likewise.I love dogs to brother.....but if one is tryin to attack me....its dead. And I expect anyone to do the same, even to my dog.
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likewise.I love dogs to brother.....but if one is tryin to attack me....its dead. And I expect anyone to do the same, even to my dog.
since the police state says it was...its off topic but a slippery slope there.Since when the **** is it illegal to take a video with your camera phone?
im in your camp on that one. im not willing to be mauled because i like dogs. (,,,and bill of sale,,,well we aint doing that big guy)I love dogs to brother.....but if one is tryin to attack me....its dead. And I expect anyone to do the same, even to my dog.
Putting ourselves in the officers shoes, what could they have done? Approach a vehicle with a possibly vicious dog in it, open the door, find the keys, partially roll up the windows, leave him inside? That sounds like a bad idea. Allow a subject, who has not complied with requests to leave but continued to be confrontational, to approach his vehicle, enter it to secure the dog and then return to them? That sounds like a worse idea. I'm not a cop, but there is surely some protocol violated there. Especially in the type of scene they had going on there. Maybe they should have done nothing and allowed the guy to continue yelling at them and being confrontational so that he could draw more attention and possibly more onlookers closer and closer to the other officers engaged in storming the house? Then when outnumbered by an angry mob, they could have used their AR's defending themselves from a crowd of humans? Even if not attacked, they probably would have faced discipline for not securing their perimeter. I think it's a sad story, but the cops were painted into a corner by a guy who acted irresponsibly with his animal. If you're going to tell the cops off, good for you, but put your dog in your car and secure him, or better yet, take him home. Would you take your child into the street to yell at the cops?A little common sense and professionalism by the first 2 officers could have saved a good dogs life, that's all i'm saying. I don't blame the cop who shot the dog. but the first 2 officers saw that dog could get out and just ignored it and left it up to someone else to have to take care of. that's just how I see it. could just be the dog lover in me.
im in your camp on that one. im not willing to be mauled because i like dogs. (,,,and bill of sale,,,well we aint doing that big guy)
im in your camp on that one. im not willing to be mauled because i like dogs. (,,,and bill of sale,,,well we aint doing that big guy)
I think that's the point. It didn't appear to be the taping that was at issue. It was the walking back and forth, yelling, being confrontational, all while holding a 100+lb dog,(any breed). If he had stood still and kept his mouth shut, we would've never seen this video because nothing would've happened.But doesn't video taping for documentary purposes fall under the same jurisdiction as the press? or something along those lines. I don't know the law to the letter, but I believe it's something along those lines right? And what about the people that were actually taping this video?