes:
1  American Studies/Interdisciplinary Studies 385
   The Dividing Lines: Pit bulls, Identity, and Community
    Fall 2013- Tu/Th 10:00 a.m.-11:15 a.m

2  Another manifestation of this madness recently occurred in Georgia when 36-year old Crystal Gale Fessler slipped into the grounds of the the animal shelter in Macon after hours and released at least 13 fighting breeds from their cages. In the resulting chaos three of the dogs were killed and many others wounded.   (Macon Telegraph)


Sources -- Emory University:
Pit bulls offer a lesson in community, identity
    Emory News Center, Dec 19, 2013
The Dividing Lines: Pit bulls, Identity, and Community
    Scholarblog for course taught by Donna Troka, Ph.D.
Course Syllabus
Pit bull discussion at Emory University, Atlanta, GA. Sept 2013


Recent Fulton County Pit Bull Attacks:

Woman remains hospitalized after pit bull attack
    MyFoxAtlanta.com, Oct 25, 2013
Medics airlifted Maria Ines Matta to Atlanta Medical Center after two dogs mauled her as she walked her own dogs. Henry County police had to shoot the dogs to save Mrs Ines.

Student bitten in face by dogs at Carver High School
    Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Oct 8, 2013
Animal control officers were able to trap another dog accused of attacking a 13-year-old on Monday, Hudson said. That animal, however, is not related to the Carver incident.

8-year-old family dog kills 2-yo toddler 
    USA Today, April 26, 2013
A family dog who had never shown aggression before attacked and killed a 2-year-old boy Wednesday in a subdivision near here about 15 miles southwest of Atlanta, police said.


News Archive: 
Nine deaths in past 18 months blamed on pit bulls
   Atlanta Journal-Constitution, November 29, 1986 (pg. A1)


Statistics:
Statistics quoted on SRUV are from the 30+ year, continuously updated Dog attack deaths and maimings, U.S. & Canada, published by Animal People. To view or download the current PDF click here. This page may also include information from Dogsbite and Fatal Pit Bull Attacks.

Information on euthanasia rates is from Pit bulls and Political Recklessness, by Merritt Clifton. Shelter  intake and euthanasia rates are published annually in the July/August edition of Animal People.


Google News: Today's pit bull attacks in the US




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Friday, December 27, 2013

Locking Jaws: II

Revised: Dec 28, 2013; 20:45 GMT
Revised: Dec 28, 2013; 21:55 GMT

To Dr. I. Lehr Brisbin,

We understand that you have studied the jaw mechanism of the American Pit Bull Terrier (APBT), and are considered by many to be an expert on this subject. Numerous animal welfare institutions, pit bull rescues, and other pit bull advocacy groups often refer to your research in their materials. In one excerpt, which is widely available on the internet, you state that pit bulls display no evidence of a locking mechanism:
The studies which have been conducted of the structure of the skulls, mandibles and teeth of pit bulls show that , in proportion to their size, their jaw structure, and thus its inferred functional morphology, is no different than that of any other breed of dog of comparable size and build. Further, there is no evidence for the existence of any kind of "locking mechanism" unique to the structure of the jaws and / or teeth of pit bulls.1
We would like to bring to your attention a recently published account of a pit bull attack on a 3-year old champion horse. The article summarizes the efforts of a neighbor to stop the attack:
[Zamora] picked up a nearby semi-rotted piece of plywood laying on the side of Gladiola Ave. and smashed the board across the body of one of the biting dogs, but to no avail, he said.

After I hit them, they didn’t budge,” Zamora said. “They would not release (the horse)."

[He] then grabbed several four-inch thick dry fire logs stacked in his front yard and wielded them at the pit bulls, but the dogs would not release their mouths, jaws tightly clenched around the horse’s legs and mouth.

[He] then ran to retrieve a child’s pink BB gun from his nearby garage, and whacked one of the canines with the butt of the children’s rifle, but the weapon only cracked in two places, and the stubborn pit bulls only continued their assault.

[He then] grabbed another piece of random side-of-the-road scrap wood, and struck one of the dogs across the skull.

The horse was so panicked that . . . ran over to the driver’s side of the vehicle, and as the driver opened the cab and attempted to exit the vehicle, the horse stuck its head inside and front hooves into the vehicle in an attempt to get away.

[Zamora] believes one of the two dogs that he struck across the skull died as a result of his injuries.
* * * * * 

This account describes in unembellished terms the tenacity pit bulls are known for. You might agree that dogmen (ie, traditional dogfighters) would refer to this trait as gameness. Journalists describing attacks, as well as victims of attacks, have sometimes used the expression "locking jaws" while describing such attacks. I think we can all agree it would be churlish to quibble over terminology in the face of such attacks.

The trait itself is undisputed, whatever we might chose to call it. I assume this trait is one of the reasons you use pit bulls to hunt hogs.

* * * * * 

Your record of service as an expert witness in judicial proceedings has earned a certain renown for you, both among advocates of pit bulls, as well as among those who would impose restrictions on them. And as you have made your services as an expert witness publicly available,2 you may therefore have valuable insights to offer on the recent attack on the horse in Montgomery County, Texas.

We therefore offer to meet with you to discuss this attack. To guarantee that the outcome of our discussion will not end in dispute we propose that our exchange be held before members of the press.

In addition, Miguel Zamora, the good Samaritan who saved the horse, should be present, so we can understand more clearly the behavior of the attacking pit bulls and Mr Zamora's efforts to save the horse. And finally, we will request the presence of the owner of the horse, who will doubtless be able to comment on the relevance of the term locking jaws.


* * * * *
Notes:
1 The American Pit Bull Terrier
2 American Canine Federation Expert Witness List

Source:
Neighbor fights off dogs' brutal attack on horse
   The Courier (Montgomery Cty, TX); December 21, 2013
Dr. I. Lehr Brisbin offers expert testimony in defense of dogfighting videos


Related Post:
Locking Jaws: I


Google News: Today's pit bull attacks in the US






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Friday, December 20, 2013

November Outreach

[This page is archived and no longer supported.]


Revised: June 3, 2014; 13:47 GMT

On November 11, 2013, 56-year old Anne Murray of Wilton Connecticut was attacked by her 2-year old pit bull. During the attack Mrs. Murray lost one arm at the shoulder and her other arm below the elbow, and her entire body was covered with bites. News accounts which claim that Mrs Murray is recovering are an outrage: Ms Murray will not recover from a mauling which caused the amputation of both arms.

Within days the pit bull outreach effort was underway. The first article (by John Burgeson of the Connecticut Post) appeared five days after the attack, and included 33 glamour shots of pit bulls. Localized versions of the article appeared in Hearst newspapers across Connecticut through the remaining weeks of November.

