No, I absolutely do not feel that dogs are more important than people. As a matter of fact, I feel that the majority of pet owners spend too much money on Vet bills and treat their animals too much like people, which they are not. However, the person said that the stranger reached down suddenly and they felt that the dog was provoked. But it's the dog that was killed for doing what comes naturally to dogs. If the dog had run after some kid and bit him, I could see putting it down but not from the information given in this particular case.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A little bit extreme don't you think, unless the dog bit the persons arm off? If someone reached down suddenly and you yourself feel that the dog was provoked, why kill the dog? Whenever I meet someone that I know with their dog I always ask first if it's OK for me to pet the dog. And if they say it's OK, I slowly put out my hand and let the dog sniff it first before stroking it.Anonymous wrote:Our dog bit a stranger that reached down suddenly to pet him. We put our dog down even though he was up to date on shots and we felt he was provoked in the situation.
No, not extreme. A dog who harms a person should be put down. Unless you feel dogs are more important than people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Go after this owner, OP. Next time that dog will kill someone.
That is quite a dramatic response!
It's not dramatic. These types of dogs can very easily kill someone. And the dog bit him, and then lunged again. That's not a playful bite, it's an attack that could have gone out of control very quickly.
Anonymous wrote:A little bit extreme don't you think, unless the dog bit the persons arm off? If someone reached down suddenly and you yourself feel that the dog was provoked, why kill the dog? Whenever I meet someone that I know with their dog I always ask first if it's OK for me to pet the dog. And if they say it's OK, I slowly put out my hand and let the dog sniff it first before stroking it.Anonymous wrote:Our dog bit a stranger that reached down suddenly to pet him. We put our dog down even though he was up to date on shots and we felt he was provoked in the situation.
Anonymous wrote:My son was bitten by a German Shepard while running (he’s 12, running with his sports team, they had gotten spread out but there was a witness behind him). A long story but the dog was identified and his vaccinations not up to date. Bites were in arm and upper back thigh and are healing fine but definitely a lot of stress as we had to identify dog, medicine to prevent infection, consultation about necessity of rabies vaccine, etc etc).
We spoke to owner who expressed concern about our son but hasn’t apologized or really acknowledged fault that dog was out of control and vaccinations not up to date. He also sent a follow up text message to my husband which was pretty incomprehensible but seemed to imply that our son wasn’t telling us the full story of how the bite happened (although there was another kid running behind my son who corroborated his story plus he’s told the story 7-8 times to school, police and medical professionals without variation, plus he has absolutely no reason to lie bc even if he was trying to pet the dog or anything we wouldn’t have gotten upset with him and he loves dogs and certainly would not have been harassing it or anything even if he had the time - which he didn’t bc he was trying to get back to school bc it was a timed run).
I guess my question is for dog owners, how would you react in this situation? We certainly don’t want to sue and my son is fine, but I am pretty angry that there isn’t more remorse and that now the owner is trying to shift blame. Am I wrong in thinking / wanting a different response? I also feel some sort of obligation to figure out a repercussion for the owner so they are incentivized to take steps for this not to happen to another kid.
Input or comments? Is there anything that we can / should be doing that isn’t over the top like a lawsuit?
A little bit extreme don't you think, unless the dog bit the persons arm off? If someone reached down suddenly and you yourself feel that the dog was provoked, why kill the dog? Whenever I meet someone that I know with their dog I always ask first if it's OK for me to pet the dog. And if they say it's OK, I slowly put out my hand and let the dog sniff it first before stroking it.Anonymous wrote:Our dog bit a stranger that reached down suddenly to pet him. We put our dog down even though he was up to date on shots and we felt he was provoked in the situation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Go after this owner, OP. Next time that dog will kill someone.
That is quite a dramatic response!
It's not dramatic. These types of dogs can very easily kill someone. And the dog bit him, and then lunged again. That's not a playful bite, it's an attack that could have gone out of control very quickly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Go after this owner, OP. Next time that dog will kill someone.
That is quite a dramatic response!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our dog bit a stranger that reached down suddenly to pet him. We put our dog down even though he was up to date on shots and we felt he was provoked in the situation.
Disgusting. Your poor dog.
Anonymous wrote:Our dog bit a stranger that reached down suddenly to pet him. We put our dog down even though he was up to date on shots and we felt he was provoked in the situation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Was your son on public property when it happened? Was the dog loose, escaped from a fence, or what? we need more details.
That really does not matter.
This was an attack from the back on a child.
Dog should be put down.
DP here. It *absolutely, positively* matters from a legal standpoint. Did your son trespass onto someone's private property, where the dog was contained, OP? We need more details.
Anonymous wrote:My dog has bitten me. It's always been when we were playing and she instantly realized she'd gone too far, and felt bad about it.