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How Police Deal With A Barking Dog Situation (shoot the dog dead)
KOTV News ^
| 6.9.04
Posted on 06/09/2004 12:49:10 AM PDT by ambrose
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1
posted on
06/09/2004 12:49:10 AM PDT
by
ambrose
To: Admin Moderator
It is my understanding that 'cop shoots dog' stories are on the approved "list".
2
posted on
06/09/2004 12:50:09 AM PDT
by
ambrose
(President Bush on Reagan: "His Work is Done and Now a Shining City Awaits Him")
To: ambrose
i.e., look at my bookmarked articles... none of those were pulled.
3
posted on
06/09/2004 12:50:36 AM PDT
by
ambrose
(President Bush on Reagan: "His Work is Done and Now a Shining City Awaits Him")
To: Travis McGee
Police say Fluppy was barking and approached Officer Cory Forister, so he shot the dog. He says he had to protect himself. Bixby Police say the procedure for handling animals depends on the circumstance and are investigating. We know how deadly Golden Retrievers can be.
4
posted on
06/09/2004 12:54:13 AM PDT
by
ambrose
(President Bush on Reagan: "His Work is Done and Now a Shining City Awaits Him")
To: All
http://www.kotv.com/main/home/storiesPrint.asp?id=63415&type=tp
Bixby Family Questions The Police Shooting Of Their Dog
A Bixby family has questions as to why a police officer shot and killed their 6 year-old golden retriever.
John and Cathy Benzinger were not home when the police responded to an alarm at their house. They say their dog was tethered to the fence in the backyard. They say police told them, the dog approached Officer Cory Forister, barking loudly. They say Forister shot Fluppy three times.
One neighbor confronted the officer after she and her children heard the shots. Molly Hannigan: "I said, 'Did you just shoot their dog?' and he said, 'Yes. I didn't want to get bit."
Dogs owner, Cathy Benzinger: "He's a big dog, he was 95 pounds but he's a golden retriever. He's not an attack dog."
The family put the dog to sleep because his injuries were too severe.
The News on 6 has made several attempts to contact Officer Forister. The Bixby Police Department's public information officer refused comment. Lieutenant Paul Tryon says he needs to review the case.
5
posted on
06/09/2004 12:56:20 AM PDT
by
ambrose
(President Bush on Reagan: "His Work is Done and Now a Shining City Awaits Him")
To: Dane
6
posted on
06/09/2004 12:57:46 AM PDT
by
ambrose
(President Bush on Reagan: "His Work is Done and Now a Shining City Awaits Him")
To: ambrose
You took the words out of my mouth. Stories abound of people mauled by golden retrievers.
This officer seems to have serious decision-making issues.
Now awaiting the predictable "any dog can be dangerous" posts. Best to shoot before attempting to befriend, just in case. After all, the officer just wants to "go home to his family" without having been nipped at by a dog.
7
posted on
06/09/2004 1:06:40 AM PDT
by
garandgal
To: ambrose
So I guess it is better to be tried by a jury of 12 mutts than to be carried in a casket by 6 pure breeds?
To: ambrose
Another out-of-control LEO that shoots first and thinks (maybe) later.
I bet she gets an accomodation for a righteous shooting to boot.
This kind of stuff makes me nauseous.
9
posted on
06/09/2004 1:13:02 AM PDT
by
Veracious Poet
(Cash cows are sacred in America...GOT MILKED???)
To: ambrose
It's a training issue. The cops aren't trained to deal with dogs. Even mean and nasty ones. I'm glad the person lived. I wish the dog had lived. I hope the department decides to get some training for it's officers.
The first thing any officer or child needs to learn is that the human species is the most deadly of ALL the species. Dogs know that. They smell us everywhere, and we bring home SUVs loaded with chicken, beef, and pork thirty minutes after we left. For dogs, we're the uber-hunters.
Take the high road, and you never have to fear a dog.
/john
10
posted on
06/09/2004 1:35:25 AM PDT
by
JRandomFreeper
(The chef is not your friend. He's nice to everyone.. until they screw up.)
To: JRandomFreeper
Giving a dog a piece of meat is just as effective as pumping bullets into its skull...
11
posted on
06/09/2004 1:40:09 AM PDT
by
ambrose
(President Bush on Reagan: "His Work is Done and Now a Shining City Awaits Him")
To: Veracious Poet
Another out-of-control LEO that shoots first and thinks (maybe) later. Let me fix that....
