Normally I'm pretty positive toward LPD. Today, however, I'm feeling a bit negative. An unnamed officer
shot and killed a dog yesterday morning:
Police say the dog was growling and barking, threatening the officer.
The officer, whose name was not released Sunday, went to the home at 37th and W streets to question [a suspect] about a felony theft.
Lincoln Police Capt. David Beggs said the officer stepped around a corner of the house just after 11 a.m., and the brown pit bull approached, growling and barking. When the dog was 10 feet away and coming closer, Beggs said, the officer fired two shots.
One shot hit and wounded the dog, which Smith said was near death around 8 p.m. Sunday at Pitt’s Veterinary Hospital. ...
[The owner] said the dog was in the front yard, which has no fence, when it approached the officer. He said the dog was greeting the officer in a friendly manner, not growling and barking.
There are several problems with this story. First, there's the neighbor's description of the dog as "like a lamb". That obviously doesn't mean the dog was behaving "lamb-like" at the time of the incident, but it does at least offer some evidence that the animal was not inherently violent.
(Aside: I grew up next door to a dog that was "like a lamb", only for it to be euthanized after suddenly attacking one of the neighbor's sons. I'm very aware that there are no guarantees in canine behavior.)
Passive animal or not, I'm much more concerned that the officer's reaction to the dog's approach was to shoot it rather than to back away. Note that Capt. Beggs' description of the incident doesn't say the dog was rushing the officer, nor does Beggs' description indicate that the officer attempted to or could not ease the situation non-violently. What did the officer try before pulling his weapon? Are Lincoln's police officers trained in animal management? If so, did the officer properly follow his training?
If the officer
had to be on the property -- if, for example, a domestic assault were in active progress inside -- this incident would be easy to justify. But no crime was in progress, no warrant was being served, and as far as the information we have indicates, the officer did not
have to be on the property at that moment. Was there really anything preventing the officer from stepping back and finding another solution (calling out the owner to tie up the dog or asking for help from Animal Control, to name two)? If so, Capt. Beggs should have said so in his statement.
The available information is somewhat fuzzy so I'm not going to go so far as to accuse the officer of being in the wrong. But generally speaking, when a police department knows it is 100% correct, it uses language that clearly supports its case. In this situation, I would expect to read that the dog was "running" or "lunging" at the officer, or maybe the officer tried to back away but the yard was cluttered and the officer stumbled, putting him in a bad situation. Instead, we are only told that the dog was "growling and barking", and that it was "coming closer". None of those activities is a canine capital offense.
Again, I'm not saying the officer was wrong. I've been around nice dogs and mean dogs, but I wasn't around this dog at this time. All I ask is that LPD treat this and similar incidents very seriously. A police officer's instincts should guide him to use the least amount of force possible, but as much force as necessary. Did that happen here?