Reunion of dog and man costs Rs. 1 lakh

In what can be termed as a rare reunion, a group of like-minded people in Maddur spent nearly Rs. 1 lakh to trace two stray dogs that were reportedly caught and released in the forest area by the Maddur Town Municipal Council.

AMONG FRIENDS: Residents took 15 days and spent a great deal of money to find the stray dog they had befriended.
The Maddur TMC had conducted a drive against stray dogs in Maddur two weeks ago. The dog catchers, hired by the civic authority, caught hundreds of dogs and released them in the Muthathi forest area that falls under the Cauvery Wildlife Zone.
Among the dogs that were released in the forest were Bhaira and Kencha. While Bhaira was the pet for residents of Kote Beedhi, shopkeepers near old bus-stand were emotionally attached to Kencha. According to the shopkeepers, no one realised that the dog catchers had captured the two dogs, until it was too late.
A group of local people conducted a search near the border areas of Muthathi forest, a home to leopards, elephants and other wild animals.
They pooled in around Rs. 1 lakh to trace the dogs. They also announced a cash reward of Rs. 25,000 to those who could provide information about the dogs. The shopkeepers also distributed photos and relevant details of the two dogs in several villages along the forest border requesting them to help trace the dogs.
It was an arduous task, but a continuous search for 15 days bore fruit on Tuesday night.
They brought the animals back on Wednesday and they celebrated the reunion with the dogs by bursting crackers and distributing sweets.
The former TAPCMS president Krishna alias Auto Krishna, Ramachandra, Balakrishna, Somashekar and others were part of the group that traced the dogs.

New Bedford, Mass. authorities looking for abused dog's owner

Massachusetts is seeing another case of horrible animal abuse, and animal control officers are looking to find the owner of a dog recovering from its injuries.


"We've been told that she tied the dog to a rope at the beach and took off," said New Bedford Animal Control Director Manny Maciel.

A 5-year-old shepherd mix was left along the bay in New Bedford, Mass. Sunday, with a choker chain wrapped around not just his neck but also his leg. Officials say it embedded into not just his fur, but also his skin.

"It was embedded in there. And it was pretty, pretty tight and painful," Maciel said.

The dog somehow broke free and wandered around New Bedford's south end for a few days, with a chain clearly too small when he found a willing and thoughtful family to care for him.

"He was limping and he just looked scared, trying to hide out somewhere," said animal lover Susan Amoril who fed him, gave him water, and he slept under the tree in her neighbor's yard.

Amoril's 4-year-old daughter fed him hot dog,  but the dog was skittish.

Maciel was able to lure him into a trap, and a vet got the chain out of his back and stitched him up. They say under the circumstances, the dog's doing okay.

Now, the search is on for a woman with blonde hair who was seen dropping him off in a green Honda Civic on Sunday. She could face felony charges of abandonment and failing to provide vet care for the dog.

"If you have to give up your animal and can't afford to take care of it, times are tough, contact your local animal control or your shelter. Don't just abandon an animal on the side of a road. After five years, how can you just toss your animal to the side," Maciel added.

If you recognize the dog or know its owner, call animal control in New Bedford at 508-991-6366, and this dog will be up for adoption at Forever PAWS shelter in Fall River.

Dog killer accused of animal cruelty

A Virginia Beach man who was convicted killing a dog three years ago is facing new animal cruelty charges.

