Showing posts with label corgi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label corgi. Show all posts

Monday, January 15, 2018

California: Three six-month-old Pit Bulls already have the instinct to chase, attack, maul and kill; try to kill elderly woman's Corgi

CALIFORNIA -- Schelli Rambo posted on Facebook January 4, 2018 at 6:38pm · Foothill Farms ·

My first "good human deed" happened today!!

On my way to the Bodega for dinner supplies, I witnessed three unleashed young pit bulls attacking and chasing a small Corgi.

When I pulled over, i saw that the Corgi belonged to an elderly woman. I immediately began chasing the dogs to get them if the poor Corgi. Finally caught up with them as the Corgi wedged herself under a nearby car for protection!!

I caught up to them and screamed at the pitties at the top of my lungs!!! I meant business!! They ran off back to their owner, and the Corgi ran home.

Meanwhile, i run back to my car which i left running and my purse in the seat, to park and lock it... I quickly wrote down the license plate number if the pit owners' truck, in case she took off... Then went looking for the woman and dog to give her the information...

The woman had taken her dog home, which i had no idea where that was so going door to door and asking around. The pit owner was also looking for the woman to do the right thing. Finally found the woman, whose husband went out to exchange information with the pit owner lady.

Who was taking her sons dogs out to run around since they can't at home....

Luckily the Corgi was not bleeding, however her back was sensitive to the touch. I strongly suggested to the elderly couple to take their dog to the vet to check and make sure!!!

The end ❤️😁



Sunday, July 30, 2017

(May 2017) New Mexico: Man raising money for his mom after her Corgi was mauled by a Pit Bull tells us, "I have nothing against Pit Bulls"

NEW MEXICO -- My mother's dog was attacked by her neighbor's Pit bull.

Please understand that I have nothing against pit bulls, just so happens that was the breed.

Does he think he'll get more donations if he apologizes for mentioning it was a Pit Bull that attacked? When loved ones are in car accidents, do their relatives tell us, "Please understand I have nothing against Toyotas, just so happens that was the car that slammed into her"??? 



Please do not EVER give people like this your hard-earned money. Find someone else who won't be an apologist. On the other hand, the money is going to his mother, who probably doesn't have the same apologist attitude after seeing her beloved Corgi nearly mauled to death.

She lives in a rural area South of Albuquerque, NM. Her neighbor's are total piles of sh**. She is trying to move to Colorado to be here with her sons and grandson. This very expensive event has set back her home renovations, which need to be done to sell the house. Her neighbors don't care about what happened and are not going to do anything about it. She spends so much time and money rescuing animals and helping everyone around her, please show her that what she does matters and doesn't go unappreciated.

Update:
Gidget is doing better. Still having a hard time eating any food. There have not been any set backs, so that's wonderful. Thank you to everyone for your help and support!!

GoFundMe: Welsh Corgi brutally attacked
Created May 6, 2017 by Dave Nelson
on behalf of Catherine Neumann
Animals
PERALTA, NM


Monday, July 3, 2017

Canada: Corgi named Doug and his owner attacked by loose Pit Bull at park

CANADA -- Last night when I was walking my seven-month old corgi in Rockcliffe-Smythe park, an off-leash pit bull ran out of a forested area and bit my dog at the neck.

My dog was swung around for a good five seconds before its owner came running along to help me restrain the pit bull.

Luckily, the pit bull was wearing a pronged collar and none of the injuries sustained by animal or human are life-threatening.


I got off with a few bite marks on my hand and the owner says his finger might be broken. Doug (my dog) sustained the brunt of the attack, with lacerations down the back of his neck and puncture wounds on his cheek. 

I imagine though that, had the pit bull not been wearing a pronged collar, the outcome would have been way more severe.

I'm just wondering if there is any way to make this case heard. The ban on pronged collars was passed haphazardly by misinformed Toronto city councillors and puts public safety at risk. Dog owners -- particularly those with larger, more aggressive breeds -- must be given the tools necessary to ensure the safety of anyone that comes into contact with their animal. #Toronto #corgi #pitbull

(Imgur - June 6, 2017)

Tuesday, June 20, 2017

California: Monika Drozd Hoffman and Scott Hoffman don't care about anyone but themselves - and their vicious Pit Bull mix

CALIFORNIA -- Monika Hoffman (aka Monika Drozd Hoffman) and Scott Hoffman own a Pit Bull they call Bodie. Monica Hoffman and Scott Hoffman don't care about anyone except themselves. They've allowed their Pit Bull to get loose and attack people and pets multiple times.

