article imageTrigger-Happy Officers Can Kill Your Puppy, But Try the Same and You're a Felon

By Michael Billy.
Subscribe to author
Published Oct 15, 2007 by  Michael Billy - 25 votes, 3 comments
Share on Facebook  
Listen - Email - Print
Recipient email:
You can enter up to 10 comma-separated email addresses.
Your email:
optional
Message:
optional

Law enforcement officers are allowed to kill the family pet without consequence, but do so much as threaten a police dog and you could be looking at jail time with a $100,000 bond.
If you happen to kill a police dog that has wandered onto your property then you could be facing a third degree felony.
On September 27, 2007 police officers approached the house of Jennifer Stiernagel. The car parked in her driveway resembled the car that was used in a bank robbery sometime earlier.
WCCO
reports:
Jennifer was alone with her two-year old son, Derek. As she talked to an investigator in the front yard, she noticed a deputy nearby approaching her two dogs. She said Duke, the Basset Hound, was barking, Eddie, the Terrier Lab, was lying in the grass growling.
"The dog was down, he didn't try jumping at him," said Stiernagel, "he didn't do anything, as soon as I turned around, he shot him right in the head."
Derek watched from the front deck 20 feet away.
I ran into the house and grabbed him," said Derek's mother. "I put him in the house and he wouldn't leave me and he was holding onto me and he was crying."
The officer in this case could -- and should -- have acted more responsibly in the situation. Why not ask the mother to take the dogs inside instead of shooting one of them in the head in front of a two-year-old?
The officer received no punishment.
In a similar situation, this time ignoring a "Beware of Dog" sign, Hartford, Connecticut Police Officer John O'Hare shot and killed a St. Bernard in front of the 12-year-old girl it was protecting.
Glen Harris, the dogs owner said, "They didn't knock. They ignored the sign, the dog sees or hears (and) protects my daughter, so he ran toward him -- not growling, not foaming at the mouth, not anything."
O'Hare has also gone unpunished.
For more information on police officers killing family pets check out this excellent Reason Magazine article.
On the other side of the law, Pittsburgh native Kenneth King has been placed in county jail for allegedly yelling at a police dog.
KDKA reports:
Kenneth King, 23, walked by a K-9 police cruiser at a Sunoco station on the North Side shortly after midnight on Saturday and was startled by the dog, which was barking.
Police say King yelled at the dog, “Shut the [expletive] up, and charged with taunting a police animal.
King is being held on a $100,000 straight bond and will be in jail until he has his preliminary hearings in a few days.
Steven E. Vanderhoff has been arrested for shooting and killing a police dog that wandered onto his property. He insists that he did not know it was a police dog. Vanderhoff has been charged with assaulting a police dog and cruelty to animals; the assault charge is a third degree felony.
No charges have been filed against Officer Deeter for failing to confine the dog.
Vanderhoff faces up to five years in prison and a $10,000 fine if convicted of the assault charge. Cruelty to animals, a second-degree misdemeanor, carries a maximum sentence of 90 days in jail.
When a police dog is killed officers are quick to say that the dog is a fellow officer and should be treated as such. I don't know about you, but my my dog is a member of my family and should therefore be treated like one. If an officer wrongly killed a member of my family I would hope that proper actions were taken against them.
So here are the rules: Do not kill or threaten a police dog no matter what, unless you want to be put in jail. However, if you are an officer, you can recklessly kill the pets of average citizens if they so much as bark at you.
The hypocrisy that the law takes when it come to police dogs is fairly astounding. Is the life of a police dog more valuable than that of a citizens dog? It depends on the perspective you take. As for me, I would never give up the life of my dog for that of a police dog, as his life is more important to me. The laws should not discriminate.
article:240190:25::0

Opinion: Health care bill passes, now the real battle

The wait is over. The House of Representatives passed the Obama administration health bill in a close vote. Concessions about insurance for abortions and all, the bill is now headed for the Senate.
Published 12 hours ago by  Paul Wallis in Politics | 9 comments

Phase 3 of 2010 Olympic ticket sales delayed until November 14

The third phase of ticket sales for the Vancouver/Whistler 2010 Winter Olympics and Paralympics was delayed by one week because of a configuration problem on the ticket sales website.
Published 12 hours ago by  Julian Worker in Sports

Iranian officials say 109 people arrested at U.S. Embassy Rally

Authorities in Iran have announced that 109 people were arrested in Tehran on Wednesday as security forces clashed with supporters of opposition leader Mir-Hossein Mousavi at a rally to mark the anniversary of the seizure of the U.S. embassy.
Published 17 hours ago by  Chris Dade in Politics

Virtual goods now a $5-billion global industry

With minutes to go before the end of the day, you visit Facebook and send out a quick birthday cake to a friend. It's $1 for the virtual icon that is simply displayed on their page. Sound silly? Well, these types of transactions are now worth billions.
Published yesterday by  KJ Mullins in Internet | 1 comment

What Facebook, Twitter, PayPal can teach us about going viral Special

Going viral isn't a finger-snap way to achieve mass popularity. In fact, as author Adam L. Penenberg explains to Digitaljournal.com, some of the top tech companies found viral success by creating a product that had to be shared to be useful.
Published yesterday by  David Silverberg in Internet | 2 comments
apis-129219 apis-129223 apis-129206 apis-129186 apis-129159
Email:
Password:
Remember meForgot password?