Wednesday, 10 November 2021

Tomorrow's Fatal Dog Attack Today...

...likely now thanks to the incompetence and laziness, not to say criminal negligence, of South Yorkshire Police
A 10-year old boy has been left needing a zimmer frame and a wheelchair after suffering a horrific injury at the hands of a dog. John Henry Dundas, from Doncaster, South Yorkshire, was left screaming in agony and unable to walk after a Staffordshire Bull Terrier locked its jaws around his leg on October 6.
The rugby-playing youngster was in his friend’s house when the dog first took a bite at his leg before it paused and took a second bite where it “locked” onto his leg and refused to let go, according to his mum Natasha Dundas.

It's goodnight Vienna for Fido, then?

South Yorkshire Police were called regarding the dog and initially took the canine away but have since returned it.

*blinks* What..?!

Natasha learned after the incident that the same dog has been involved in attacks on others in the area.
The mother-of-two added: "I just can’t believe the dog has been handed back. I don’t understand why they would want a dog like that after seeing what it has done to my son."

Because some people shouldn't have a goldfish, let along a dangerous dog. And for some, what a dog like that can do when it wants to (the images of the injuries are horrific), is the attraction of it... 

"We know it has attacked others before but still nothing has been done. They are still able to walk the dog around our streets off a lead. My son is terrified of it and he will have to watch out for it, even on the way to school."

What have the uniformed incompetents got to say for themselves this time? 

A spokesperson for South Yorkshire Police said: "Police were called at around 8:30pm on 6 October to reports that a child had been bitten by a dog in Essex Avenue, Doncaster.
"The victim, a 10-year-old boy, suffered serious injuries and was taken to hospital via his parents.
"Officers attended the scene and the dog was seized."

Open and shut case, so clear-cut even SYP couldn't screw it up, surely? 

"A man was interviewed under caution in connection to the incident. Officers have now exhausted all possible lines of enquiry into the circumstances surrounding this incident but any new information can be passed to police by calling 101 quoting incident number 866 of 6 October."

One hopes, in the light of Monday's totally avoidable tragedy in Wales, that this decision is now being hastily revisited? And the animal will be seized and application made for its destruction?

Although the early reports that Gwent Police seem to be hanging their hat on whether the dog in that case was one of the four banned breeds in the original DDA, rather than using the full breadth of their enhanced powers under the revision to that act, isn't encouraging... 

6 comments:

  1. With Selective Yorkshire Politics being involved it's just as well that Fido didn't send an unapproved tweet or he'd be pushing up daisies by now . . .

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  2. Doesn't the boy have parents, grandparents or other relatives who can take matters into their own hands?

    If he WAS MINE, THE DOG'S OWNERS WOULD BE LEFT NEEDING WHEELCHAIRS ....

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  3. "Corrupt from bottom to top."

    The Right Honourable Priti Patel, MP, Home Secretary.

    The Police Union (that's the federation to you, Jaded) has been quick to demand that Ms Patel's withdraws her 'savage indictment'. Insofar as it applies to most instances of police debacles, I see no reason why the Home Secretary couldn't mitigate the statement with the additional words 'and totally stupid'.

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  4. The victim's family should actually offer to take the dog in for a few weeks as a "no hard feelings" gesture - and then teach it to do the Nazi salute. Then the owner might see some serious court time and punishment.

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  5. "...it's just as well that Fido didn't send an unapproved tweet or he'd be pushing up daisies by now . . ."

    🤣

    "Doesn't the boy have parents, grandparents or other relatives who can take matters into their own hands?"

    We only hear from the mother. I suspect there's no father in the picture, as is so very often the case these days...

    "The victim's family should actually offer to take the dog in for a few weeks as a "no hard feelings" gesture - and then teach it to do the Nazi salute. Then the owner might see some serious court time and punishment."

    Sadly true!

    But what does it say about this country that we ignore genuine threats in favour of manufactured ones?

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