When Animal Control went to seize the Pit Bull, they refused to hand over the mauler. They then drove the dog outside the jurisdiction of authorities in an effort to allow it to continue to maul and attack victims.


Meanwhile, Andrew and Violet Chen said the Pit Bull is too dangerous to live in their Redondo Beach neighborhood. Their 9-year-old Chihuahua corgi mix, Shogun, has been attacked three times by the animal, they said.

“It’s about the safety of the community,” Violet Chen said. “One time is an accident. We completely understand. But three times is a proven history.”

Bodie’s future now rests with Redondo Beach police Capt. Jeff Hink, who oversaw a rare administrative hearing last week to determine whether the dog should be deemed vicious or dangerous.

Hink is expected to issue a ruling within 30 days. He has a range of options, from requiring the homeowners to construct a fence to removing the animal from the city to having the dog euthanized.

The Hoffmans, who have paid several thousand dollars in medical bills for Chens’ dog, repeated their apologies during the hearing, but argued they are responsible dog owners and Bodie should be spared.

The hearing was the fallout of attacks involving the dog that took place in June 2015 in the 1700 block of Harriman Lane, and another May 22 when the Pit Bull ran down the street and went after Shogun. Chen received cuts on his arm as he tried to defend his dog.

In the previous attack, two large mixed-breed pit bull terriers ran down the street off-leash and made a beeline toward his dog.

Together the two dogs attacked, one clamping down on the rear of the smaller animal and the other toward its neck like it was a stuffed toy.

“It was horrible,” Chen said. “It looked to me like they were trying to tear him apart.”

In her argument to have the dog declared dangerous or vicious, City Prosecutor Joy Abaquin said another attack involving Bodie occurred March 9 on a different victim.

Shortly after the incident last month, Redondo Beach police officers attempted to confiscate the animal, but the Hoffmans refused to hand him over. 


The Hoffmans then snuck their vicious Pit Bull out of the city, where officers no longer had jurisdiction.

The officers could have sought a warrant, but they elected instead to pursue a hearing, Abaquin said.

While in each case the dog got loose by accident, Chen’s wife, Violet, said it didn’t change the fact the dog was dangerous. Four neighbors also testified they also did not feel safe with the pit bull in the neighborhood.

Monika Hoffman agreed the attacks were “very traumatizing for everyone involved.”

“We put a gift basket together because we were so sorry,” she said.

Hey Monika, take your gift basket and shove it.

Attorney Theodore Frank, who represented the Hoffmans during the hearing, called three witnesses in addition to the couple, who testified to Bodie’s calm demeanor.

So what Teddy? Just because the dog is OK with one person, we all know about these dogs suddenly 'snapping' where they're OK one minute and the next they're trying to kill everyone.

Monika Hoffman CLAIMED Bodie’s aggressive behavior was “a big surprise to us.” The dog never showed aggression toward another dog or person, she said, and they took him twice to a summer camp where he interacted with children.

Jason Harker, who came to the Hoffman house to pick up his own dog at the time of one of the attacks, said Bodie managed get out in the few moments he left the door open.

“Unfortunately, I had the door cracked open a little bit and he must have slipped through the door,” Harker said.

In the other incident, the dog broke through a metal gate designed to encompass the driveway when the garage door was open. The Hoffmans said as a potential remedy they would construct a permanent fence around their front yard and instruct guests to use a side door.


Whether that will be enough to satisfy the hearing officer is yet to be seen. For now, Bodie is staying at a friend’s house in Hermosa Beach.

Chen thought the city should have taken action sooner. Had it been his wife or a child walking their dog at the time, who knows how the incident could have turned out, he said.

“You can put as many parameters as you want,” Chen said. “It could just be a lapse in judgment. I love dogs. I don’t necessarily want to euthanize. I understand they have a lot of issues, but this shouldn’t be taken lightly. Three times is too many. This could have been avoided.”


(Daily Breeze - June 18, 2017)

Friday, November 11, 2016

Bermuda: Silver lining after pit bull attacks woman's Corgi Terrier mix

BERMUDA -- Katherine Houston described seeing her dog being attacked by a loose pit bull as a nightmare.

However, now with her dog on the road to recovery, Ms Houston is trying to turn the incident into a positive by using it to support the Bermuda Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.