While these articles were being published Burgeson and Eileen Fitzgerald (of the Danbury News-Times) were preparing for the big time. On December 7 the Associated Press released a version which was picked up by hundreds of newspapers across the country.

National Pit Bull Awareness Day was launched in 2007 by Jodi Preis of Bless the Bullys, a Tennessee pit bull rescue group. October was designated as National Pit Bull Awareness Month in 2011 and has already become an institution, now used primarily as a means of promoting the adoption of pit bulls. During the October outreach campaign animal shelters and humane organizations prevail upon malleable journalists to help promote their pit bull marketing campaign, as happened recently in Boston and elsewhere.1

It now appears that November is the month when those same shelters explain to the public that their facilities remain crowded with surplus pit bulls, despite the October campaigns.

* * * * * 

On December 5th the Chicago Tribune published a feature article by Robert McCoppin. The article gave extensive coverage to the problems of sheltering and adopting out the extraordinary number of surplus pit bulls in the Chicago area. Two days after McCoppin's article appeared two-year old Jah'niyah White died on Chicago's south side after she was attacked by her grandfather's two pit bulls.

The conjunction of Jah'niyah's death with McCoppin's article (as with the Burgeson/Fitzgerald article and the attack in Wilton) illustrates the complexity of writing about pit bulls. Inevitably there will be another attack, and it may happen while your article is going to press.

* * * * *

The Connecticut articles, for the most part, attempted to present the issue fairly. Burgeson and Fitzgerald interviewed Colleen Lynn (of Dogsbite) at length, but they inevitably segued to comments by pit bull advocates gushing about the sweetness of pit bulls: She's the nicest, sweetest dog you could ever know. It must be next to impossible for journalists to avoid this honey trap.

McCoppin, on the other hand, makes no effort to present both sides of the issue, simply describing at length the efforts to adopt out pit bulls. The article ends with an account of plans by PAWS Chicago founder Paula Fasseas to build a new adoption center in Highland Park, due to open next spring. And closes, inevitably, with Fasseas saying, yes, and they're really sweet dogs.

 All of these recent articles explain only that our shelters are overcrowded, largely with pit bulls, which we've known for decades. (See Shelter Crowding, below.)

Neither McCoppin nor Burgeson and Fitzgerald explain how we arrived at this situation, nor do they suggest what we might do to alleviate the problem. The suggestion seems to be to build more shelters and adopt out more pit bulls. But the First Law of pit bull accounting, as we know from hard experience, holds that the more pit bulls we adopt out, the more pit bulls shelters will be compelled to take in. We could build adoption shelters on every street corner and we would only continue to make the problem worse.

There is a solution. First, we must recognize and accept that we cannot adopt our way out of the problem. An article written in 2011 sets out the problem:
. . . an effective response to pit bull overpopulation must target breeding, and must be legislatively mandated,  since pit bull breeders have proved intransigently resistant to any and all forms of gentle persuasion. . . . . 

“Anything that just brings a heap of dead dogs is another tragic failure – and is basically where we already are,”  ANIMAL PEOPLE editorialized in December 2005.  It is profoundly disappointing that six years later the heap of dead pit bulls is many times higher, while much of the animal advocacy community continues to promote the same policies and practice the same denial that for 25 years have contributed to manufacturing the pit bull crisis.

More adoptions will not end shelter killing of pit bulls;
Animal People, October 2011
Then we must apply the workable, realistic solution we've been avoiding:
Overwhelmed by the pit bull influx at the same time that public expectations have risen that shelters should be “no kill,” the humane community has made unprecedented efforts to avoid killing pit bulls, including promoting the very myths –– such as the fiction that pit bulls were ever used as “nanny dogs” –– that tend to lead to fatal and disfiguring accidents.


Mandatory pit bull sterilization, in effect in San Francisco since 2006, could prevent the impoundment and subsequent deaths of more than 900,000 pit bulls per year nationwide [and] end the desperation of shelter management to avoid killing pit bulls . . .

Stop dogfighting by addressing supply-side economics;
Animal People, November 20, 2013
* * * * * * * * *

Interactive map of Illinois fatal pit bull attacks, with supporting data,
courtesy of Dogsbite.org:



For full details and larger map go to 
Illinois Fatal Pit Bull Maulings - DogsBite.org



* * * * *
Notes:
1 Rising Pit Bull Adoptions Reflect Breed's Changing Image 
   Boston Globe, October 7, 2013

We are grateful to Dogsbite.org for use of the interactive map of Illinois pit bull attacks. To view other interactive state maps go to Dogsbite's State Pit Bull Fatality Maps.


Sources: Wilton, CT
Woman loses both hands during pit bull attack
   WTNH News 8, November 12, 2013
Pit bulls dominate shelters
   Connecticut Post, November 16, 2013 (by John Burgeson)
   with 33 glamour photos of pit bulls
Pit bulls dominate shelters
   Stamford Advocate, November 22, 2013 (by John Burgeson)
   also with 33 photographs
   Norwich Bulletin, November 23, 2013 (By John Barry)
   NBC Connecticut, November 25, 2013
   Danbury News-Times, November 30, 2013
   By John Burgeson and Eileen FitzGerald
   Associated Press, December 7, 2013
   By Eileen FitzGerald and John Burgeson


Sources: Chicago:
A painful Christmas for family of child killed by dog
   Chicago Tribune, December 9, 2013
Pit bull overload floods shelters, strains rescuers
   Chicago Tribune, December 5, 2013
What about proposed animal control changes?
   Galesburg Register-Mail, November 22, 2013
Pit bull mix is euthanized after attacking pound worker
   Chicago Tribune, November 3, 2013
Animal Control Worker Seriously Injured In Pit Bull Attack
   CBS2 Chicago, November 2, 2013
64-year-old Chicago woman attacked by 3 pit bulls, may lose leg
   Allvoices, October 20, 2013
Woman, Chihuahua Attacked By Three Pit Bulls
   CBS2 Chicago, October 18, 2013
Man Critically Injured After Pit Bulls Attack
   NBC5 Chicago, September 1, 2013
Peorian recounts terror of pit bull attack
   Peoria Journal-Star, March 23, 2013


Shelter Crowding:
   American Statesman, May 14, 2012
   Animal Medical Center of Southern California
   Miami Herald, July 25, 2013
   Kansas City Star, June 26, 2012


Related Posts:
Pimping pit bulls
Index of Illinois Posts
Timeline of pit bull attacks in Illinois


Other Resources:
Pit Bull Attacks and Dogfighting in Illinois
Pit bull attacks: Chicago


Statistics:
Statistics quoted on SRUV are from the 30+ year, continuously updated Dog attack deaths and maimings, U.S. & Canada, published by Animal People. To view or download the current PDF click here. This page may also include information from Dogsbite and Fatal Pit Bull Attacks.

