Saturday, August 24, 2013

After being attacked by a pit bull, shelter staff shoots and kills injured basset hound

NORTH CAROLINA -- The director of the Franklin County Animal Shelter used a .22 rifle to dispatch an injured basset hound, a method of euthanasia that is outside the approved guidelines for sick or injured animals.

Taylor Bartholomew reported his action to the state Department of Agriculture's Animal Welfare Section, and he was disciplined.

Taylor Bartholomew

Sheriff Jerry Jones said it was a mistake, and that the county is taking steps to make sure it doesn't happen again.

“The animal director decided to shoot the dog at the kennel at the animal shelter instead of waiting for someone to euthanize it medically,” Jones said. "I think we had some human error and we are working to correct that.”

The Sheriff says it was an "honest mistake". I say you can't fix stupid.

 
According to the state and a report by the animal shelter, the dog [was attacked by] a pit bull when the two shared a kennel at the shelter at 351 T. Kemp Road in Louisburg.

[In the video, it says a shelter staff member 'accidentally' stuck the Basset hound in with the pit bull.]

Shelter staff didn't immediately think the dog's injuries were serious. A couple of days later, Bartholomew said, he realized the dog was chewing on his injured paw and appeared to be in severe pain, so he shot him.

At the time, there was no one available who was certified to euthanize the dog.

[In the video, it said that they never bothered to call one of the field officers who are certified in euthanasia to come to the shelter to euthanize the dog.]

While state policy allows animals to be shot under extreme circumstances, it prohibits that action on shelter property.

Jones said the county had plans to improve training for all who work with animals.

"Immediately I made that a priority that every officer that works at the animal shelter will be trained to euthanize,” he said.


"Honestly, I think this was a mistake," he continued. "I do not think there was any ill intent or criminal intent – it is just something that the only thing we can do is learn from it."

Jones added that he doesn't want a single incident to overshadow the good work done at the shelter. He pointed out that the facility averaged about 30 adoptions per month last year.

[It also said the shelter worker who 'accidentally' stuck the poor Basset hound into the pen with the pit bull 'is no longer' working there.]

(WRAL.com - Aug 21, 2013)

NOTE: Previous link wasn't working; correct it with updated link - 8/24/13

4 comments:


  1. poor basset should have gone to the vet after the attack , the worker who put the dog in with the pit should have paid the vet bill.

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  2. My blood is boiling over this one. Nobody "accidentally" puts a basset hound in a kennel with a pit bull.There's more going on here with this idiot. The link is not working Four Legs so I'm going to borrow your story on this. I have 2 basset hounds and they would be so incapable of dealing with a pit bull. This entire story just astounds me.

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    Replies
    1. Thanks for letting me know. I found the correct link and fixed it!

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  3. "I think we had some human error and we are working to correct that.”

    I THINK?? Still don't know ???

    "While state policy allows animals to be shot under extreme circumstances, it prohibits that action on shelter property."

    Do they keep training records on employees? Looks like this important information should have been covered and documented.

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