In August 2010, police arrested Byron McAdoo for throwing a york-terrier mix across a room so hard it died.  Police say it happened at his home on Lavender Lane.
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"He was raised around dogs all his life," said father Bryon McAdoo, Sr. "I've had a dog ever since he was a baby. No, he wouldn't hurt no dog."
McAdoo never served jail time for the dog abuse in 2010. Just after the crime he 10 On Your Side he found a small dog in his front yard and claimed he took the dog to give it care.
"I'm sorry that the dog died," McAdoo said in that 2010 interview. "I did not mean for the dog to die at all. I wish I could still have it right now."
The dog wondered from its home just around the corner. His name was Nooch and his owner was heartbroken at the loss.
McAdoo pleaded guilty to killing Nooch in August 2011. Part of the plea agreement said he wouldn't own or live with any dogs for three years.
"We had a dog at our residence in Virginia Beach," said wife Savanna McAdoo.
Savanna McAdoo said she and Byron are now separated. She believes police found out about the dog when they went to register the dog for a license. A red flag about McAdoo's past came up.
"At that time, I thought it was okay for Byron to have a dog," she said. "I didn't know that it was three years that he couldn't have a dog."
10 On Your Side uncovered a letter from the Virginia Beach Commonwealth's Attorney to Judge Les Lilley asking the court to issue a warrant for McAdoo's arrest. The letter says animal control found McAdoo with two dogs and suspects him of abusing another.  A spokesperson for the Commonwealth's Attorney said more information could not be released because of the ongoing investigation.
WAVY.com found at least two dogs at McAdoo's Chesapeake home, where he lives with his parents.
McAdoo will be back in court Friday morning.

The perpetual puppy: New breed of dog ‘never grows old’

This dog could be a little long in the tooth, but you’d never know it looking at its baby-faced appearance.

The perpetual puppy: New breed of dog 'never grows old'Even when it’s fully-grown, the cava-poo-chon still looks like a puppy – and it’s the latest ‘go-to’ dog in the current trend for small pets.
Bred by Arizona-based Linda and Steve Rogers, the cava-poo-chon is a cavalier King Charles spaniel and bichon frise mix bred with a miniature poodle.
The pair enlisted the help of a geneticist and reproductive veterinarian to develop the ‘tribrid’ – or triple cross.

According to Ms Rogers, cava-poo-chon combines the best of the three breeds and are offered with a choice of colour and two types of coat: curly or very curly.
The dog’s small stature means it will never lose its youthful looks and Linda says there is no reason why the dogs can’t enjoy a 20-year lifespan.
However, the American Kennel Club refuses to recognise the cava-poo-chon as an official breed, with one expert describing some specially-bred small dogs as expensive ‘gimmicks’.

 

Man missing after dog returns home alone with bloody leash


Los Angeles police are looking for a 22-year-old man who disappeared Tuesday night while walking his dog, which returned to his South L.A. home dragging a bloody leash, the man's fiance said.

Darwin Vela 


Darwin Vela, 22, left his home in the 2900 block of South Redondo Boulevard about 9 p.m., police said. His fiance, Kelly McLaren, said she skipped their usual walk so she could shower.

"When I came out, I heard the dog crying," McLaren said. "He was outside alone and Darwin wasn't there."

The 90-pound chocolate Lab was "cowering," McLaren said. When she noticed blood on its leash, she called 911 "right away."

Officers searched the area, she said, and although a bloodhound briefly traced his scent, police found no sign of Vela. McLaren said he left his cellphone, wallet and keys at home and has not contacted family or friends.
Police told McLaren they would test the blood found on the dog's leash to determine whether it belonged to Vela, she said.

McLaren said her fiance has never disappeared without notice and is "not the kind of person to do that now."

Man who knifed pit bull must face consequences, dead dog’s owners say

The owners of a pit bull that was stabbed to death after it attacked a pug in Kitsilano are defending their dog, and demanding the man who killed it be held accountable for his actions.

 

Pit bull Pandora in a family photo with its owner’s niece, Aylah. (Family photo)
The roommate of Samantha Fairbridge, the dog’s owner, was walking the six-year-old pit bull named Pandora near Kitsilano Pool around 1 p.m. on Wednesday when a small, white, dog approached off-leash, Ms. Fairbridge’s sister Amy said. Shortly after, a black, off-leash pug came up “barking and jumping at [Pandora],” Amy Fairbridge said.

