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To: DeaconBenjamin
when good citizens start shooting police for killing their dogs, this may change. When the consequences of killing a dog become more than the hazard of being bit, police may be a little bit less prone to just unload on a family pet.
80 posted on
04/27/2014 12:10:22 PM PDT by
jyro
(French-like Democrats wave the white flag of surrender while we are winning)
To: DeaconBenjamin
“[The] dog shooting in Rains County this week [was] an unfortunate situation,”
Yeh unfortunate for psycho loon Deputy Dooley. Now he’s out on the street looking for more suitable work like a garage mechanic. No public interaztion with dogs or people.
82 posted on
04/27/2014 12:16:53 PM PDT by
Georgia Girl 2
(The only purpose o f a pistol is to fight your way back to the rifle you should never have dropped.)
To: Pride in the USA; Stillwaters
Ping. The incidents of police shooting dogs with little or no provocation has become epidemic. Often these incidents begin with innocent dogs who have escaped their yards, or when police come to the dog owner's home mistakenly looking for a different address, or even when police are called to the home by the owner for unrelated reasons (such as a neighbor's burglar alarm accidentally going off). Your dogs are not safe if they incidentally encounter law enforcement, even when your dogs are doing nothing at all. Stay aware, and help your dogs stay safe.
http://dogmurders.wordpress.com/
94 posted on
04/27/2014 2:12:50 PM PDT by
lonevoice
(We can evade reality, but we cannot evade the consequences of evading reality)
To: DeaconBenjamin
Fine. He gets a Jury Trial in Rains County, Texas but only if he pays all costs if he loses.
Until then, I call BS.
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