Jump to content

Four-year-old Girl Killed By Family Dog In Mountsorrel - Uk


melzawelza
 Share

Recommended Posts

Has anyone questioned the rescue? Before deciding on an opinion, I'd like to know something about the dog's history. If there was temperament screening, it would be good to know how it failed. Taking a sleeping baby out of bed when it is sleeping with its mother is unusual behavior for any dog.

A dog with high prey drive and a small child twitching and/or making noises in her sleep could have been a recipe for disaster. Of course that is pure conjecture.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm not saying he is Aussie but how much do you know of his background? Do you know for sure he's never shown aggression, do you know for sure he's been well socialised around small children?

I have a child and three large rescue dogs. One is the size of a Dane, with the bulk of a Pyrenean Mountain Dog. It can be done but you do need to go by trust being earned over a longish period of time, not automatically granted. It also helps that all three dogs were adopted from Maremma Rescue and I have trust in her temp assessments. There is no way I would bring a large rescue dog in from someone/somewhere I didn't know with a young child in the house.

That poor poor mother, it is just beyond comprehension. :cry: I commend her bravery for killing the dog.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Every article I've read (except for that one) in the aftermath of this has said that the police are currently investigating the dog's breed and doing DNA tests etc... it boggles the mind. WHO CARES?! It has NO bearing on the incident!!

Investigate the history of the dog (that you can find out!)

Investigate what testing the rescue did prior to rehoming

Investigate how the child and dog had interacted in the two months prior

Investigate the health and reproductive status of the dog

Investigate the way the dog was kept

Investigate what happened immediately preceding the attack

There are so many RELEVANT things to look in to. It drives me insane. How will they ever figure out how to prevent this happening again if they don't ask the relevant questions?!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

They would be testing for evidence of the dog's breed to ascertain if it is on the banned list I would imagine for legal reasons.

Of course nobody asks any of those other questions. :(

My guess is they are comparing the dog's DNA with swabs taken from the child's wounds. Doesn't sound to me like they are sure they've got the right dog OR that a dog was involved at all. :shrug:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

My guess is they are comparing the dog's DNA with swabs taken from the child's wounds. Doesn't sound to me like they are sure they've got the right dog OR that a dog was involved at all. :shrug:

Oh :( I hadn't thought of that.

(The bolded bits were bolded by me, not HW)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Has anyone questioned the rescue? Before deciding on an opinion, I'd like to know something about the dog's history. If there was temperament screening, it would be good to know how it failed. Taking a sleeping baby out of bed when it is sleeping with its mother is unusual behavior for any dog.

The article says she got it "from a pound". sounds like she called it "a rescue" but it was not actually from a reputable rescue...

The boarding kennel mentioned in one article is linking back to a dog rescue.

Seems like it is running on the same kenneling premises: operating firstly as the contract to impound for Leicester after which the animals are rehomed by the rescue if unclaimed.

Website is down. :( Won't post it here, although local people posting on forums seemed to have worked it out or knew of the place.

Dog was impounded in August as a stray.

Edited by Powerlegs
Link to comment
Share on other sites

My guess is they are comparing the dog's DNA with swabs taken from the child's wounds. Doesn't sound to me like they are sure they've got the right dog OR that a dog was involved at all. :shrug:

Oh :( I hadn't thought of that.

(The bolded bits were bolded by me, not HW)

I haven't seen anything that suggested this, but it's quite possible :(

Link to comment
Share on other sites

They would be testing for evidence of the dog's breed to ascertain if it is on the banned list I would imagine for legal reasons.

Of course nobody asks any of those other questions. :(

My guess is they are comparing the dog's DNA with swabs taken from the child's wounds. Doesn't sound to me like they are sure they've got the right dog OR that a dog was involved at all. :shrug:

The article I read was quite clear that the DNA rest was related to the dog's breed, however that could be the papers getting it wrong of course. Wouldn't be the first time.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Off the tragic topic but...

“Jodi used to try and walk the dog on a lead, but it would struggle and pulled her over a few times."

Why would you adopt a dog you could not control? Even without having small children this seems like a seriously bad idea...

Even if you found out it was too strong for you after you adopted it, why would you keep it????

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Tragic. crying.gif

Conflicting reports, but they are saying it attacked her in the lounge room now. And that the dog had suffered abuse as it had scars all over it's body (according to a neighbour) Why would the kennel rehome to someone in a flat with a small child? Poor little girl.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The place sounds like a German "Tierheim" to me. They don't call it a pound, but it is. It is where strays and surrenders are kept until somebody comes along to buy them. they do not do temp testing and evaluations as we know them from reputable rescues here. I guess I could be wrong though, since I am not familiar with the UK system.

Either way, I do not think the dog looks comfortable in the photo with the girl and I bet there were previous signs of trouble that were missed..

Tragic for this little girl and her family but unfortunately the impact of this on other dogs will be hard to predict and likely not good. R.I.P. little girl and R.I.P. dog, too. Who knows if we will ever learn exactly what caused this tragedy, since once again, the breed is the focus of this investigation, and not the dog's actual behavior and circumstances.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share

×
×
  • Create New...