“What was a brief interaction with another dog all of a sudden turned into two strange dogs that are not on their leash, and so it escalated,” she said. “Pandora felt threatened, as any other dog, no matter the breed, would have felt in that case. Pandora was the only dog that was being restricted by a leash at that moment.”
Police say the pit bull then bit and latched onto the pug’s neck. However, the woman walking Pandora, who wrote down what happened as soon as she got home, said Pandora bit the pug’s ear – not its neck.
The pug’s owner, a 72-year-old man, ran toward the dogs, and along with Ms. Fairbridge’s roommate, tried to free the pug. The man then opened up a pocket knife and “put down the pit bull,” Vancouver police Sergeant Randy Fincham said.
Neither police nor the B.C. Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, which has taken over the investigation, could comment on how many times the man stabbed Pandora, saying a necropsy this week will determine that. But the roommate told the Fairbridge sisters the man stabbed the dog multiple times, allegedly shouting, “You hurt my dog! … You deserve to die,” Amy Fairbridge said.
“By the time he had stabbed her twice, she was falling on the ground and his dog was free,” Ms. Fairbridge said. “At this point, there is no threat left to his dog. Pandora is dying. But he continues to stab her over and over again, until Pandora is bleeding to death.”
The man took his pug to a veterinary hospital, where it had minor surgery to repair “multiple small puncture wounds” in its neck, Sergeant Fincham said. Animal control took the dead pit bull to the B.C. SPCA, which will perform the necropsy and determine whether animal cruelty was involved in the case.
“At law, it’s only an offence if an animal suffered… ,” said Marcie Moriarty, chief prevention and enforcement officer for the B.C. SPCA. “For instance, if the dog died instantaneously, then there would be no offence.
“Another important element will be interviews with the animal owners and any witnesses to determine what exactly transpired, because there is, of course, the defence that the person was simply defending either themselves or their property.”
Vancouver has no breed-specific bylaw, unlike Burnaby, which includes pit bulls in its definition of vicious dogs. Owners in Burnaby face more restrictions, pay more for licences and face larger incident fines.
The Fairbridges, who are now coping with the loss of a dog they have had since it was a puppy, say they understand the man’s instinct to protect his dog, but question why the stabbing allegedly continued after the dogs had separated. Amy Fairbridge added that Pandora had never before been aggressive with another dog or human, and had played with her young daughter since she was a toddler.
“She was like the runt of the litter, the smallest pit bull you will ever see,” Amy Fairbridge said. “Knowing and living with this dog, seeing it care for my daughter, from the ages of one-and-a-half to three, gives me a really good idea about the temperament of this dog.”

Man, Dog Rescued After Getting Trapped In Lawrence Co. Swamp

A 70-year-old man, out looking Native American arrowheads in a wooded area of Slippery Rock Township in Lawrence County, had to be rescued Wednesday evening from a swamp.

(Photo Credit: KDKA)The man had gotten permission from the property owner to be on his land.
Luckily, he had his cell phone with him when he and his dog, Daisy, got stuck in some mud and muck in about three feet of water.

the rescued man’s friend, said he called him for help when he became stuck up to his knees. Both he and his dog were okay, but they were cold, wet and wanted to get warm.
Property owner Brian Pancher said he just met the elderly man two days ago and gave him permission to be on his property.
Pancher says they used a couple of small boats to get to the stranded man and his dog first, and then put them on an ATV to bring them out to safety.
“You always feel a lot better when you know the person that you took the energy to rescue is going to be okay, and I know he’s going to be good

Cambridge guide dog 'viciously' attacked by two dogs

A guide dog required stitches after a "vicious and unprovoked" attack by two other dogs in a Cambridge street.

 Guide dog after being attacked by two dogs
Neda, a yellow Labrador, was on a harness with her partially-sighted owner when the unleashed dogs attacked, wounding her shoulder and stomach.
Helen Sismore, from the Guide Dogs for the Blind Association, said Neda would not be able to work for a month.
"The owner is feeling very frightened and vulnerable, but we are supporting her and Neda," she added.
Cambridgeshire Police confirmed they were investigating an attack, on 13 November at about 16:45 GMT.
Eight-year-old Neda has been with her owner, who did not wish to be named, for more than six years.

