CA - Cops go to wrong address, shoot family dog

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Vallejo couple outraged police officer shot dog

http://www.ktvu.com/news/182412646-story

28 July 2016

VALLEJO, Calif. (KTVU) - A Vallejo couple is outraged after their dog was shot by a police officer on Tuesday during the investigation of a domestic dispute call.

Samantha Melo and her boyfriend Manuel Trujillo said a barbeque at their Vallejo home ended with their Pitbull mix named Rambo, being shot twice by police. The incident happened Tuesday around 6:00 p.m. on the 900 block of Sacramento Street.

Melo said Rambo, who was standing outside near the side of the house, ran to the front yard when three officers approached the house.

“All I remember [Trujillo] saying is, ‘No, no, no, don’t shoot. He’s a good dog’,” Melo said.

“By the time I turned the corner, they already shot,” Trujillo said.

Rambo was shot once in his chest and in his left hind leg. The dog ran into the house, but the couple brought him back out to the front yard to apply pressure to his wounds. Melo said she became hysterical.

“I’m standing there and one of the officers says to me, ‘You need to calm down because you’re being annoying’,” she recalled. “He said, ‘Are you guys arguing?’ We’re like, ‘What are you talking about? We’re not arguing’.”

Lt. Sid DeJesus with the Vallejo Police Department said three officers were investigating a call about a domestic dispute in the area.

“The initial address given by the caller to 911 was an address that in fact did not exist,” DeJesus said.

He said after the officers continued to search the block when they heard people arguing on the property where Melo and her boyfriend were. DeJesus said as the officers approached the house, a dog aggressively charged at them. One officer tried to tase the dog, but the Taser did not deploy. Another officer immediately fired her weapon.

“This particular officer indicated that if she did not discharge felt that she would be immediately attacked by the dog,” he said.

DeJesus said officers called animal control after the dog was shot.

Melo said an animal control officer told them they had to take the dog to a vet on their own. They rushed Rambo to an emergency vet hospital in Suisun for surgery. The dog is expected to make a full recovery.

Melo later spoke to a sergeant at the police station who explained that officers had the wrong house.

“He said it was at the wrong address and all of that would be on the police report,” she said.

But DeJesus said officers were at the right house and the dog should have been under control.

“In these particular cases we try to do everything we can before our use of deadly force on an animal,” he said.

Melo called the incident a traumatic experience. She does not have children and considers Rambo like a son.

“We’re on our yard so of course my dog is not on a leash,” she added. “Pitbulls are not as aggressive as people think they are. I’m just glad that [Rambo] is alive.”

KTVU asked if the officers were wearing body cameras. DeJesus said they were, but the cameras were not recording. He said a supervisor documented the incident and is working on a report that will be sent to Internal Affairs for review.
 
Stuff like this is why I don't care when I hear about something bad happening to a police officer (whatever that might be).

For every one officer harmed, there are probably 1000 civilians harmed by cops in some way (wrongful kidnappings, arrests for victimless "crimes", injury, death, etc).
 
They shoot at us randomly with impunity.
They wonder why random cops get shot.
 
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Here are some statistics from 2014: http://www.dogsbite.org/dog-bite-statistics-fatalities-2014.php

2014 dog bite fatality statistics
42 U.S. dog bite-related fatalities occurred in 2014. Despite being regulated in Military Housing areas and over 700 U.S. cities, pit bulls contributed to 64% (27) of these deaths. Pit bulls make up about 6% of the total U.S. dog population.
Together, pit bulls (27) and rottweilers (4), the second most lethal dog breed, accounted for 74% of the total recorded deaths in 2014. This same combination also accounted for 74% of all fatal attacks during the 10-year period of 2005 to 2014.
The breakdown between these two breeds is substantial over this 10-year period. From 2005 to 2014, pit bulls killed 203 Americans, about one citizen every 18 days, versus rottweilers, which killed 38, about one citizen every 96 days.
In the year of 2014, the combination of pit bulls (27), rottweilers (4) and mastiff-type guard dogs and war dogs (4) -- the types used to create "baiting" bull breeds and fighting breeds -- accounted for 83% (35) of all dog bite-related fatalities.
Annual data from 2014 shows that 48% (20) of the fatality victims were children 13-years and younger, and 52% (22) were adults, 20-years and older. Of the total adults killed by dogs in 2014, 73% (16) were ages 50-years and older.
Annual data shows that when combining all age groups, female victims (24) were greater in number than male victims (18). Amongst adults 50-years and older, females were excessively victims 81% (13), versus males 19% (3).
In 2014, 19% (8), of all dog bite fatality victims were either visiting or living temporarily with the dog's owner when the fatal attack occurred, down from 38% in 2013. Children 6-years and younger accounted for 88% (7) of these deaths.
57% (24) of all fatalities in 2014 involved more than one dog; 19% (8) involved a pack attack of four or more dogs; 31% (13) involved breeding on the dog owner's property either actively or in the recent past and 5% (2) involved tethered dogs.
Dog ownership information for 2014 shows that family dogs comprised 48% (20) of all fatal attack occurrences, 40% (17) of the attacks occurred off the dog owner's property, up from 22% in 2013, and 21% (9) resulted in criminal charges.
Texas led lethal dog attacks in 2014 with 7 deaths. 86% (6) were attributed to pit bulls and 43% resulted in felony charges, up from 0% in 2013. Florida followed with 5 deaths, North Carolina 4 deaths and Alabama and Ohio each with 3 deaths.
Jurisdictions in two states each incurred 2 dog bite fatalities in 2014 -- Bell County, Texas and Montgomery County, Ohio. Both attacks in Montgomery County occurred in the City of Dayton. No felony charges resulted from these 4 deadly attacks.

This tells you how rare it is for a dog to kill an adult - even rarer for one to kill an adult stranger.

So, in ALL of these circumstances, we've been allowing cops to use deadly force when their lives are not in danger. It would seem like Tennessee v. Garner is being violated over and over.
 
Same article was posted last week. Except it appears to be a different one...

Sad how this shit seems to happen daily.

You want to get REALLY MAD over it. MAD as HELL.




Who the fuck actually wants to live in a world where people treat each other this way ??? WHO ?! Nobody, right ? Then why can't we fucking grow up and treat each-other and our property the way we want to be treated etc.

It keeps amazing me how FUCKED UP humanity is.
 
Here are some statistics from 2014: http://www.dogsbite.org/dog-bite-statistics-fatalities-2014.php



This tells you how rare it is for a dog to kill an adult - even rarer for one to kill an adult stranger.

So, in ALL of these circumstances, we've been allowing cops to use deadly force when their lives are not in danger. It would seem like Tennessee v. Garner is being violated over and over.

Unless a Dog is trained to guard something... Your chances of getting seriously hurt are like 0.0000001% or it's most likely something you could have avoided and provoked yourself.
 
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