“It felt like it would make everything right,” she said. “My son and I got our very first dog right here at the SPCA shelter.

“When these things happen, you have got to respond, and we have to do something to help groups like the SPCA. We have to be community minded.”


Ms Houston said that on August 28 she was walking her pet, Nevada, near Cut Road in St George’s when the dog was attacked by a loose pit bull who gripped the Corgi - Terrier cross by the neck.

“It was out of nowhere,” she said. “He didn’t even whimper. It didn’t last too long but from his neck to his shoulders his skin was ripped off.

“When I told Dr Jennifer Fullerton that he didn’t even whimper, she said he was in a strangle hold. It was pretty horrendous. It was a nightmare.”

She said a stranger drove her and Nevada to a veterinarian, and it was there she noticed that she herself had suffered a puncture wound to her forearm.

While Nevada was treated for his injuries, complications arose in the form of a series of bacterial infections which required antibiotics and a second emergency surgery.

Ms Houston said the owners of the pit bull involved in the attack stepped forward in the wake of the incident and offered to reimburse her for the cost of treatment, which over the last two months rose to about $3,000.

They should have put their vicious dog down. 

However, after some thought, she decided that she would donate the reimbursement checks to the SPCA as they come in so that other animals could benefit.

Deborah Titterton Narraway, executive director at the SPCA, said the donation came at a time when the charity was working on improving its facilities so it can keep better care of dogs.

“The SPCA lives off of community involvement and everything we do is based on what the community gives, so we are grateful for any donation,” she said.

“The timing of this is just wonderful. We have had a full shelter now since I have been here, with every type of dog.”

While she said that redoing the kennels entirely would cost “a few million dollars,” there are a number of less costly changes and improvements that can be made.

“We have a donor who has come forward who has offered to help us put in acoustics to help the reverberation,” she said.

“A lot of the dogs that come here don’t have the best background, and most are coming in are nervous even if they come from a loving home.”

She said that the charity was also looking to install a “pocket door” so that people who come to see the cats don’t have to first walk past the kennels — something that can cause the dogs unnecessary stress.

The SPCA are also hoping to make use of an exterior run, improving it so that it could be used for large dogs or dogs that require additional space.

“We want to be able to better handle whatever comes in through the door, and that is exactly how these funds are going to be used,” she said.

(Royal Gazette - Nov 5, 2016)

Saturday, October 8, 2016

Florida: Woman's dog mauled by out of control pit bull. Friend says she and her Corgi were attacked by an American Bulldog the week before.

FLORIDA -- "My baby Maddie was just mauled by a white and brown pit bull while on our walk. The dog was with its owner on leash but pulling and wanting to charge at my Maddie and it did. Broke off and attacked. This was on end of Westline in Deltona." - Jose Colon

 
 

If if was a small dog, it would have been killed. This was a nightmare!

Susan Decker Key: So sorry, it's the owners fault for not taking control of their dog

Really? Do they need to be lectured right now?

Josie Colon: I need to let all around here know. I've never seen this dog around here and owner cannot control his dog, he's in his 50 or 60s with a strong dog :( anyone walking a smaller dog around his dog, would be fatal.

Josie Colon: No more walks for Maddie or any of my babies :(

Josie Colon: Marion should I report or just let people know to be carful with their pets? I don't want anyone's pet hurt or killed if I can prevent.

Heidi Herzberg: Is not the one that lives on Jutland, is it?

Josie Colon: Yes!!!!

Josie Colon: I love all dogs including bullys but owner needs to know that dogs aggressive with other dogs should not be outside especially if you can't control them. I don't want anything bad to happen to that dog. But I don't want other pets hurt either.

Mary Arroyo: Please take her to the vet and have her checked to make sure she's OK and make them pay for it people need to take responsibility for what their pets let every one no

Jane Davis: The EXACT same thing happened to Tipper and I last Friday. It's only that she is so strong that she lived. This was a white and brown American bull dog who got her. On leash...owner there. She lost control of her dogs. We paid the price. I got hurt too when her dog knocked me down.

 
 
 
 

Jane Davis: She absolutely needs a vet asap as those puncture wounds are serious. Tipper went straight on antibiotics and pain meds and the wounds are still bothering her and problematic. I am going to have to take her back in to be checked.

Josie Colon: Oh wow! Had no idea! Yes it was horrific! I don't handle situations like that well and I was just screaming, Get your dog, get your dog off her! over and over. Owner just watched at the beginning. 

