Friday, November 21, 2014

Buffalo Police Department shoots 92 dogs over three years: One unnamed cop shot dead 25 of the dogs


It is common for police to shoot dead dogs especially during search warrants but the Buffalo, NY police seem to be well ahead of many other departments in the USA.
The Buffalo Police Department is particularly infamous for shooting over 90 dogs in the last three years.
‘Police Kill Dog’ is a common headline across the nation. In fact, many online media outlets have a dedicated segment that regularly chronicles such acts by the police against dogs.
News station WGRZ-TV using the Freedom of Information Act, managed to uncover some startling statistics. The news station requested information about the Buffalo Police Department, more particularly about the use of force against animals.

The report the news agency received revealed that the Buffalo PD alone shot 92 dogs from Jan. 1, 2011 through Sept. 2014. 

 

The shootings had alarmingly high mortality rate as seventy-three of those dogs died, while nineteen somehow survived, reported Opposing Views. In comparison to Cincinnati, a municipality of similar size, Buffalo’s numbers were more than three times.

Unsurprisingly, all Buffalo Police Chief of Detectives Dennis Richards had to say about the high number of dog executions was,
“The numbers are what the numbers are. “Certainly, no officer takes any satisfaction in having to dispatch a dog.”
Perhaps, he might have been wrong about the second sentence because detailed analysis of the report revealed that nearly 30 percent of these dog shootings in Buffalo were carried out by just one man.

This one cop, whose identity hasn’t been revealed, shot 26 dogs, killing 25 of them in the last three years.

 

On the other hand, if one looks at the 2012 Annual Discharge Report filed by the New York City


The Buffalo PD revealed that many of the dogs were shot dead during executions of what is commonly referred to as ‘No-Knock’ warrants.  The Buffalo police said most of the warrants were for people who were making, trading or consuming narcotics. It is a police tactic to murder the dog before serving the warrant even if the suspect turns out to be innocent.

Obviously attempting to downplay the numbers, Richards said,
“It’s a small percentage of the number of total search warrants executed or actions taken by police. The department has carried out 357 search warrant raids this year, most of which are in the relentless pursuit of the state’s immoral war on drugs.”
There have been numerous cases of police fatally shooting dogs. But perhaps the Buffalo PD may have to develop alternate ways to tackle the dogs without gunning them down. Some of these canines may even help the police.

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