WND EXCLUSIVE
Police take horrific action 'every 98 minutes'
Outrage erupts over rash of dog shootings by cops
Leo Hohmann
Hawthorne, California, police shoot dead a Rottweiler dog.
A rash of animal shootings by police officers nationwide has
law-enforcement agencies running for cover amid growing public outrage
that could force state legislatures to require greater accountability
from men and women in uniform.
Police in Utah shot a family’s dog while searching for a lost boy,
prompting hundreds of pet owners to protest June 28 in front of the Salt
Lake City Police Department headquarters. They carried signs demanding
“justice for Geist,” a 110-pound Weimaraner shot by a city cop within
the dog’s fenced-in back yard. The “missing” boy was later found
sleeping in his home.
Willy Pete
State police in West Virginia shot a family’s dog June 24 as it was
reportedly running away from them during a search for a suspect on
adjoining property. Shots rang out even as the dog’s owner was screaming
for officers to hold their fire and let her put her dog inside.
In Maryland, two Baltimore police officers were charged last week
with animal cruelty after one of them allegedly held down Nala, a
7-year-old Shar-Pei, while the other slit the dog’s throat.
Richard Bruce Rosenthal, general counsel and co-founder of New
York-based the Lexus Project, said police across the country are
trending toward less tolerance and less respect for people’s pets, which
he sees as part of a larger trend toward more aggressive policing
tactics in America.
A pet is a person’s property, which should not be summarily executed
for doing what dogs naturally do, which is to investigate unknown people
or other dogs who approach their territory, he asserted.
“It is a growing problem and part of it is, post 9/11, our judicial
system has basically trashed the Constitution under the mantle of
security, and personal rights cease to exist,” Rosenthal told WND.
“All over the country we have cops shooting dogs for no other reason
than they can. And our courts and our elected officials, rather than
protecting the citizens and the Constitution, simply see it as a way to
take more power and more money. I think it’s a civil-rights violation. I
think it’s a constitutional violation.”
Willy Pete
The West Virginia incident happened June 24 in a rural area of Mason
County. A paramilitary unit scoured the woods bordering the property of
32-year-old Ginger Sweat. Her dog, a 6-year-old beagle-basset hound
named Willy Pete, woke up from an afternoon snooze on his porch to the
sound of eight officers coming out of the adjacent woods. Willy Pete
scampered off to investigate. Sweat, who was putting one of her two
young children down for a nap, looked out the window and saw an officer
with a police dog on a leash emerge from the woods and ran out outside
pleading with the officers not to shoot her dog, begging them to let her
bring it inside.
Watch video of the man whose dog, Geist, was killed by Salt Lake City Police:
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