I thought Maddie would be killed. I would rather have my roof torn off than my Maddie killed. I wish there was an animal hospital open!! Hate that I have to wait until tomorrow :(

Mary Arroyo: If you know who it is you need to reported because it will kill someone else's dog.

 

Josie Colon: My baby at the hospital :)

Josie Colon: They said good thing I took her. The one near shoulder was 1.5 inch deep :( she's all taken care of. Sigh..

 
 
 

Friday, September 16, 2016

Ohio: Corgi attacked by loose pit bull, has his ear ripped off. Donations helping cover his vet care

OHIO -- "Here is my Farley. He was attacked by a pit bull on loose.

 

"I was worried about costs as am on a fixed income. My family and friends had a gofundme me for him. I am blessed they love this little guy. After several surgeries Farley is doing well. Ear was reattached..a little floppy and hard of hearing. but back to his shenanigans as corgis do. Gofundme Farley's Fight for Recovery."

They've nearly reached their goal on the GoFundMe page. Poor Corgi!


  
 

Sunday, August 14, 2016

Florida: Woman who recounts terrifying experience of protecting her Corgi from a pit bull brings out the crazies

FLORIDA -- Posted on Corgi Nation Facebook:

"Let me preface this by saying I am a dog lover..... if you know your dog is aggressive to the point of attacking smaller dogs, could you please control it at all times??? My on-leash corgi almost got mauled by an out of control pit bull in the vet parking lot. When I told this clueless lady to control her dog she said it was my fault for having a small dog......WTF???? I REPEAT, WTF????"

Of course it brought out the pit bull defenders, including Ashley Stefanides, who repeatedly posts one ridiculous claim after another. Why can't someone simply recount their experience without people insisting they should "blame the deed and not the breed"???

 
 
 
  
Ashley Stefanides says Labs, Golden Retrievers and
 Poodles have attacked her. Um, yeah...

Tuesday, August 2, 2016

Iowa: Iowa City police officer is either lazy or untrained. Cites suspect on city rather than state code. What's city code maximum punishment for viciously beating Corgi? No more than 30 days in county jail.

IOWA -- People across the country are reading about a corgi named Jasper who was allegedly kicked by his groomer at an Iowa City veterinary center. And they have one question.

Why was the groomer, 22-year-old Lucas Van Orden V, charged with animal neglect and not something more serious?

Van Orden was employed as a groomer at Creature Comfort Veterinary Center at 2122 Act Circle in Iowa City. Police say he was grooming the dog, which USA TODAY reports is named Jasper, on July 9 when he kicked it, causing multiple rib fractures and bruising of the lungs. Van Orden told police he kicked the dog while grooming it, according to criminal complaints, and was charged with animal neglect, a simple misdemeanor.


MAXIMUM PUNISHMENT FOR CITY VIOLTION? THIRTY DAYS IN COUNTY JAIL
Online court records show the charge was brought under Iowa City Code 8-3-3, which covers animal neglect, abuse, torture and other actions. Assistant Iowa City Attorney Sue Dulek said state law prohibits city code from penalizing anything greater than a simple misdemeanor, which is punishable by up to 30 days in jail.

If officials had brought charges under Iowa Code 717B, advocates say the crime would have fit the definition of animal abuse.

"Looking at the case on this, it could very easily have been charged under the state code as animal abuse, which under the Iowa state code is 'causing physical harm to an animal belonging to another person,' " said Scott Wilson, animal welfare intervention coordinator at the Animal Rescue League of Iowa. "And that’s an aggravated misdemeanor, which we think would have much better suited the case."

MAXIMUM PUNISHMENT FOR STATE VIOLATION? TWO YEARS IN PRISON
An aggravated misdemeanor is punishable by up to two years in prison.

But Dulek said officers cannot charge someone under both city and state law, and the charging decision was made by the Iowa City officer. A representative for the Iowa City Police Department directed further questions to the city attorney's office.

And that's why - if you are unsure of the charge, CONTACT YOUR SUPERVISOR. CONTACT YOUR PROSECUTOR'S OFFICE. Don't just assume because now it's too late!

A statement last week from Creature Comfort said Van Orden "was discharged from his employment" and declined to comment further on the case while legal issues are pending.

A 1998 application to the Iowa Department of Agriculture to operate as a commercial kennel shows Lucas S. Van Orden IV as the business's practice manager and Nadia E. Vandergaast, a doctor of veterinary medicine, as the owner.