Dog's incredible survival after being mown down by car and carried on terrifying 55-MILE ride while wedged in its grille


A dog survived after being struck by a car then travelling 55 miles dangling from its bumper, it was reported today.

Driver Julia Cesar Siqueira said he heard a thud after turning onto a road near his home in Itapetinga, northeastern Brazil.
Terrifying: Rescuers help a dog after it was struck by a car and carried 55 miles while wedged in the front grille
But the student, 35, carried on his hour-long trip towards the next town - unaware that the young mogrel was trapped inside the vehicle's front bumper grille.

Dog owner pictured calmly strolling away seconds after vicious attack on jogger

This is the moment a dog owner calmly strolls away - seconds after his snarling pet had bitten a runner.

 
The stunned victim was out for a run with his own dog, a Cocker Spaniel, when the man's Staffordshire Bull Terrier struck.
It bit the runner, 47, on his leg and attacked his pet before it was finally brought under control - but the owner refused to give his details.
The victim then took this picture on his phone, which police have now released as they appeal for information.
The attack happened at 4pm on October 28 on a canal path near Warrington Road in Abram, Wigan.
PC Gordon Beattie said: "This innocent runner and his dog were set upon by an aggressive dog that had been let off its lead.
"As if that wasn't bad enough, the owner didn't apologise or hang around to check is he was OK or give his details.
"He is exactly the sort of irresponsible person who gives other dog owners a bad name.
"I now want people to take a look at the photograph we have released today to tell us if you recognise this man.
"He clearly couldn't care less about his animal attacking random people and next time it could be a child or an elderly person that his dog sinks its teeth into."
The owner of the Bull Terrier was white, between 50 and 55, around 6ft 2 with a large build and aggressive manner.
He had a greying shaven head, grey stubble, and was wearing a blue jacket/fleece, brown Puma trousers with white Puma logo on back of left leg, and grey trainer

Dog to be put down after biting 2nd toddler in two months

A dog owner has been cited and a mother is under investigation after a two-year-old was bitten by a lab mix Tuesday night.

 

Just before 10 p.m. Tuesday, officers were called out to Steeplechase Apartments off Central Avenue Pike.
Officers said the dog owner, Jetta Surrett, 31, babysat the toddler.
The Knoxville Police Department said the mother, Kendra Lusby, 32, was picking up her daughter and insisted Surrett let the lab-mix out of a locked bedroom to play with her child.
"The dog owner told the mother it was not friendly with kids," said Darrell Debusk, Public Information Officer with KPD. "The mother insisted and let the dog out, and when they were sitting on the floor, the dog bit the child."
The dog bit off a large portion of her cheek. The 2-year-old was transported to UT Medical Center and is expected to be ok.
According to a report from the Knox County Sheriff's Office, this was the second time the dog bit a 2-year-old in the past two months.
The report showed on October 3rd, 2013, deputies were called out to Surrett's previous address after the dog bit her 2-year-old cousin while they were playing Frisbee.
While the report lists the dog as a female named Lilly, KPD said Surrett admitted it was Simba, the same male lab-mix that bit the 2-year-old Tuesday.
"She said her other dog had died and Simba was becoming more aggressive," said Debusk.
Surrett was not cited in October, but officers with KPD officially cited her Wednesday for her dog not being up to date on its rabies vaccinations. The misdemeanor comes with a $50 fine.
Debusk said KPD's Family Crime Unit and the Department of Children's Services is investigating the mother, who could face charges.

