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SiNNiK
12-15-2006, 07:47 PM
Fatally Injured Dog Received No Veterinary Care

Fatally Injured Dog Denied Veterinary Care, Dies Slowly After Being Gunned Down by City Police; Demand Staff Training and New Policies at Fort Worth Animal Shelter

On November 14, a Fort Worth city police officer—who claimed that a stray dog charged at him repeatedly—reportedly shot "several rounds from his handgun striking the animal." The dog, later identified as a family's companion named Bud, was reportedly shot in the head and the chest. According to TV news reports and city officials, the dying dog was left alone at the city's animal shelter without care for several hours, during which time he surely suffered horribly. Bud died slowly, most likely from blood loss, organ damage, and/or shock.

Graphic news footage shows that Bud was bloodied and unable to walk properly. In the footage, animal control officer Barry Alexander can be seen needlessly restraining Bud on a control pole and prodding him to move forward while he is obviously in pain. The footage then shows that Alexander lifted Bud by the skin on his back and the noose around his neck and put him in a compartment on an animal control truck. Animal control supervisors and health department officials claim that the officer did not know how injured this obviously dying dog was upon leaving him alone in a cage at the animal control center. Officials responded to PETA's three-page letter offering assistance to prevent another tragedy from happening with this vague, less than helpful three-sentence response.

Failing to provide veterinary medical care to animals "as needed to prevent suffering" is a violation of Fort Worth's city codes as well as Texas state law. Please contact city officials and demand that immediate action be taken to provide all animal control officers with professional training in injury and disease recognition and that policies be instituted requiring veterinary care or euthanasia for injured animals in the city's custody.

Please contact the people below and be a voice for this poor dog.


The Honorable Michael J. Moncrief
Mayor of Fort Worth
1000 Throckmorton St.
Fort Worth, TX 76102
817-392-6118
817-392-2409 (fax)
mike.moncrief@fortworthgov.org

Daniel B. Reimer, MPH
Director of Public Health
1800 University Dr., Rm. 232
Fort Worth, TX 76107
817-871-7201
817-871-7335 (fax)
daniel.reimer@fortworthgov.org

Sign the Petition:
http://www.thepetitionsite.com/takeaction/934866885?ltl=1166215265

reeskujo
12-15-2006, 08:02 PM
I signed the potition and will be contacting those people that is not only inhumane but cruel and disgusting,Thanks for the post...Ree

BelovedJuggernaut
12-15-2006, 08:23 PM
I fail to see how they could not identify the dog being seriously injured.

*sigh*

Nancy
12-15-2006, 08:45 PM
I agree...a bleeding dog sounds injured to me. I've never seen a gsw that didn't cause bleeding

SiNNiK
12-15-2006, 08:47 PM
thanks Ree.

BJ, it'd be my bet that they treated that dog the way they did because of Super-Cop Syndrome ("How dare that dog charge me, doesn't it know i'm a cop and I'M in charge?")

:(

reeskujo
12-15-2006, 09:27 PM
thanks Ree.

BJ, it'd be my bet that they treated that dog the way they did because of Super-Cop Syndrome ("How dare that dog charge me, doesn't it know i'm a cop and I'M in charge?")

:(
I'm with you on that one.I've seen the way cops treat dogs even very well behaved dogs that are regarded as a so called"Dangerous Breed".I'm definitlely getting e-mails out to the ones you provided.Thanks again for the post and the info...Ree