Posted on 03/07/2014 10:01:14 AM PST by Altariel
YORK COUNTY, SC Alice Renee McGlone says her cats Rhett Butler and Tara will have to go on without Scarlett her 9-year-old Labrador retriever after a York County Sheriffs Office deputy shot and killed the dog when, he says, it charged him aggressively on Tuesday.
McGlones friend Ron Montana buried Scarlett on Wednesday afternoon in her backyard, under a tree, on Clara Street in Rock Hill. Montana and McGlone say theyre outraged that the deputy used lethal force.
But, sheriffs officials say the deputy had no choice but to protect himself from the dog.
He hated to have done what he did but we teach our officers that they need to protect themselves in all situations, said Capt. Allen Brandon. Its regrettable what happened.
(Excerpt) Read more at thestate.com ...
You must watch this one to the end to appreciate it....
It’s an old Reno 911 episode clip where the police shoot the dog.... must watch to see why it is so funny
http://www.spike.com/video-clips/jbllzt/poor-dog-assiatance-call
In may area they still carry have it. I have heard on any departments not carrying it.
we train our officers and he did what he had to do
That claim could open up the city to a lawsuit because the officer obviously did what he was trained to do, and it is also just as perfectly obvious that he should have been trained better. Jury trial, pictures of cute dog, crying owner on the stand. $5Million, and some remedial training for the entire police department.
Golden Retrievers,...well know Pit FIghters,..yep
goofy yes dangerous...ahaha NOT LIKELY!
And that not only was the officer too stupid to merely back up, the police chief is that stupid too.
I guess the concept of private property outside, and sometimes inside, the house is a lost concept. Police should not be able to freely, without warrant, go into someone’s fenced yard (unless it is the only entry to the front door), but that idea is antithetical to today’s government agents.
Scarlett was beautiful.
I hear about cops shooting dogs frequently. Why don’t I ever hear about letter carriers having problems?
Funny you should say that *she’s* a Firearms Training Unit Detective, Barbara J. Mattson of the Connecticut State Police. Go figure. LOL
Good Gawd....
The problem isn’t dangerous dogs; the problem is sociopathic government employees who believe themselves better than the mere peasants.
I am fully aware of the Official Excuse.
You are the first person in the thread to promote it.
maybe it was just a mind prep exercise for the public to start accepting that police officer little tin god syndrome is now the rule and no longer the exception. If that is the case then at some point we should probably expect police to start shooting citizens for recording their activities.
It’s about intimidation.
“We shot your dog. We’ll get away with it. Cross us, and you could be next.”
See #49.
Ooooo...that must have been a hard one to handle, huh?
CA....
I was taught the same thing, officer...
No need to “re-state”, just read: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/3130726/posts#6
I'm impressed that our police departments are hiring quadriplegics...
IIRC.....BAD ADVICE
Current legal scholars recommend you NOT to put "beware of dog" signs up since, IF your dog bites someone, the warning sign indicates that you KNEW of a potential of future dog aggression and the victim will wipe the court with your good intentions and bank account. Shrug...some areas of the countries are different, but sounds legit.
Better idea: Fence with "no trespassing" and "private property" sign clearly visible. I don't know what alternative to warn people of a dog on your property would be, but I was advised on my farm to have "no trespassing, no hunting, private property, and no soliciting" signs posted. Oh, and your doormat should say this:
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