Colo. man informed his dog has successfully signed up for ObamaCare

It's a real shaggy dog story. While Americans across the country are struggling to sign up for ObamaCare due to problems with the federal health care website, at least one enrollee has successfully gotten covered through a state-run exchange: a Colorado man’s 14-year-old Yorkie.
dogobamacare.jpg
Fort Collins resident Shane Smith told KDVR he received a letter last week informing his dog,Baxter, that a health insurance account had been opened for the pup through Connect for Health Colorado.

Smith told the station he had to sign up for coverage through the state exchange because his health insurance plan was cancelled under ObamaCare. He isn’t sure how Baxter wound up getting enrolled instead, but he said he did give Baxter’s name as a security question as part of the registration process.
“It was pretty funny. Typical ObamaCare, that they would insure your dog by mistake,” Smith told KDVR.
Smith said when he called Connect for Health Colorado they fixed the problem, but he is still wary of ObamaCare due to all the issues.
“There’s been a lot of headaches that’s come from all of this,” Smith told KDVR.  “All the phone calls. All the nonsense. They ended up giving me good coverage I think, but who knows if they’re going to take it away,” Smith said.
 “As long as Baxter’s covered, that’s all the counts,” he joked.
Colorado runs its own health insurance exchange that is separate from the problem-plagued website Healthcare.gov, which is run by the Department of Health and Human Services. A Connect for Health Colorado spokesman told KDVR its system would never make up a name when generating a letter, but it works quickly to resolve the situation when mistakes are made.

Dog Makes Full Recovery After Being Strapped With Fireworks, Set Ablaze

A dog who was badly burned and left to die on a street in North Hollywood back in July is now “fully recovered” after a series of surgeries and skin grafts, according to staff members at the Westlake Village Animal Hospital.

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The 3-year-old American Staffordshire terrier was found abandoned on July 5. The dog, nicknamed “Indy,” was suffering from severe burns to his stomach, legs and paws.
“There were fireworks strapped to him and they lit them on fire,” said Dr. Daniel Slaton, of the Westlake Village Animal Hospital.
“That’s the burn mark patterns through the back of the legs,” Slaton said. “As he was walking, it was burning the back of his feet.”
Slaton has treated many animals with July 4 injuries, but never this extreme, he said.
Shelter volunteer Allison Polumbus described the attack as deliberate, vicious and cruel. “It’s really hard to see an animal in this kind of pain,” Polumbus said
We saw him without the bandages. It’s horrific, it’s gory, and you can’t even imagine the pain he’s in,” Polumbus said. The person responsible for the attack on Indy has never been caught despite a $50,000 reward.
Surveillance video showed the man suspected in the attack driving a white Toyota pickup with dark stripes on the side, a sunroof and a small extra-cab.

Dog Needs Surgery After Eating Girl’s ‘Volcanic’ Homework

A family dog is recovering after emergency surgery after eating a girl’s homework.

Payton and Reggie (credit: CBS)

 

It’s the oldest line in the classroom – “My dog ate my homework.” But in this case it was painfully true.
“I made a volcano project out of candy and I pinned the candy to a foam base,” Payton said.
Payton and her dog “Reggie” share a love of school science projects.
“It was Mt. Haleakala in Maui,” Payton said.

1 Arrested After Police Recover Pit Bulls, Dog Fighting Manuals

Minnesota law enforcement has recovered 15 pit bulls, dog fighting manuals, guns, drugs and paraphernalia after executing 10 search warrants at addresses connected to a suspected dog fighter.
On Wednesday, officers from Minneapolis Animal Care & Control, the Minneapolis Police Department and other law enforcement agencies executed the search warrants at nine addresses in Minneapolis and one in New Hope. No officers or dogs were injured during the operation.
One of the rescued dogs, who authorities say was the leader of the pack, was at the press conference Wednesday afternoon. Part of his ear was bitten off and his eye was injured.
Investigators say the dogs – five of them puppies – were recovered from eight Minneapolis homes, where conditions were tough.
“They’re in a kennel. They’re chained up. Most of them are on a dirt surface. Some had feces in the kennel area. Most of them did not have water. I did not locate food in most of the kennels,” said Sgt. Lindsay Herron of the Minneapolis Animal Care & Control.
The dogs are currently being cared for by Minneapolis Animal Care & Control.
The suspected dog fighter was arrested and is now in custody at the Hennepin County Jail awaiting charges.

