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However, what was the officer doing. Was he on an emergency call that he had to get to in order to save a person or maybe even a child's life. What if he was on an emergency call to prevent somebody from killing another person.
Point is, the story does not state what the officer was doing, heading to do, when he shut off the engine to the car.
I hate to say this, but first thought might have been for the situation he was heading into and was not thinking and went thru the motions of turning off the car and getting to the scene.
We don't know the why, when, where of it. Yet, so many of you are very quick to judge and find them guilty.
Get all the facts before judging. You would want the same if it was you.
1 year ago
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Their careers as k-9 handlers are over, and those dogs really are partners for these guys. Regardless, this shouldn't have happened and there must be accountability.
1 year ago
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And if it is because he truly was stupid and there was no emergency or really answer other than he forgot, then he should be held accountable.
I just wish we knew why he forgot or the situation that was happening at the time.
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I was stationed overseas in 117 degree heat and our Military Working Dogs toiled with us, but were hydrated and rested in special air conditioned dog houses. Likewise, the safety of an MWD in a combat zone is taken very seriously and the loss of a dog is devastating. The loss of a dog due to negligence would destroy one's career and would most likely result in legal action against the service member.
The death of those police dogs was tragic and that is the common feeling among all of us. I can't imagine how those officers feel knowing that they could have done something differently.
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Not all parents who leave their children in hot cars resulting in death are charged. Sometimes accidents are just that--accidents. When I first heard of that assistant principal leaving her small toddler in the van after she took doughnuts to her teaching staff for the first day of school, I was very quick to judge because I never left my child in a car. Period.
After giving it some thought, I know it was an accident. Her husband usually took the child to daycare and had a dental appointment that day. Who am I to judge? After all, I am not perfect. I'd like to THINK I am, but I'm not...and neither is anyone else.
Sometimes I wonder how people who have so much compassion and heart when it comes to animals can so easily become the "crucify, burn at the stake, hang 'em by the heels" crowd.
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Then there's the double standard. If i "forgot" about my dog, i'd be charged with criminal neglect. You don't leave anything living in a hot car. Period.
expecting technology to cover your behind is another form of neglect. Didn't the story say that in one of the deaths the air conditioning failed to operate? You can't put an animal in a dangerous situation and then expect something mechanical to save it. Stupid.
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One thing that I've seen is the states that constantly deal with the high heat index's,etc., they seem to remind people of it continuously,whether it be the local news,Newspapers,radio,etc.,so you would think that the average person that lived in those conditions,would always be aware of those facts,and the dangers involved.
I think any officer that does canine patrol,should automatically have the heat alarm systems installed-no ands,ifs or buts,no matter what the cost.
As for the officer that forgot his dog for two hours,well,I had a bit of a problem with that.Someone mentioned that Officers treat their canines like family,and I know that for the most part,that is true.I just heard that comment and thought family,huh?.....I would have never forgotten a family member.
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We don't know the whole story as to when and where the officer was.
What if he was called on for an emergency with somebody dieing and he was there trying to save the person. And he was rushed to the scene and forgot.
Yes, he should not have forgotten, but the point is that this story here does not state why or where or what the officer was doing.
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But the story says that he left the dog in the car for 2 HOURS! Unless is was some kind of gun stand off this sounds like negect to me and not an accient.
We should ask for more details as to what the police officer was doing for 2 hours. That is the only way I would change my opinion.
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didn't the officier take him inside while he did his paper work. The officier should
be charged as he would in any other case where someone died.
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It makes me mad that these cops just 'fogot' to leave the engine running. Obviously they don't care about the animals because no real animal/ dog lover would ever do that with their baby. This just shows the serious flaws in using dogs like tools, they get treated like tools.
The police officer who killed the dog in the car SHOULD be charged, there is no excuse for this, and it is NOT an accident. If that cop shot someone and killed them I am sure that their actions would not be considered an accident. Deliberately going against what you have been trained to do and killing a police dog is killing one of their own. K9s are considered a police offier on their own so why is killing one by neglect not a problem.
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