Information on euthanasia rates is from Pit bulls and Political Recklessness, by Merritt Clifton. Shelter  intake and euthanasia rates are published annually in the July/August edition of Animal People.


Google News: Today's pit bull attacks in the US




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Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Dog Laundering


The following letter is reprinted by permission of the author1 and by permission of Animal People,2 where it first appeared.
* * * * *

To the Editors of Animal People,

I believe animal shelters have a moral and legal duty to investigate, record and report about the behavior of every dog put up for adoption.  I have created materials for them to do it, including written policies and procedures, as well as forms.  The kit is called Avoiding Liability When You Train, Shelter or Adopt Out a Dog,  available via <www.dogbitelaw.com>.

I coined the term “dog laundering” to describe the intentional breach of an animal shelter’s duties that takes place when a vicious dog is transferred from one group to another for the purpose of disguising its history and placing it in an unsuspecting new home.  I believe that such conduct on the part of the groups is both a tort and a crime.  Just as bad,  it is harmful to the honest adoption/shelter groups and to good dogs who need homes,  because as the public becomes aware of the practice of dog laundering,  people will return to the pet stores.

Kenneth M. Phillips
Attorney at Law
www.dogbitelaw.com
kphillips {@] dogbitelaw dot com

* * * * *
Notes:
1 Attorney Kenneth M. Phillips, the author of Dog Bite Law, dogbitelaw.com
2 Animal People, October 2013, p6 (Web page no longer available)

Statistics:
Statistics quoted on SRUV are from the nation's authoritative source for current dog attack statistics, the 30+ year, continuously updated Dog attack deaths and maimings, U.S. & Canada.
View or download the current PDF

2014 Year-end report of dog attacks
   Animals 24-7; January 3, 2015
32 years of logging fatal & disfiguring dog attacks
   Animals 24-7; September 27, 2014
How many other animals did pit bulls kill in 2014?
   Animals 24-7; January 27, 2015

This page may also include information from Dogsbite &Fatal Pit Bull Attacks.

Google News: Today's pit bull attacks

2014 Dog Bite Related Fatalities on Daxton's Friends
Index of canine fatalities on Daxton's Friends

Definitions:
SRUV uses the definition of "pit bull" as found in the Omaha Municipal Code Section 6-163. As pit bulls are increasingly crossed with exotic mastiffs, Catahoula Leopard Dogs and other breeds, the vernacular definition of "pit bull" must be made even more inclusive.

Sources cited by news media sometimes refer to "Animal Advocates" or sometimes "Experts." In many cases these words are used to refer to single-purpose pit bull advocates who have never advocated for any other breeds or species of animals. Media would be more accurate to refer to these pit bull advocates as advocates of fighting breeds.

Similarly, in many cases pit bull advocates refer to themselves as "dog lovers" or "canine advocates" and media often accepts this usage. The majority of these pit bull advocates are single-purpose advocates of fighting breeds.





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Thursday, December 5, 2013

To the Editor

The following letter is reprinted by permission of the author and by Animal People, where it first appeared.1

* * * * *
To the Editors of Animal People,

I enclose a donation in memory of my old dog Penny, whose last year of life was very difficult after a pit bull attack. I lost a finger while trying to rescue her.

Yours is the only publication I know where one can read the truth about pit bulls. I appreciate your courage.

I hope your readers will stop donations to all six animal charities listed in Jeff Borchardt's letter "Who killed Daxton Borchardt?,"2 published in your September 2013 edition. I phoned three of those charities after my dog and I were attacked and told them I was removing them from my will because they are pushing the adoption of pit bulls, while wonderful, friendly dogs of other breeds are being euthanized.

I have volunteered for animals for 43 years, including at county shelters and humane societies. I took many abused and neglected dogs into my home. Yet, while walking Penny on a leash in a park, we were attacked by three pit bulls who were up for adoption! These same dogs were being taken into classrooms full of small children. I stopped than.

In memory of 14-month old Daxton Borchardt, I encourage Animal People readers to write letters to their local newspapers and contact the staff of their local schools to make sure they are not brainwashed into believing that pit bulls are "nanny dogs." Perhaps we can prevent another precious life from being taken from us.

Hazel Mortensen
Solvang, California

* * * * *

The six animal charities listed in Jeff Borchardt's letter and referred to by Ms. Mortensen are:
  • Best Friends Animal Society
  • National Canine Research Council
  • Animal Farm Foundation
  • BADRAP
  • ASPCA
  • HSUS (Humane Society of the U.S )


* * * * *

Notes:
1 Animal People, October 2013, p6
2 Animal People, September 2013, p7


Related Source:
Father of child killed by babysitter's pit bulls speaks out;
   Dogsbite, July 26, 2013


Statistics:
Statistics quoted on SRUV are from the 30+ year, continuously updated Dog attack deaths and maimings, U.S. & Canada, published by Animal People. To view or download the current PDF click here. This page may also include information from Dogsbite and Fatal Pit Bull Attacks.

Information on euthanasia rates is from Pit bulls and Political Recklessness, by Merritt Clifton. Shelter  intake and euthanasia rates are published annually in the July/August edition of Animal People.


Google News: Today's pit bull attacks in the US




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Friday, November 29, 2013

Leazaun Thornton's pit bull

Revised: December 29, 2013; 15:39 GMT

On November 1, 2013 Leazaun Thornton of Reynoldsburg, Ohio was cited for harboring a pit bull. Reynoldsburg, a suburb of Columbus, approved legislation in 1996 which prohibits the keeping of vicious dogs, including pit bulls.

Ms. Thornton is contesting the citation, claiming that her dog is a cross between a Cane Corso and a Presa Canario and is considered to be a mastiff, not a pit bull.

* * * * *

In a related incident, 65-year old Anne Murray of Wilton, CT was attacked by her pit bull on November 11th, 2013. The family pet gnawed off one arm above the elbow and the other arm below the elbow. Her entire body was covered with bites.

What is the connection between harboring a mixed-breed dog in Reynoldsburg, OH and the horrifying pit bull attack in Wilton, Connecticut? The connection is that advocates of fighting breeds habitually attempt to confuse the issue by arguing about the breed of the dog, which is an irrelevant diversion in nearly every instance.

In Reynoldsburg Leazaun Thornton claimed her dog was not a pit bull but a mix between a Cane Corso and a Presa Canario. Ms Thornton's case is related to the simultaneous effort by Reynoldsburg pit bull advocates to overturn the city's pit bull ban which has been in effect since 1996.