Animal advocates sue NYC to save dog

Animal advocates are suing the city to save a 4-year-old mutt named Jake who officials want to euthanize fearing he may have rabies because he was used in illegal dog fights.


Animal advocates sue NYC to save dogThe Lexus Project saved Jake from doggy death row earlier this week and the group is asking a Manhattan Supreme Court judge to approve an adoption.
The advocates say the city’s alternative to execution– a six-month quarantine– would also be a death sentence for Jake because he would not be able to survive the isolation as he is suffering from bite wounds on his head and legs.
The 75-pound mixed breed’s attorney, Susan Chana Lask, told the Post in an interview that the battered pup was “left for dead” and picked up by Animal Care and Control earlier this month.
“He was obviously used as a bait dog in fighting rings and then left to be disposed of, not thinking that an attorney would jump in and say ‘We’ll be his voice,’” Lask added.
The activists want to adopt the brown and white pooch and nurse him back to health. They have raised almost $3,000 for the cause.
They believe he does not have rabies because he has a microchip and is neutered—indications that he was once a pet and received vaccinations.
Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Alice Schlesinger ordered The Lexus Project to return to court this Friday with a plan for his care.
Jake is currently at a city shelter in Harlem.
The city’s Law Department said, “Animal Care and Control takes great pains to balance public health and safety concerns with an animal’s well being and has been providing regular veterinary care to Jake. We will be addressing the petitioners’ claims in greater detail at Friday’s court appearance.”

Reward Doubled To Find Missing Hilliard Dog


A Cleveland-area kennel owner is helping double the reward to help find a missing Hilliard dog.

A Hilliard dog boarder admits it sent the pup home with the wrong family.
The Harkins family said Sunday morning they left their black lab Jasmine in the care of Camp Bow Wow in Hilliard.
 
Monday morning, they got a phone call.
"He said that there was a mix-up," said John Harkins. "That another dog that looked exactly like Jasmine was there. And when that dog's owner came to pick up that dog, Camp Bow Wow gave them Jasmine instead."
The other dog's owner told the Harkins his step-son brought Jasmine to their home on Amity Road.
She resisted going into the stranger's house, broke free, and took off.
The news was especially tough for 17-year-old Haley Harkins.
She suffers from Williams Syndrome and calls Jasmine her sister.
Amy Ryan owns two unaffiliated Camp Bow Wow franchises in Northeast Ohio.
She was moved by Haley's story and offered to help double the reward to find Jasmine to $2,000.
She also sent workers from her locations to Hilliard to help assist in the search for the dog.

Given away dog on Trade Me for $900

Wendy Sadgrove thought she had given her beloved pet to a "good home" but only weeks later her basset hound was listed for sale on Trade Me for $900.
The mother of three, from Waipapa near Kerikeri, reluctantly gave away the three and a half-year-old pedigree basset hound named Simi after a string of tragic events meant she could not keep the playful canine.
 Basset hound Simi was put up for sale on Trade Me after her owner thought she had gone to a "good home".
She is demanding the dog be returned as she never intended for money to be made out of her unfortunate circumstances.
Mrs Sadgrove said she was widowed last year when her husband died of cancer. Their other family dog, also a basset, died last month.
"Simi needed another dog for company but we couldn't afford to get one. So the only thing to do was give her away to a good home," said an upset Mrs Sadgrove.
She posted on a Facebook group called Northland Grapevine - Info Sharing Group, where people give away or sell items. She wanted a good home for Simi, ideally a loving family with another dog.

Forever young: New dog breed won't lose puppy face

Imagine the ideal designer dog. It would be smart, healthy and hypoallergenic. It would have the yap bred out and longevity bred in. And, most important, it would never lose its puppy face.

