On Monday, Rocky Barrett, owner of Good Guys Automotive and Barrett Motor Co., his wife, Candace, and their three daughters, ages 6, 8 and 12, returned home around 6 p.m. to find Angel, their 40 pound Lab/boxer-mix, bleeding to death on their back porch.
RIP Angel |
Angel, who Rocky Barrett said “mothered” his horses and children, was spayed, vaccinated and “a really gentle animal” that slept on a small sofa on the family’s porch at their S.C. 324 home.
Sometime Monday, Angel was viciously attacked by two Rottweilers who Barrett said often roamed the neighborhood and attacked his dog once before.
When Barrett’s 8-year-old daughter, Reece, found Angel, she had more than 100 puncture wounds, Barrett said. The family immediately rushed her to Chappell’s Animal Hospital but it was too late.
Angel took her last breath as Candace Barrett loaded her into the car.
“She didn’t stand a chance,” Rocky Barrett said about the dog he says “never bothered anyone.”
On Tuesday, dried blood was still splattered across the porch. Potted plants were knocked over and a glass top table was broken. Barrett, pointing to a gaping hole at the bottom of the screen door acting as a secondary entrance to the porch, believes a Rottweiler broke through the screen and dragged Angel into a corner.
“My dog didn’t go down without a fight,” Rocky Barrett said.
“It could’ve been my 6- or 8-year-old daughter,” said Barrett, struggling to hold back tears while also saying that he’s sure his 6-year-old daughter would’ve tried to break up the fight had she been home.
“Those dogs could’ve killed our children ... could’ve killed our horses.”
This was the fourth time within almost two years that the dogs have trespassed onto the Barretts’ property, they said. The first time, they called the dogs’ owner and had them pick up the animals. The second time, Rocky Barrett said he took them back himself. The third time, the dogs managed to “jump on” Angel and “beat her up,” he said. Angel was saved, he said, thanks to the intervention of Jimmy Bagley, deputy city manager for the city of Rock Hill.
“I picked up a stick or rock and ran them off,” Bagley said, adding that he had just dropped off one of the Barretts’ daughters from school when he saw the dogs chasing each other and “going at it.”
His concern, he said, was more for the Barretts’ children, who were outside playing and eventually screaming when the Rottweilers showed up on the property.
The Barretts said they’ve asked the dogs’ owner, Amy Clark, who lives nearby on S.C. 324, to keep them contained.
Nothing happened, Rocky Barrett said.
After Angel died, Candace Barrett said she went to see Clark. While in her neighbor’s yard, she saw that the Rottweilers still weren’t contained. Instead, they were bloody, sweaty and “punctured,” she said.
On Tuesday, Clark told The Herald her dogs ran off when she let them out their kennel to play. When they returned, she said they looked beaten and injured.
“I don’t have mean dogs,” Clark said, just hours before she prepared to have both dogs euthanized. “I don’t know why they did it. I hate that it happened.”
Clark said she agreed to have the dogs euthanized to satisfy her neighbors.
“Now, I’m going to lose my family pet too,” Clark said. “Nobody wins.”
Tuesday morning, the Barretts remained home while their daughters, who Candace Barrett said cried themselves to sleep Monday night, attended school.
“They were distraught,” Candace Barrett said. “It just broke their hearts.”
The Barretts called the York County Animal Control office after Angel’s death. The on-call officer told them there was nothing he could do because he didn’t witness the assault.
When the officer asked if the Barretts or anyone else saw the dogs attack Angel, they told him the Rottweilers appeared bloody and beaten. Rocky Barrett took pictures showing that one of the dogs’ ears appeared to have been bitten. Another one has blood on its neck.
The officer didn’t contain the animals, because animal control officers do not usually contain animals or issue tickets unless there’s a witness to the event, said Steven Stuber, director for York County Animal Control.
“We need to witness it or have somebody stand up in court to say, ‘I saw it,’” Stuber said.
[Yeah, no... you don't need a witness. DNA will tell you everything. Get DNA swabs of the blood on the porch - I guarantee the Rottweilers' blood will be found. Collect some hairs from the torn screen. I guarantee you'll find the Rottweilers' fur. This will show that the Rottweilers came into the porch and attacked Angel, who never left the porch or her property. I'm sure the Barretts would pay to send the swabs off to be tested. York County Animal Control needs to get with the times.]
He said Monday’s incident was an “ongoing investigation.”
On Tuesday, the Barretts followed the advice of a York County Sheriff’s deputy’s and consulted Magistrate Bob Davenport. Davenport was unable to comment, saying it was an ongoing case, but he did say warrants were possible.
The investigation begins just days after York County Council on Oct. 1 agreed to a proposal placing limits on the tethering of animals.
According to the proposal, dog owners will have to keep their dogs on a trolley system, which would enable the dogs to roam more freely, and keep their dogs confined when they're away.
The proposal doesn’t ban tethering in the county. Dog owners can still tether their dogs as long as they are present and the tether is at least 10 feet long with a swivel at both ends. Tethering still will be allowed if the dog is restrained by other means, such as a fence.
(heraldonline.com - Oct 10, 2012)