In the Wilton case pit bull advocates from around the state, including Kayte Zowine, Allyson Halm, and Racquel Trapp1 all claimed the dog was not a pit bull. The controversy about the breed of the dog that ate Anne Murray's hands simmered until Wilton police Capt. John Lynch briefed the Wilton board of selectmen on the matter, and said the dog wasn't a pit bull but an American Staffordshire Terrier. The issue may ultimately have been resolved when the ASPCA acknowledged that the dog was a pit bull.

All these breeds (and others) are pit bull type dogs.

It is not uncommon for breeders of American Pit Bull Terriers to register their dogs as both American Pit Bull Terriers (in the United Kennel Club) and American Staffordshire Terriers (in the American Kennel Club). It is also not uncommon for breeders of American Staffordshire Terriers to dual register their dogs as both American Staffordshire Terriers (in the AKC) and American Pit Bull Terriers (in the UKC). If both kennel clubs are willing to cross-register these dogs it's evident they are the same dog under different names.

Ms Thornton does not claim that her dog is a pure-bred Cane Corso or Presa Canario (the breed responsible for the notorious Dianne Whipple mauling); she claims it is a cross-breed. Pit bulls historically have been interbred and crossbred for a broad range of shapes and sizes.2  They have been crossed with mastiff type dogs for increased bulk for so long that in many individuals it's impossible to distinguish a specific lineage; and all of these crossbreeds are therefore referred to as pit bull type dogs.


* * * * * 

Omaha NE Municipal Code Section 6-163
For purposes of this section, pit bull shall be defined as any dog that is an American Pit Bull Terrier, American Staffordshire Terrier, Staffordshire Bull Terrier, Dogo Argentina, Presa Canario, Cane Corso, American Bulldog, or any dog displaying the majority of physical traits of any one or more of the above breeds (more so than any other breed), or any dog exhibiting those distinguishing characteristics which substantially conform to the standards established by the American Kennel Club or United Kennel Club for any of the above breeds.


* * * * *
Notes:
1  Kayte Zowine is co-director of the Bridgeport-based  Project Precious Rescue; Allyson Halm is president of Adopt-a-Dog Inc., and Racquel Trapp is director of Angel Capone Pit Bull Rescue in Bridgeport.
2  See the SRUV version of Find the Pit Bull.

Definitions:
SRUV uses the definition of "pit bull" as found in the Omaha Municipal Code Section 6-163. As pit bulls are increasingly crossed with exotic mastiffs, Catahoula Leopard Dogs and other breeds, the vernacular definition of "pit bull" must be made even more inclusive.

Sources cited by news media sometimes refer to "Animal Advocates" or sometimes "Experts." In many cases these words are used to refer to single-purpose pit bull advocates who have never advocated for any other breeds or species of animals. Media would be more accurate to refer to these pit bull advocates as advocates of fighting breeds.



Similarly, in many cases pit bull advocates refer to themselves as "dog lovers" or "canine advocates" and media often accepts this usage. The majority of these pit bull advocates are single-purpose advocates of fighting breeds.

Posts on pit bull identification:

Sources for Reynoldsburg:
Eight member committee will review pit bull law
   This Week Community News, November 23, 2013
   This Week Community News, July 16, 2013
   The Province, October 2, 2013

Sources for attack on Anne Murray:
   Norwalk Citizen, November 20, 2013
   Norwalk Citizen, November 20, 2013
   NY Daily News, November 13, 2013 

Statistics:
Statistics quoted on SRUV are from the nation's authoritative source for current dog attack statistics, the 30+ year, continuously updated Dog attack deaths and maimings, U.S. & Canada.
View or download the current PDF

2014 Year-end report of dog attacks
   Animals 24-7; January 3, 2015
32 years of logging fatal & disfiguring dog attacks
   Animals 24-7; September 27, 2014
How many other animals did pit bulls kill in 2014?
   Animals 24-7; January 27, 2015

This page may also include information from Dogsbite &Fatal Pit Bull Attacks.

Google News: Today's pit bull attacks

2014 Dog Bite Related Fatalities on Daxton's Friends
Index of canine fatalities on Daxton's Friends









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Monday, November 18, 2013

Puppycide


On November 4th, 2013, an alarming article appeared in The National Review. The article by Charles C. W. Cooke appeared under a title sure to raise the blood pressure of anyone who has ever looked into the eyes of an adorable puppy: Puppycide. 

Cooke is one of the young Turks of the Libertarian movement. He makes regular appearances as a talking head on right-leaning TV programs and writes a column for The National Review. What could have motivated him (or the Editors) to devote valuable space in TNR to an animal welfare issue when he could just as well have been piling on the health care debacle instead?

Charles C. W. Cooke

Animals and politics often make strange bedfellows, but there is more to this story than meets the eye.

* * * * *

The origins of the article lie in the efforts by an obscure libertarian filmmaker to fund a film about the shooting of dogs by police. Patrick Reasonover, the producer/director/auteur of a proposed film with the working title of Puppycide, launched a fundraising campaign on the crowdsourcing service Kickstarter.1   Reasonover set a fundraising goal of $100,000 and the campaign was set to run for 25 days, from October 21 through November 15. If fundraising failed to reach the $100,000 goal the pledges would be returned to the donors.

News of the proposed film filtered out to libertarian blogs and the contributions dribbled in.  As the campaign clock ticked Reasonover worked the phones, email, and airwaves to speed up donations. The people given to wearing tin foil hats tuned in.2  Supporters posted notices like the following blog post on Living Freedom:
I received an email update from them today saying that anybody who donates $150 or more will now get all of these items:
  • This Just Announced Hoodie
  • Signed Movie Poster
  • Bandana and Frisbee
  • DVD of finished film
  • Bumper sticker
  • Digital download of the finished film
  • And campaign updates
* * * * *

The momentum began to build and several mainstream media outlets published stories about the fundraising campaign. Radley Balko pitched the film in the Huffington Post. A piece appeared in an online version of The Atlantic. As the campaign wore on Reasonover finally received coverage in the crown jewel of the libertarian media, The National Review.

You might ask yourself if there's more to this story than a libertarian perspective of animal welfare. The answer is yes: the story is really about pit bulls, cop haters, and a libertarian magazine called Reason.

Balko, who pitched Puppycide in the Huffington Post, is the author of two books critical of the police and is a former writer for Reason. He is also interviewed in the film. Riggs, the author of the piece in The Atlantic, is also a former associate editor at Reason. The Reason index shows dozens of articles about pit bulls, Breed Specific Legislation, and puppycide. At least five of the articles, about the shooting of dogs by police, use the following manipulative image as an icon:


Reason is an incubator for anti-cop journalists. The writers are willing to use any subject, including animal welfare, as long as it includes an anti-cop angle.