Enter the "cava-poo-chon." The breed is the newest and latest in the decades-old search for the dog-face fountain of youth and perfect pet accessory. But the American Kennel Club does not recognize the new trend as an official breed, and one expert calls some specially bred small dogs expensive "gimmicks."
Bridgette is a member of a breed that is being labeled as the perfect pet accessory because it has the puppy face fountain of youth.
"There's always been a market for these forever-ish young dogs," said veteran trainer Steve Haynes of Fidelio Dog Works in Austin who is working with 50 first-generation cava-poo-chons. "Until recently, specialized dogs like miniature Yorkies and miniature Maltese were the go-to dogs."
The cava-poo-chon is a cavalier King Charles spaniel and bichon frise mix bred with a miniature poodle. With the help of a geneticist and reproductive veterinarian, the tribrid or "triple cross" was created by Linda and Steve Rogers of Timshell Farm in Pine, Ariz.
With a price tag ranging from $2,000 to $3,500, the cava-poo-chon combines the best of the three breeds, Linda Rogers said. She added that there is no reason they can't live for 20 years. The Rogerses offer a choice of color and two types of coat — curly or very curly, she said.
So far, 58 families have returned to get a second cava-poo-chon, and 12 of the dogs have been certified to work in nursing homes and hospitals as therapy dogs, Rogers said.
Amy Wolf of Austin says she found her perfect dog in the breed.

Illinois Man, Jonathan Byler Dann, Reunites With Dog He Thought He Lost To Tornado

Jonathan Byler Dann's home was among the 400 lost to the tornado that ravaged Washington, Ill., on Sunday, but a discovery yesterday made for a beautiful silver lining.
 jonathan byler dann
Maggie, Byler Dann's 11-year-old dog who was thought to have perished during the disaster, was discovered alive in the rubble of his home.

Dog to be put down after biting 2nd toddler in two months

A dog owner has been cited and a mother is under investigation after a two-year-old was bitten by a lab mix Tuesday night.

Just before 10 p.m. Tuesday, officers were called out to Steeplechase Apartments off Central Avenue Pike.
Officers said the dog owner, Jetta Surrett, 31, babysat the toddler.
The Knoxville Police Department said the mother, Kendra Lusby, 32, was picking up her daughter and insisted Surrett let the lab-mix out of a locked bedroom to play with her child.
"The dog owner told the mother it was not friendly with kids," said Darrell Debusk, Public Information Officer with KPD. "The mother insisted and let the dog out, and when they were sitting on the floor, the dog bit the child."
The dog bit off a large portion of her cheek. The 2-year-old was transported to UT Medical Center and is expected to be ok.
According to a report from the Knox County Sheriff's Office, this was the second time the dog bit a 2-year-old in the past two months.
The report showed on October 3rd, 2013, deputies were called out to Surrett's previous address after the dog bit her 2-year-old cousin while they were playing Frisbee.
While the report lists the dog as a female named Lilly, KPD said Surrett admitted it was Simba, the same male lab-mix that bit the 2-year-old Tuesday.
"She said her other dog had died and Simba was becoming more aggressive," said Debusk.
Surrett was not cited in October, but officers with KPD officially cited her Wednesday for her dog not being up to date on its rabies vaccinations. The misdemeanor comes with a $50 fine.
Debusk said KPD's Family Crime Unit and the Department of Children's Services is investigating the mother, who could face charges.

A Dog’s Life sheds light on canine point of view

Dogs don’t just see the world from their own, lower-to-the-ground perspective, David Suzuki says in the opening moments of Toronto filmmakers Donna and Daniel Zuckerbrot’s charming, lighthearted The Nature of Things program A Dog’s Life.

