Growing Epidemic of K-9 Abuse, Deaths Prompts PETA’s Plea to Odenton Based Law-Enforcement Organization: End Use of Dogs

For Immediate Release:
August 6, 2024

Contact:
Maddy Missett 202-483-7382

Odenton, Md.

Following a dramatic uptick in reported cases of dogs used in law-enforcement dying from overheating or in other horrific ways and handlers violently abusing their K-9 partners, PETA—which had long supported the use of K-9s—sent a letter today to the Federal Law Enforcement Officers Association urging the Odenton-based organization to recognize that the time has come to encourage its members to phase out the use of dogs altogether. Some law-enforcement agencies are already using robotic dogs to deal with crime.

The following cases from just the past two months prompted PETA’s letter:

  • A former sheriff’s deputy was charged with aggravated animal cruelty after being caught on video repeatedly hitting a K-9 named Nero and slamming him to the ground in Bryan County, Georgia.
  • A police officer in Prince George’s County, Maryland, was charged with six counts of animal cruelty—including two felonies—after both of his assigned K-9s, Daisy and Spartacus, were found to have “gaping open wounds” on their necks from the metal prongs of electronic shock collars.
  • Vader, a police K-9 in Arnold, Missouri, died of heatstroke after he was left unattended in a patrol vehicle and the safety equipment failed to activate.
  • A sheriff’s K-9 was found dead in his handler’s vehicle, reportedly from heatstroke, in Dorchester County, South Carolina.
  • Nitro, a police K-9 in Coalinga, California, died after being confined to an outdoor kennel over the weekend in temperatures that reached 114 degrees.
  • Coba, a K-9 with the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division, was fatally shot while a law-enforcement team was serving a felony warrant near Prosperity, South Carolina.

Many additional cases are detailed on PETA’s website.

PETA frequently collaborates with law-enforcement agencies across the nation to investigate, charge, and prosecute animal abusers and previously responded to such incidents by calling on agencies to employ humane K-9 training and handling methods, install devices in patrol cars that notify officers when the temperature rises, and retire K-9s who are subject to abuse. But due to the growing epidemic of cruelty to and deaths of these dogs, PETA is now calling for K-9s to be replaced with modern policing technology, such as tactical robots.

“Even though there are good officers who respect and protect their dogs, K-9s are in crisis, as they are punched, body-slammed, and left to die in the heat by their own police handlers,” says PETA Senior Vice President Daphna Nachminovitch. “PETA is calling on the Federal Law Enforcement Officers Association to advocate for the safety and well-being of all officers by encouraging it to phase out these programs that subject dogs to violence from birth to death.”

PETA notes that several departments across the country—including the New York Police Department, the Massachusetts State Police, and the Houston Police Department—use tactical robots, which can be deployed in situations that could otherwise result in serious injury or death for K-9s and human officers.

PETA also sent letters to the leaders of the National Sheriffs’ Association, the National Troopers Coalition, the National Association of Chiefs of Police, and the Fraternal Order of Police.

PETA—whose motto reads, in part, that “animals are not ours to abuse in any way”—points out that Every Animal Is Someone and offers free Empathy Kits for people who need a lesson in kindness. For more information, please visit PETA.org or follow the group on X, Facebook, or Instagram.

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