* * * * *

But are libertarians interested in animal rights? An analysis of the Reason articles shows that is far from true. Reason simply found a nascent issue which provides a platform for their anti-police posture, one which unfairly exploits the passion of millions of true animal welfare advocates. The Huffington Post and The National Review were both used, perhaps unwittingly, as platforms by the cop-hating fringe of the libertarian movement.

There is no recorded case of police shooting a puppy; neither The Huffington Post nor The National Review offered a clarification of this critical point. Their tacit acceptance of such an explosive term is reminiscent of the old days of yellow journalism. The libertarian publications failed to mention how often law enforcement officers are confronted by fighting breeds.
Proponents of laws requiring police and sheriff’s deputies to be trained in dog behavior note that U.S. law enforcement officers shot at least 210 dogs in the first four months of 2013, contending that many of the shootings were avoidable. ANIMAL PEOPLE confirmed 33 of the shootings, which targeted 31 pit bulls and two Rottweilers. The dogs had killed more than 70 other animals, and killed or injured 28 people. Among the injured were nine police officers, three animal control officers, and a police dog.3
Police have, on rare occasions, shot innocent dogs. Rather than treating these shootings as unfortunate accidents, and acknowledging the dangerous situations that law enforcement officers face, some libertarians have exploited the issue for their own political ends.

Puppycide is not an animal welfare film; it is an anti-cop polemic.


* * * * *

Notes:
1 Crowdsourcing is the practice of obtaining needed services, ideas, content, or funding by soliciting contributions from a large group of people, especially from an online community.
2 . . . the use of the term has been associated with paranoia and conspiracy theories. The supposed reasons for their use include the prevention of perceived harassment from governments, spies or paranormal beings. (Wikipedia, Tin foil hat)
3 Excerpted from a comment in response to the article in The National Review. The comment was posted by Merritt Clifton on Monday November 4, 2013; 2:22 pm.


Journalism:
Puppycide
   The National Review, November 4, 2013
Kickstarter Campaign Seeks Funding for Puppycide Documentary
   Huffington Post, October 29, 2013
Is a Pet Dog Really Killed by a Police Officer Every 98 Minutes?
   The Atlantic Cities, October 24, 2013


Other sources:
Puppycide page at Kickstarter
Ozymandias Media
Reason.com; index of articles about police shooting of pit bulls
Dogs Shot by Cops, Animal Legal Defense Fund


Libertarian Media:
A call to action to end unaccountable shootings
   23hgold, November 17, 2013
Puppycide documentary moves forward
   Cato Institute, November 14, 2013
Puppycide Kickstarter campaign; the last three days
   Living Freedom, November 12, 2013
   Silver Doctors, November 11, 2013
Police shooting of thousands of dogs in America
   Liberty Rising Radio, November 11, 2013 (40 minute audio interview)
Puppycide: Can a documentary save lives?
   Police State USA, November 11, 2013
CA Residents Protest Puppycide
   The Lisbon Reporter, October 23, 2013
“Puppycide” Documentary Seeks to End National Tragedy
   NH Insider, October 22, 2013


Statistics:
Statistics quoted on SRUV are from the 30+ year, continuously updated Dog attack deaths and maimings, U.S. & Canada, published by Animal People. To view or download the current PDF click here. This page may also include information from Dogsbite and Fatal Pit Bull Attacks.

Information on euthanasia rates is from Pit bulls and Political Recklessness, by Merritt Clifton. Shelter  intake and euthanasia rates are published annually in the July/August edition of Animal People.







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Sunday, November 10, 2013

Burnaby NewsLeader

To: The Burnaby NewsLeader

 On Monday, September 31, the Burnaby BC Council voted unanimously to approve changes to their animal control bylaws. The new law establishes increased fees and fines for infractions by vicious dogs, of which pit bulls are the only breed specified.

On the day before the Council vote the NewsLeader published an article which cast doubt on the proposed bylaw changes. We are writing to correct several misrepresentations in your article.

* * * * *
She [Mary-Catherine Kropinski] also questioned the report's use of statistics from the U.S.-based dog-bite victims group, dogbites.org, on pitbulls being responsible for a high number of fatal American dog attacks.
In the six day period from October 30 through November 4, 2013, there were three fatal pit bull attacks. There have been a total of 27 fatal dog attacks in the US and Canada during calendar year 2013; 24 of them have been committed by pit bulls.

Your article appears to question whether these attacks occurred, even though each attack is thoroughly documented. If Ms Kropinski dismisses the data on dogsbite she must explain how these deaths occurred; it is not enough to discount the data without proving how it is incorrect.

* * * * *
Rebeka Breder, a lawyer who specializes in animal law, said focusing on the breed does not ensure public safety.
Nothing can ensure public safety, so Ms Breder is technically correct in making that claim.

But regulating pit bulls does without question reduce the number of fatal and disfiguring pit bull attacks. In 1989 Miami-Dade county in Florida passed legislation restricting pit bulls, and remains the only county in Florida with Breed Specific Legislation (BSL). Since that time Miami-Dade has experienced no fatal pit bull attacks, while 18 people have been killed by pit bulls elsewhere in Florida.

Statistics such as these are repeated across the country: where well-written BSL laws are enforced, the number of pit bull attacks causing death or grievous injury declines.1

Conversely, also in 1989 California passed a statewide law which prohibited municipalities in the state from passing BSL ordinances. Since that time the pit bull population has ballooned and there have been at least 38 fatal pit bull attacks in California.

* * * * *

These are documented cases, as is every fatal pit bull attack on Dogsbite and on Fatal Pit Bull Attacks. The NewsLeader has, without cause, attempted to cast doubt on these fatal attacks, and thereby slandered a responsible public safety and victim's advocacy organization.

Advocates of fighting breeds have long attempted to discredit the accurate reporting of fatal pit bull attacks. The attempt to suppress disagreeable news is reminiscent of attempts by political parties (and before them, fascist governments) to control the news.

Many animal advocates believe that pit bulls deserve the same protections we accord to other dogs. SRUV and millions of other committed animal advocates believe that human and animal victims are more deserving of protections than the type of dog responsible for 89% of the fatal dog attacks this year.

Well-intentioned animal advocates like Ms Kripinski and her dogsitter must realize where the danger lies. Perhaps when the death rate in Canada approaches that in the US, they will. But by that time it may be too late to do anything about it.