A Dog's Life Dogs have an innate, almost uncanny ability to read human emotions, an understanding that dates back to humankind’s origins. Oddly, A Dog’s Life tells us, we may not be as astute at reading dogs’ behaviour.
“You’ll be amazed at what they can do, and what they can’t do,” Suzuki says, early in his introduction.
That may sound obvious — a little like saying dogs get along with cats about as well as sheepherders get along with cattle ranchers — but there’s much in A Dog’s Life that will surprise and delight even the most well-informed dog lover. As University of Western Ontario PhD student and canine researcher Krista Macpherson points out in A Dog’s Life, we have learned more about dogs in the past 10 years than in the previous 100.
“How is it that we’ve lived together for so long,” Suzuki says, “and yet we know so little about them?”
Funny he should ask …

Colo. man informed his dog has successfully signed up for ObamaCare

successfully signed up for ObamaCare

Colorado resident Shane Smith says his dog Baxter mistakenly received health insurance through a state-run exchange.kdvr
It's a real shaggy dog story. While Americans across the country are struggling to sign up for ObamaCare due to problems with the federal health care website, at least one enrollee has successfully gotten covered through a state-run exchange: a Colorado man’s 14-year-old Yorkie.
Fort Collins resident Shane Smith told KDVR he received a letter last week informing his dog,Baxter, that a health insurance account had been opened for the pup through Connect for Health Colorado.
Smith told the station he had to sign up for coverage through the state exchange because his health insurance plan was cancelled under ObamaCare. He isn’t sure how Baxter wound up getting enrolled instead, but he said he did give Baxter’s name as a security question as part of the registration process.
“It was pretty funny. Typical ObamaCare, that they would insure your dog by mistake,” Smith told KDVR.
Smith said when he called Connect for Health Colorado they fixed the problem, but he is still wary of ObamaCare due to all the issues.
“There’s been a lot of headaches that’s come from all of this,” Smith told KDVR.  “All the phone calls. All the nonsense. They ended up giving me good coverage I think, but who knows if they’re going to take it away,” Smith said.
 “As long as Baxter’s covered, that’s all the counts,” he joked.
Colorado runs its own health insurance exchange that is separate from the problem-plagued website Healthcare.gov, which is run by the Department of Health and Human Services. A Connect for Health Colorado spokesman told KDVR its system would never make up a name when generating a letter, but it works quickly to resolve the situation when mistakes are made

Dogs, guns, drugs seized from illegal dog fighting operation

Authorities have broken up an alleged dog fighting ring in Minneapolis and New Hope, saving 15 pit bulls and making one arrest, a city spokesman announced Wednesday. 

Search warrants served at 10 locations found the dogs, two guns, narcotics, dog fighting paraphernalia and a dog fighting training manual, according to spokesman Matt Lindstrom.
The arrest so far of one man, who was renting various houses through the county in which to keep the dogs, provided a peek into what officers call an underground illicit sport that can pay out $15,000 for one game.
"Dog fighting is a terrible crime that is harmful to not only the dogs involved, but the overall community as well," wrote Lindstrom. He urged people to call 311 if they suspected any form of animal cruelty in their neighborhood.
Sgt. Lindsay Wagner said the loser dogs in such illicit fighst typically are killed. In this case, she and other officers seized 10 adult dogs and five puppies.

Police: 5 Arrested, More Than 2 Dozen Dogs Seized In West Baltimore Dog Fighting Bust

A major dog fighting ring is busted in Baltimore City. More than two dozen dogs have been seized by Animal Control. Investigators say the animals were forced to fight.

Meghan McCorkell has more on the investigation.Police raided two locations in West Baltimore and found 26 dogs–one of them dead.A sign on a West Baltimore home warns about a dog inside, but behind the blacked-out basement windows, investigators say they made a horrifying discovery.“Blood splattered on carpets and walls. An actual ring where the dogs were being fought. Dogs were chained to the walls,” said Baltimore City Police Detective Patrick Huter,Eleven dogs and four puppies were found chained up inside. Animal Control collected evidence after one man was arrested.