Friday, July 24, 2009

Other Dog Breed Attacks DO Get Reported, Not Just PITTBULL Attacks! It's just that Pittbulls attack more often and worse than the average dog bite

Woman says she needed 29 stitches after canine trio latched onto her

Dog owner cited after boxer attack
DIANE COCHRAN Of The Gazette Staff | Posted: Wednesday, July 22, 2009 11:25 pm

BOB ZELLAR/Gazette Staff
Laurah Peron shows her dog-bite injuries Wednesday at her home on Laurie Lane. Peron was attacked by three dogs owned by her neighbor. .
.A woman recovering from an attack by her neighbor's dogs, including one that apparently was not vaccinated against rabies, says other people in her Billings Heights neighborhood could be at risk.

Laurah Peron was preparing to spray her front stoop for bugs on the evening of July 6 when, she said, three boxers owned by her next-door neighbor attacked her. Peron lives on the 300 block of Laurie Lane.

She had her back turned when the animals charged. Two latched onto her left leg and one onto her right hand, she said.

"All of a sudden they were just on me," she said. "I was screaming at the top of my lungs."

Peron was standing at her front door but could not get inside because the door was locked. She had gone into her yard through an attached garage.

Her pair of sheltie dogs and a neighbor heard her screaming. The neighbor helped her into the garage as the three boxers attacked one of the shelties.

"If he wouldn't have come over, they would have killed me," Peron said.

After several false starts - the dogs kept tripping the automatic garage door's laser sensor, preventing it from closing - Peron and the neighbor managed to shut the animals out of the garage.

A second neighbor took her to the hospital, where she received 29 stitches in her leg and began undergoing a series of preventive rabies shots. Rabies cannot be detected until symptoms appear. By then, it is fatal.

Peron didn't realize until almost a week later that her dog had also been wounded. The wound had abscessed and needed attention from a veterinarian.

An animal control officer wrote nine tickets to the owner of the boxers, Leon Garcia. Garcia is scheduled to appear in Billings Municipal Court July 30.

Three of the tickets were for having a potentially dangerous dog. Each of those citations carries a maximum penalty of six months in jail and a $500 fine.

Three more tickets were for having a dog at large, two were for having an unlicensed dog and one was for failing to vaccinate a dog against rabies. Each of those citations carries a maximum $40 fine.

Animal Control also quarantined the dogs for 10 days to ensure they were not infected with rabies. Several rabid skunks have been captured or killed in the Heights this year.

All three dogs are back in the neighborhood, where children and older people live and could be at risk, Peron said.

Animal Control does not have the authority to confiscate or destroy pets, said the agency's supervisor, Dave Klein. Only a judge can order an animal to be destroyed, Klein said.

But Peron, who has nightmares about the attack and now carries bear spray with her when she leaves her house, doesn't want the boxers to be killed. She hopes their owner will build a more secure fence and maintain the animals' rabies vaccinations.

"I don't want to traumatize their kids," she said. "The dogs are part of their family just like my dogs are."

Contact Diane Cochran at dcochran@billingsgazette.com or 657-1287.

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Dog Perishes in ‘American Idol’ Hopeful’s Car

Dog Perishes in ‘American Idol’ Hopeful’s Car

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Avoiding Dog Bites | The Humane Society of the United States

Avoiding Dog Bites | The Humane Society of the United States

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Thursday, July 16, 2009

County Commissioners getting slow start on Dog Ordinance

Citizens of Ballantine and some from Billings concerened about aggressive dogs in the County met with Yellowstone County Commissioners, Under Sheriff Jay Bell, Yellowstone County Animal Control Officers: John Fleming and Julie. they were told by County Commissioner Jim Reno that the county pushed the matter of the dog ordinance to the back burner and that it would be rectified. So far, weve been waiting since January of this year!
The ordinance on file at the clerk and recorders office is not being enforced. It has been replaced by an all together different idea of animal control. And this different idea has not been filed through proper channels to be enforced. Seems county ACO'S (Animal Control Officers) and the sheriff's Dept. got ahead of themselves and forgot to do this important part of amending the old ordinance before they started enforcing something different. when asked for a copy of the minutes of the meeting in which ACO, County Commissioners and Sheriff's Dept. had their meeting to change the old ordinance, the County could not provide this information. They forwarded the letter to the Animal Control Officers. Isn't it comforting to know that county animal control apparently know more about how the county is to conduct their business than the County Commissioners? Come on, not even a good stall tactic!