* * * * *

Sources:
Pregnant cows attacked by pit bulls
   CBC News, October 14, 2013
Burnaby stands by pit bull 'vicious dog' bylaw, increases fines
   The Province, October 2, 2013
Council approves new pit bull fines
   Burnaby NewsLeader, October 2, 2013
Farwell pit bull victims shocked by lack of city action
   Revelstoke Times Review, October 1, 2013
Problem pit bulls are relocated
   Chilliwack Times, September 24, 2013
Pit bulls terrorizing neighborhood
   CBC News, September 16, 2013
Pit bull attacks raise call for tough restrictions
   Huffington Post B.C., September 13, 2013
Burnaby council looks at new rules and higher fees for owners of ‘vicious dogs’
   Global News, September 10, 2013
Dog trainer defends pit bulls after attacks on children
   CBC News (audio file), August 28, 2013
Two four-year-old children in B.C. have been mauled by pit bulls in the past week. Dog trainer Shelagh Begg says the media is to blame for the breed's bad reputation.
It's time to ban pit bulls in B.C.
   The Province, August 30, 2012
   Vancouver Courier, October 19, 2011


Statistics:
Statistics quoted on SRUV are from the 30+ year, continuously updated Dog attack deaths and maimings, U.S. & Canada, published by Animal People. To view or download the current PDF click here. This page may also include information from Dogsbite and Fatal Pit Bull Attacks.

Information on euthanasia rates is from Pit bulls and Political Recklessness, by Merritt Clifton. Shelter  intake and euthanasia rates are published annually in the July/August edition of Animal People.
Google News: Today's pit bull attacks






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Saturday, November 9, 2013

Texas Timeline


SRUV stopped logging attacks in February, 2016.
This log represents only a few of the more notable recent pit bull attacks in Texas before that date.



* * * * * 


Mailman Injured in Pit Bull Attack
   February 16, 2016; KIII South Texas TV

Arlington Dog Loses Leg in Brutal Attack; Owner Wants Changes
   January 19, 2016; CBS DFW

Two pit bulls attack and kill neighbor's dogs in Canutillo
   January 3, 2016; KFOX14

2015

Man, officer attacked by pack of pit bulls in south San Antonio
   December 15, 2015; KENS 5 San Antonio TX

Stranger's heroism saves mother, child from dog attack
   November 24, 2015; KHOU

Woman, daughter attacked by their four pit bulls
   November 13, 2015; KSAT ABC12

Rosharon woman seriously injured in dog attack
   November 6, 2015; KHOU
Shirley Sanders was evacuated by Life Flight to Memorial Hermann Hospital.


Bryan officers credited with saving man's life after pit bull attack
   November 3, 2015; The Eagle

Three People Attacked by Dogs in North Houston
   October 26, 2015; ABC 13

El Paso sheriff's deputy bitten by stray animal
   October 22, 2015; KFOX 14

Woman's dog mauled by same pit bulls who killed Texas boy
   October 21, 2015; WMAZ
   A Vidor, Texas woman said the same dogs who killed a 5-year-old boy in Orange County Sunday viciously mauled her puppy last year. This comes after our Texas station, KBMT reported Monday night that the two pit bulls attacked a little girl and her mom.

FATAL ATTACK
Texas boy, 5, mauled to death by two pit bulls at home of family friend
   October 20, 2015; Daily News

Dog Allegedly Mauls Goats Leaving Ten Dead
   October 2, 2015; KWTX

5-Year Old Girl Recovering After Pit Bull Attack
   September 29, 2015; KWIX.com

Elderly Woman Brutally Attacked by Dogs in Houston's Southside
   September 9, 2015; ABC 13 Eyewitness News

Winnetka Heights dog attack: scary reminder of why strays issue must be fixed
   August 19, 2015; Dallas Morning News

Two pit bulls attack men in two separate West Side incidents
   August 15, 2015; KSAT ABC 12 San Antonio

Two Pit Bulls Attack 6-Year-Old Child, One Euthanized by Owner
   August 14, 2015; San Angelo Live

Woman, little girl in hospital after being mauled by two pit bulls
   August 5, 2015; KPRC Houston

Boston Terrier dies protecting children from pit bull attack
   July 13, 2015; ABC 13 Eyewitness News Houston

Charges to be filed after woman attacked by 4 dogs
   July 9, 2015; KVUE, Kyle TX

Pitbull Owner Charged
July 8, 2015; Tyler Star News (Texas)
According to police reports the two Pitbulls have been documented attacking people and other animals on five separate occasions.

FATAL ATTACK -- Pecos, TX
Elderly Man Killed After Being Attacked by Pit Bull
   July 2, 2015; NewsWest 9

Pit bull shot, killed after attacking Smith County workers
   June 30, 2015; Tyler Morning Telegraph

3-year-old Lawton Boy Dies After Pitbull Attack
CANINE HOMICIDE
  June 29, 2015; KFDX Fox Texoma

Postal worker attacked by pit bull during mail route
   June 17, 2015; KHOU

Dog attacks HPD officer near Midtown
   June 9, 2015; Click2Houston

Woman injured, dog dead after 4 pit bulls attack them in Kyle
   June 12, 2015; KVUE ABC

Pit bull snatches child from mother's grasp
   June 4, 2015; Tyler Morning Telegraph

Couple And Pet Survive Dog Attack, Want Pitbull-Mix Punished
   June 1, 2015; CBS DFW

Longview woman's pit bulls attacked 4 people
   May 30, 2015; Longview News Journal


Sondra Rene’ Kroll


May 14, 2015; Midland Reporter-Telegram
Pit-bull attacks 6-year-old girl

May 5, 2015; KWTX Waco
Weekend Pit Bull Attack Leaves 2 People, Dog Injured

April 27, 2015; KRISTV.com Corpus Christy
Aggressive dog shot and killed

April 20, 2015; CBS DFW
Pit Bull Mauling Death Being Referred To Grand Jury

April 19, 2015; NBC5 DFW.com
CANINE HOMICIDE
2-Month-Old Boy Dead in Pit Bull Attack

April 17, 2015; Killeen Daily Herald
Woman charged after alleged Cove pit bull attack

April 10, 2015; Killeen TX
Pit bull attack sends girl, 6, to hospital

April 1, 2015; MyHighPlains, TX
Waco Police Officer Saves Woman From Pit Bull Attack

March 10, 2015; Marshall, TX
1 arrested in vicious dog attack resulting in hospitalization of 83-year-old
On February 9, 2015, at 8:45 am, Sarah Harper, an 83-year-old retired teacher, was attacked in her front yard by two pit bull type dogs o . . . . The victim, a great-grandmother and longtime Marshall resident, remains in ICU while she recovers.