Another out-of-controlUNTRAINED LEO that shoots first and thinks (maybe) later.
Of course, an untrained officer and an out-of-control LEO act similarly.
I keep thinking that maybe mad dogs, untrained cops, and out-of-control cops should be locked up until we determine if someone has rabies....
/john
12
posted on
06/09/2004 1:42:35 AM PDT
by
JRandomFreeper
(The chef is not your friend. He's nice to everyone.. until they screw up.)
To: ambrose
My dog won' take meat from anyone. Ever. Even me.
He's old and grumpy, and his food has to by dry food with a splash of veg oil, and tossed to make him eat. Not that he's spoiled or has bad teeth or anything...
/john
13
posted on
06/09/2004 1:45:10 AM PDT
by
JRandomFreeper
(The chef is not your friend. He's nice to everyone.. until they screw up.)
To: ambrose
My wife and I have 4 Shih-Tzu's( two we planned on, adopted the other two as a pair) and they let us know when something
isn't "right", and defend it as such.
It sounds like this doggie was just protecting his yard (in
a tied-up position).IMHO , if the dog was "bad" enough to scare an "armed" LEO, it probably would have scared off
almost any person who had set off his owner's alarm.
....and the bad part is, the LEO's will probably get them
another "dog" to "replace" the one they killed, but the "replacement" will probably NEVER "replace" the one they "lost".
.....(I'd almost bet the shooter never owned a dog......
or IMHO, worse yet......is a CAT owner.....)
OK....asbestos suit firmly in place.....POST!!
14
posted on
06/09/2004 2:16:19 AM PDT
by
musicman
To: musicman
15
posted on
06/09/2004 3:04:14 AM PDT
by
ActionNewsBill
("In times of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act")
To: ambrose
According to department policy, the officer is given pepper spray to use first. If just walked in their backyard, then shot the dog without pepper spray then the officer is in question.
In my opinion, an officer that enters a back yard on a burglar call without seeing big dog and then panics and shoots it without seeing it is tied to the fence is an accident waiting to happen. Good thing it was not a dangerous kinder gardener playing cowboys and Indians in his own back yard with a (gasp) politicaly un-approved cap gun.
16
posted on
06/09/2004 3:09:04 AM PDT
by
American in Israel
(A wise man's heart directs him to the right, but the foolish mans heart directs him toward the left.)
To: musicman
I have worked as a volunteer with leader/companion dogs...the last time, about three weeks ago.
I mentioned to the trainer that there sure seemed to be alot of Golden Retrievers in his group.
He told it is because Goldies are working dogs. They are pacifists by instinct and rarely will go out of their way to attack/provoke/incite any trouble.
She told me that she has heard only one instance of a Goldie getting between its master and trouble.
On the other hand, here in Sedgwick County, Kansas, at the local animal shelter, pits are not allowed to be adopted out. When we went to adopt Balto, the handler there took us to the "pit room", about twenty cages with pits that were destined to die. Not a mean one in the bunch. They played with every pit in the group, and she discussed how it is so sad that a tiny handful of irresponsible dog owners is going to be the spark that eradicates a breed.
17
posted on
06/09/2004 3:37:55 AM PDT
by
baltodog
(There are three kinds of people: Those who can count, and those who can't.)
To: ambrose
>>We know how deadly Golden Retrievers can be.
Especially when tied to a fence. Just damn.
18
posted on
06/09/2004 3:45:43 AM PDT
by
FreedomPoster
(hoplophobia is a mental aberration rather than a mere attitude)
To: ambrose
The dog had to be put to sleeep after he was shot three times ! ? ! ? !
This cop (I know) doesnt know how to tell when or if he is being threatened or even what the right thing is to do about it if he was. What a idiot.
19
posted on
06/09/2004 3:47:10 AM PDT
by
Delta 21
(MKC USCG -ret)
To: ambrose
So, basically, a 200-pound human male, trained in life-and-death situations, is more afraid of a dog then say, your average jogger? When I'm out running, I'm often beset by dogs but I could care less. I'm bigger and meaner than they'll ever be and they know it. They bark but they keep their distance.
20
posted on
06/09/2004 3:57:23 AM PDT
by
Junior
(Love isn't always on time. Sometimes you have to pay for it up front.)
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