
HOW
MANY CHILDREN HAVE TO DIE BEFORE THE NATION |
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2. Research is clear - so is common sense. See the results and the laws that are changnig. |
| 1. - From
the Wednesday, January 14th, 2004 Fayetteville NC Observer: "Three-year-old Nathan Roy Hill had wandered away from his home at 89 Doris Drive and into the back yard of the home next door, where the dog was on a chain, the sheriff said. Rollins said the boy's mother, Christy Gambill, called the Sheriff's Office at 6:22 p.m. and said her son had been missing about two hours. Deputy Benjamin Wood arrived at 6:45 p.m. and saw Nathan's body in the neighbor's yard just minutes into his search." Chained dogs are often unsocialized, in physical distress, and territorial. Dogs are pack animals, and humans have become their pack. To ostracize them from that pack is not only cruel, but creates a danger to society. From the Spartanburg, South Carolina Herald Journal Thursday, October 2, 2003: When Crystal Sinclair looked out to check on her 2-year-old daughter Thursday morning, all she saw was a toy. She went to her next-door neighbor, Patricia Hancock, to ask for help. Soon, she and Hancock came upon the body of Makayla Paige Sinclair where EIGHT of Hancock's nine Great Danes were kept CHAINED TO A TREE. . . . Hancock called 911 at 10:05 a.m., and when EMS arrived, Makayla was dead. Dogs Deserve Better, an organization working to get dogs off chains and into the family, insists that it's time American woke up to the dangers of chaining a dog. Karen Delise, author of Fatal Dog Attacks, has researched and chronicled the circumstances surrounding every fatal dog attack in the United States since 1955. Chained dogs have killed at least 98 people. Of the 98 people, 92 were children that either wandered into reach or attempted to play, tease, feed, or untangle a chained, tied or similarly restrained dog. She also states in her book: Statistically, chained dogs are more dangerous than free-running packs of dogs. |
2. - America needs nationwide laws prohibiting the chaining of dogs to
the To contact Dogs Deserve Better go
to their website at and to contact Julie Lewin at NIFAA in Connecticut call 203-453-6590. Tammy Sneath Grimes, Founder Dogs Deserve Better: No Chains! Make a Dog's Life Worth Living http://www.dogsdeservebetter.com P.O. Box 23, Tipton, PA 16684 1- 877- 636-1408 814- 941-7447 |