March 7, 2015; Lorena, TX
Mother, daughter injured in a pit bull attack

March 3, 2015; El Paso, TX
11-month-old girl recovering from dog attack in Montana Vista

February 14, 2015; Cypress, TX
Poodle nearly killed while saving girl from pit bull attack
My children's hero on GoFundMe.com

February 9, 2015; Marshall, TX
1 arrested in vicious dog attack resulting in hospitalization of 83-year-old

February 5, 2015; Collin County TX (CBS DFW)
3 Members Of Family Hospitalized After Pit Bull Attack
Mother, 2 daughters recovering after pit bull attack
It looked like a war zone. . . There was quite a bit of blood. Everyone was really shaken in the neighborhood and just really worried about them and praying for them, Williams said, adding that online reaction to the attack isn’t making things better. . . . So many people defending pit bulls and feeling sorry for the dog that got shot. He was shot while he was attacking a woman.
February 5, 2015; Kingsville, TX
Girl attacked by pit bulls in Kingsville
   . . . the girl was rushed to the hospital in Kingsville but was later flown to Driscoll Children's Hospital.

January 20, 2015; Waco, TX
Officer hears screams, rescues local woman from pit bull attack

January 14, 2015; Waco, TX
Pit bull attacks local girl playing in her yard

January 13, 2015; El Paso, TX
Loose pit bull mauls family dog, family calls for harsher punishment

January 3, 2015; Henderson County, TX
Pit bull shot after attack


2014

December 30, 2014; Hidalgo County, TX
Man in critical condition after pit bull attack

December 17, 2014; Houston, TX
Man attacked by two pit bulls in North Houston

November 23, 2014; Katy, TX
Owner could regain custody of 3 pit bulls that attacked neighbor

October 27, 2014; Texas City, TX

October 22, 2014; Grand Prairie, TX
Neighbors Want Pit Bull Gone After Attack

October 20, 2014; Amarillo, TX
Pit bull bites man, dog shot by officer

October 20, 2014; Lubbock, TX
Police release 911 audio on pit bull attack near North Lubbock mobile home park

September 24, 2014; Seagoville, TX
Two pit bulls shot, killed after attacking another dog

September 16, 2014; Houston, TX
Pit bull attacks woman walking in NE Houston

September 9, 2014; Nacogdoches, TX
Nacogdoches man saves child, woman from pit bull attack

September 3, 2014; Waxahachie, TX
Pit bull attacks grandmother

August 11, 2014; Victoria, TX
Pit bull shot after charging resident, officer
When officers arrived at the home, the dog charged an officer and was shot a second time by the officer . . .

August 10, 2014; El Paso, TX
Pit bull attack sends man to hospital

August 6, 2014; Houston, TX
2 pit bulls attack woman in her driveway

July 23, 2014; North Austin
Animal control investigates dog attack in N Austin

June 29, 2014; Plano
Man hospitalized following pit bull attack

June 19, 2014; San Antonio
Woman attacked by pit bull
Savannah says Animal Care Services picked up the dog but . . . the dog is back at the house and on the street.  She also claims ACS never called to give her an update on the pit bull's rabies tests and she has since had to have a series of 13 painful rabies shots.

June 11, 2014; Houston
Pit bull attack sends woman to hospital

June 4, 2014; Waco
Three pit bulls attack man, woman

May 29, 2014; Burke
Boy, 8, injured in attack by three pit bulls

May 24, 2014; Horizon City
Pit bull attacks 11-yo boy

May 12, 2014; Midland
Midland woman bit by pit bull; fears for neighborhood children

May 8, 2014; New Braunfels Herald-Zeitung
Resident seeks assistance from repeated attacks by marauding pit bulls

May 5, 2014; Houston
Houston man hospitalized after attack by three pit bulls

April 25, 2014
Bautmont man with Down syndrome hospitalized after attack by three pit bulls

April 25, 2014
Pit bulls attack owner in her backyard
The incident occurred in the same part of the city where a 2-year-old boy was killed and an 8-year-old girl was injured when a group of children walking home from a neighborhood playground was attacked by a bull mastiff on March 1. On April 14 three pit bulls attacked a 12-year-old girl, an 11-year-old boy and a 26-year-old woman who was trying to help the children in the area of Cody Poe Road and Armadillo Drive in Killeen. On Feb. 17, 2-year-old Je'vaeh Mayes of Temple died at Scott & White Hospital after a pit bull her family was watching for a friend attacked her in the backyard of her home. . . 

April 21, 2014, Alvin TX
(previously unreported pit bull attack)
Mother recalls attack on 2-yo daughter
She shoved her fist into the dog's mouth and even bit its ear off all while telling her daughter to turn over so she didn't choke on blood.

April 14, 2014; San Antonio, TX
CANINE HOMICIDE
This dog not for everyone
(Account of previously unreported attack)
An 83 year old woman died two weeks after her neighbor's dog attacked her. The victim, Petra Aguirre, was mauled March 31 as she fed her cats in the backyard of her west-side home.

April 14, 2014, Killeen, TX
Pack of pit bulls attack three, including two children
Witnesses said they saw three pit bulls attack a 12-year-old girl, a 11-year-old boy and a 26-year-old woman who was trying to help the children get away from the dogs.
2 children, woman in stable condition after attack by pit bulls

April 14, 2014, Houston TX
2 pit bulls attack pedestrian

April 9, 2014, Dallas TX
11-yo boy attacked outside apartment building

March 31, 2014, Kaufman, TX
CANINE HOMICIDE
85-yo woman found dead in her home of pit bull attack

March 31, 2014, League City, TX
2-year old airlifted after attack by pit bull owned by mother's boyfriend

March 28, Harris County TX
Off duty deputy shoots pit bull
Two pit bulls come into his unfenced backyard. The dog’s owner later told deputies it bit him earlier in the day.

March 25, Temple (Bell County) TX
Family pet killed in pit bull attack

March 20, Houston, Harris County TX
Man, deputy attacked during attack
They then turned on a 50-year-old man who sitting on his porch.  The dogs savagely attacked the man, biting him to the bone.  "I was trying to save his life, they were dragging him all through the yard."

March 18, Oak Cliff (Dallas) TX
5-year old boy attacked by pit bull
A witness told police that the dog had bitten the boy once before.

March 5, Houston TX
Neighbor helps jogger attacked by 2 pit bulls
They were playing tug of war with her. One was pulling this way and the other was pulling that way, trying to tear her apart. I ran down there and dove on top of her. That’s all I could do. Just put myself between her and the dog.