Looking beyond Jasper, advocates say Iowa's animal welfare laws are among the weakest in the nation.

Last year, the California-based Animal Legal Defense Fund ranked Iowa 49th in the nation for its animal protection laws.

That's abysmal, Wilson said.

Wilson's organization, the Animal Rescue League, is pushing for a new state law that would provide clarity about the legal definitions of certain terms, increase the penalties for most types of animal abuse and torture, and seek to set restrictions on owning animals for those convicted of an animal welfare crime.

The legislation, Senate File 2289, died in the Iowa House this year after making it through the Senate, Wilson said, but his group plans to try to pass it again next year.

One reason the law needs to be changed, Wilson said, is because it doesn't include mandatory psychological counseling after a conviction for a more serious offense. That kind of care can catch abusers early and break those patterns, he said.

Another reason, Wilson said, is that the law is out of step with the severity of some of the crimes, like animal torture, which is an aggravated misdemeanor on the first offense.


"It only becomes a felony if it’s a second offense, which considering the definition of torture we thought was kind of strange," he said.

Wilson said it's important for members of the public to report suspected animal abuse to local law enforcement. Too often, people think their neighbor will call, and then no one does, he said.

"It’s just sad to see this sort of thing happen," he said of Jasper. "I can’t understand why an animal professional, be they groomer, animal control officer or what, would do this to a dog."

(USA Today - Aug 1, 2016)

Earlier:

Sunday, July 31, 2016

Iowa: Police say vet employee Lucas Van Orden viciously beat and kicked Corgi

IOWA  -- An Iowa City veterinary clinic employee is accused of injuring a dog while it was at the clinic for grooming

Iowa City Police said the incident happened on July 9 around 10:30 a.m. at the Creature Comfort Vet Center on Act Circle in Iowa City.


Authorities charged Lucas Van Orden V after a dog suffered multiple fractured ribs, bruised lungs, and subcutaneous emphysema. 

Following the injuries, the dog was taken to a pet emergency room, where it stayed for several nights for observation.

Police said Van Orden admitted that he kicked the dog during the grooming process, which was ultimately the cause of the injuries to the dog.


Van Orden is the son of the practice manager, Lucas Van Orden IV.

Van Orden IV released a statement on the incident (involving his son), saying, "The owners and management of Creature Comfort Veterinary Center are aware of an animal injury during grooming, and subsequent citation for animal neglect issued by the City of Iowa City against the groomer.

"Any animal injury is of paramount concern, and is not tolerated in any respect. Immediately upon learning of this incident, the groomer was discharged from his employment."


(KCCI - July 30, 2016)

Saturday, March 5, 2016

Arkansas: Nearly 200 dogs seized during raid of suspected puppy mill in Madison Co.

ARKANSAS -- Nearly 200 dogs have been removed from a suspected puppy mill in Madison County after a tip received by the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) on its puppy mill tip line.

According to a release from HSUS, the Madison County Sheriff's Office served a warrant at the Madison Co. property, and found animals there that were in "deplorable living conditions," such as living in feces, and didn't have access to food or water.

 

"I can't believe that something like this could happen in Madison County and I am relieved that we were able to come to the aid of these dogs today," said Clay Rowland, with Madison County Sheriff's Office.

Responding authorities found approximately 200 dogs there. The HSUS, Saline County Humane Society, Madison County Pet Shelter, Animal League of Washington, and Jones Mobile Veterinary Service helped rescue the animals, which are being taken to a temporary emergency animal shelter.

 

Once at the shelter, the dogs will be examined and receive any treatment that is needed. RedRover is helping with caretaking of the animals, while Greater Good and Rescue Bank is providing food and medical supplies for the animals at the temporary shelter.

The owner, whose name has not been released at this time, reportedly faces two charges of animal cruelty.

 

"Arkansas' lack of a laws regulating commercial dog breeding makes the state a hotbed for puppy mill operators, and this case is no exception," Jessica Lauginiger, puppy mills response manager for The HSUS' Animal Rescue Team, said. "No animal should ever be forced to live in conditions like we've seen today. We're thankful to the Madison County Sheriff's Office for taking action to help these animals."

 

The HSUS has also established a reward program that offers up to $5,000 to anyone who gives them information leading to the arrest and conviction of a puppy mill operator. Anyone who wants to report a tip are asked to call 1-877-MILL-TIP, and will remain anonymous.

(KATV - March 3, 2016)