CA Deputy Serving Eviction Notice Shoots Himself in the Leg While Trying to Shoot Dog

A couple of hours ago while out walking I had a pit bull come across the street towards me barking -- I just faced him and yelled "NO!" and he went back the way he came. It doesn't work 100% of the time, but seems to work more often than not. I did reach for some pepper spray, something maybe Deppidy Dipsh*t should have considered doing -- then he wouldn't have a hole in his leg.

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An ex-cop friend of mine figures the reason the American police are so broken, is that there are way too many Barney Fifes, with way too much firepower.
 
It is a terrible shame he failed to shoot himself in the head. The gene pool is very manky these days.
 
Cop enters fenced in yard and fires on his non-threatening barking dog, yet the owner feels sorry for the officer. I would still be pretty pissed off regardless if he shot himself.
 
Cop enters fenced in yard and fires on his non-threatening barking dog, yet the owner feels sorry for the officer. I would still be pretty pissed off regardless if he shot himself.

I think the owner said that for the cameras.. or that is all of the interview that they chose to show.

I'll bet the owner was laughing at the stupid fuck,, and cursing him for such stupidity off camera.
 
Precious is built very much like my dog Snowflake. And appears to be about as threatening. Snowflake currently is laying on the couch with me, with her head propped up on my stomach. She's dreaming. It's cute.

I bet in 99% or more of these cases, it's just a paranoid person who THINKS a dog is threatening. Occasionally we have our dog out in the front yard, and someone walks by. Once in awhile she will bark once or twice, and less often run over to the person(s). She is NEVER threatening, only saying hello. In every single case the person meets her, gives her a pat on the head, and is instantly hooked (and our dog is, too). In fact more often than not after we talk for awhile and they continue their walk, our goofy dog tries to go with them! :)
 
Is this the same story as the other thread about a cop shooting himself while attempting to kill a dog or is this a seperate incident? I can't find that thread.
 
I bet in 99% or more of these cases, it's just a paranoid person who THINKS a dog is threatening.

I think in about 98% of these cases it has little or nothing to do with fear -- it's just a pure "why did we do it? because we can!" power trip. Especially if the dog is a "pit bull" -- it's pretty much open season on them no matter what.

And to Henry Rogue, yes, it's the same story. Though not the first I've heard of where a cop shot himself while trying to shoot at a dog, or shot a fellow cop. A few mundanes have gotten hit too, not that they count.
 
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I was arguing with my dad about police officers killing dogs. His claim was that an officer is already going into a "potentially dangerous" situation and doesn't need a dog as yet another possible threat or nuisance. My argument was the governments propensity for incrementalism and taking a mile when you give them an inch, so when it is ok to kill dogs for no reason then it only takes a little more bending of morality for that dog to become a human in the officers eyes. Not to mention the destruction of property in the vain of officer safety.
 
I was arguing with my dad about police officers killing dogs. His claim was that an officer is already going into a "potentially dangerous" situation and doesn't need a dog as yet another possible threat or nuisance. My argument was the governments propensity for incrementalism and taking a mile when you give them an inch, so when it is ok to kill dogs for no reason then it only takes a little more bending of morality for that dog to become a human in the officers eyes. Not to mention the destruction of property in the vain of officer safety.

We don't need no stinkin' chirren distracting law ossifers on de job serving jaywalking warrants BLAM BLAM BLAM!
 
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I was arguing with my dad about police officers killing dogs. His claim was that an officer is already going into a "potentially dangerous" situation and doesn't need a dog as yet another possible threat or nuisance. My argument was the governments propensity for incrementalism and taking a mile when you give them an inch, so when it is ok to kill dogs for no reason then it only takes a little more bending of morality for that dog to become a human in the officers eyes. Not to mention the destruction of property in the vain of officer safety.
It's not as dangerous for the cop, as it is for any living being that might come across the cop's path. A cop pulls over a motorist. Whose life is in more peril? The guy who you know has a gun, a vest, a radio and aggressive tactics or the guy who is late for church? Yeah, maybe the next guy isn't going to chuch, maybe he just got done robbing a bank and is armed, so what. The majority of the time it ain't the cop, whose life is in danger.
 
I was arguing with my dad about police officers killing dogs. His claim was that an officer is already going into a "potentially dangerous" situation and doesn't need a dog as yet another possible threat or nuisance. My argument was the governments propensity for incrementalism and taking a mile when you give them an inch, so when it is ok to kill dogs for no reason then it only takes a little more bending of morality for that dog to become a human in the officers eyes. Not to mention the destruction of property in the vain of officer safety.
My argument is defense is no excuse when you're INVADING somebody's home. What the fuck is wrong with these police officers? "I trespassed on somebody's property unannounced and his dog is barking at me, so I shot the dog in self-defense."
 
His claim was that an officer is already going into a "potentially dangerous" situation and doesn't need a dog as yet another possible threat or nuisance.
When I was a firefighter, I went into burning buildings, helped at car accident scenes with drunks and car fires, dealt with distraught people dealing with tragedy and had dogs bark at me. NEVER did my instinct tell me to shoot the dog.


And this isn't just emergency workers. Lots of people deal with dangerous situations every day and don't need to shoot, taze, torture, people, dogs, rabbits (or whatever threatens them.)
 
I really, really wish I could have seen that shooting. I would have laughed until I p*ssed myself.

I hope the dog is rewarded with a big juicy steak.

And if I were the dog's owner, I would be tempted to send the cop a get well card featuring:

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Everyone deserves a 2nd chance, so sign up that lucky dog (before midnight tomorrow) as the officers leg therapy proceeds.

http://www.wagsforhope.org/

Maybe they can become friends?

Don't give the cop too much wiggle room though, so make sure that rehab center has metal detectors and an "absolutely NO GUNS allowed" policy!
 
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