March 1, Killeen TX
CANINE FATALITY
Bull mastiff kills 2 yo boy and injures 8 yo girl

Feb 17, Temple TX
CANINE FATALITY
2-yo girl mauled to death

January 21, McAllen TX
Pit bull attack on small dog being walked by a woman and her daughter in park

January 5, Houston TX
CANINE HOMICIDE
1 dead, 2 more injured as 3 pit bulls attack


* * * * *

2013

December 27, Corpus Christi, TX
Three-Year Old Boy Attacked by Neighbor's Pit Bull

December 26, San Angelo TX
5 pit bulls attack man on bicycle
Tom Green County does not have a Leash Law, Pearce said, and law enforcement officials cannot to much to control the issue. “It’s getting to be a really bad problem, There’s no county animal officer. There’s not a leash law in the county.”

December 21, Conroe, TX
Neighbor fights off dogs’ brutal attack on horse
Zamora then grabbed several four-inch thick dry fire logs stacked in his front yard and wielded them at the pit bulls, but the dogs would not release their mouths, jaws tightly clenched around the horse’s legs and mouth.

December 17, Jacksonville TX
We talked to the mother yesterday and she said he was stable; he has a breathing tube, but the techs also went on to say that he had suffered a stroke, but that he was responsive

December 3, Forth Worth
Animal control officers conducted three sweeps for strays in the neighborhood last month . . . there have been 678 stray dogs picked up this year, including 70 in November.

December 1, Missouri City

November 10, San Antonio
Pit bull attacks have neighborhood living in fear
Larkin Garcia is left with just one Chihuahua after he says he witnessed two neighborhood Pit Bulls killing his other two dogs over the past three months. “My neighbor's dog been killed across the street. Their dogs, the two of them, have been killed. Down the road another one has been killed. And then a Siamese cat.”

November 8, Corpus Christy
October 16, Laredo
The father had to unlock the dog’s jaws to release the child.

October 16, Odessa

An Odessa family is warning neighbors after two pit bulls killed their beloved family pet "Chuco”. Odessa Police and Animal Control would not respond to the incident because it was not an emergency.
Chuco

October 11, San Antonio

September 23; Monahans
Pit bull attacks hospitalize two teens
Only fighting with one arm of course the pit bulls really got him and dragged him to the ally.

September 19, Houston
Investigators say two pit bulls barged through a fence, got into a house through the doggie door and then attacked two Jack Russell Terrier dogs named Lucy and Jackson. Lucy was killed in the family home, and Jackson died at an animal hospital.

August 30, Katy
The lower part of one of the man’s legs was missing and there were bite marks on his body

August 27, Houston
The toddler sustained multiple lacerations covering half of his face, across his scalp and forehead, and down his cheek, in addition to multiple deep puncture wounds in his back.

August 21, Houston
The dog survived and was taken to the vet by its owner. The bite victim was sent to the hospital by ambulance to be treated. Police would not say if anyone would face charges over the incident.

July 15, SW Houston
A camera captured the two pit bull mixes darting across the street like missiles towards Elrod and Bailey.

July 12, San Antonio

July 10, Harris County
The two 8-month-old dogs had the girl pinned on the ground and were reportedly biting her repeatedly. . . .

July 3, Austin
. . . a 16-year-old girl came to the store with a pit bull that weighed about 90 pounds. The maltese was with its owner, an elderly woman. . . . the pit bull soon broke away from the young owner and ran through the store dragging its leash until it found the maltese.

June 26, June 29, Jasper County

June 27, Lubbock
Saving Grace Pit Bull Rescue volunteer Jane Brewer said . . . the city picked up about 2,040 pit bulls last year and few were claimed by owners.

June 12, Houston
The owner of a pitbull in southwest Houston has refused to surrender his dog for a 10-day quarantine period, after it attacked a woman on May 29. As a consequence the victim was required to undergo a series of rabies vaccinations and the owner has accumulated nearly $7,000 in fines.

June 10, Plano
The pit bull has not been aggressive or violent toward the shelter staff, according to officials, and will be released back to her owners next Tuesday . . . .

May 8, Beeville
He suffered some serious injuries because he chose to intervene and take on the dog, but both he and the dog's owner cannot believe that the dog they both loved so much could become so vicious. "It's just, it's hard to understand, because he was such a good dog. He slept with me at night. He took care of me," Malcom said. "We're dog lovers. We never expected that to happen. I don't understand what happened. It was almost like he was cursed or something, like somebody had him under a curse."

May 6, North Austin
The dog reportedly bit her on the arm and on her left breast, causing severe injuries. She had to yank her arm out of the dog's mouth and had to be hospitalized.

March 21, Baytown

February 19, Sabinal
CANINE HOMICIDE
Isaiah Ray Aguilar was playing with his brother in the front yard when the balloon blew toward the home of the next door neighbor and onto the path of a chained pitbull. . . . The dog has not been euthanized, and city officials say they don’t believe they have the right to put the dog to sleep.

January 23, Willis, Montgomery County
An 18-month-old boy and his mother are recovering at Memorial Hermann Hospital in Texas, after being attacked by a pit bull at their home. . . . This is the second time in less than a week a child has been attacked by a pit bull under similar circumstances in Montgomery County.

January 22, Montgomery County
CANINE HOMICIDE


* * * * *
Statistics:
Statistics quoted on SRUV are from the nation's authoritative source for current dog attack statistics, the 30+ year, continuously updated Dog attack deaths and maimings, U.S. & Canada.
View or download the current PDF

2014 Year-end report of dog attacks
   Animals 24-7; January 3, 2015
32 years of logging fatal & disfiguring dog attacks
   Animals 24-7; September 27, 2014
How many other animals did pit bulls kill in 2014?
   Animals 24-7; January 27, 2015

This page may also include information from Dogsbite &Fatal Pit Bull Attacks.

Google News: Today's pit bull attacks

2014 Dog Bite Related Fatalities on Daxton's Friends
Index of canine fatalities on Daxton's Friends

Definitions:
SRUV uses the definition of "pit bull" as found in the Omaha Municipal Code Section 6-163. As pit bulls are increasingly crossed with exotic mastiffs, Catahoula Leopard Dogs and other breeds, the vernacular definition of "pit bull" must be made even more inclusive.

Sources cited by news media sometimes refer to "Animal Advocates" or sometimes "Experts." In many cases these words are used to refer to single-purpose pit bull advocates who have never advocated for any other breeds or species of animals. Media would be more accurate to refer to these pit bull advocates as advocates of fighting breeds.

Similarly, in many cases pit bull advocates refer to themselves as "dog lovers" or "canine advocates" and media often accepts this usage. The majority of these pit bull advocates are single-purpose advocates of fighting breeds.





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