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You are browsing the archive for 2010 July.

Dog Leads Rescuer To Trapped Master

July 30, 2010 in Heroics, News

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By Drew C. Wilson For enctoday.com

Havelock, North Carolina — It could have been a scene right out of the classic TV show “Lassie,” but this time the hero was a little fox terrier named Dottie.

The 4-year-old black, white and brown dog is credited with bringing help to her master after he had fallen while on a walk at Flanners Beach over the weekend.

“She’s my little hero,” said Glenn Walker, 88, of Havelock, recalling the event Sunday in which he was helpless in some rocks and brush for more than four hours.

Walker had taken Dottie on a leash down to the banks of the Neuse River to see how she’d react to the salt water.

“We were walking down by the river, and it was mighty hot and I decided to head back toward some shade,” Walker said. “I was climbing over those rocks to get into the shade and I fell down and I couldn’t get up. I think I must have had a minor heat stroke. I don’t know.”

Walker, a 22-year Marine Corps veteran who served in World War II and Korea, said he was too weak to stand after the fall.

“I didn’t have any strength,” he said.

He still had Dottie by the leash, but as the hours slipped by without anyone noticing his plight, Walker let the dog go.

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UPDATED: Sgt. Chris Duke Reunited With Rufus, Stray Dog That Saved His Life In Afghanistan

July 30, 2010 in Heroics, Military, News

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UPDATE 1:


From The Huffington Post

When a suicide bomber crept onto an American military base in Afghanistan in the middle of the night, intent on attacking a barracks where 50 soldiers slept, three stray dogs quickly came to the soldiers’ rescue. The dogs, known by the names Rufus, Target and Sasha, barked to alert the sleeping soldiers of the danger, and bit the terrorist’s leg to hold him back. Because of the dogs’ deterrence, the bomber detonated the explosives before he could get inside the building.

The terrorist was killed — along with Sasha, one of the dogs from the heroic trio of mutts. A handful of soldiers, along with Rufus and Target, were wounded by the blast, but miraculously, they were all alive — thanks to the dogs’ actions.

“There isn’t a doubt in my mind [that the dogs] saved my life,” said [Sgt. Chris] Duke, who was wounded by shrapnel — and is now adopting Rufus.

The New York Post reports Sgt. Chris Duke is reuniting with Rufus at his home in Georgia, where the dog will come to live with the soldier and his family. Target, the other heroic animal that sprung to help the soldiers, is also being adopted — by the Phoenix army medic who saved the dog’s life from the injuries caused by the explosion.

The reunions are made possible by Robert’s Cause and the Puppy Rescue Mission, two nonprofit organizations that have gotten involved to help Rufus and Target, and other animals caught up in the conflict in war-torn Afghanistan.


Dog-Eating Alligator In Florida Wanted ‘Dead Or Alive’

July 29, 2010 in Endangerment, Environment, Law Enforcement, News

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By The Associated Press

MIAMI — Florida officials have put out the word that an urban alligator who has been eating dogs and other pets and terrorizing a neighborhood is now wanted, dead or alive.

Gary Morse of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission told AFP the state agency has taken the unusual step of authorizing an alligator hunter to shoot and kill the three-meter (10-foot) long animal.

But finding this alligator, on the loose for two years in the St. Petersburg area and stalking pets around the city’s canals, may not be easy, Morse said.

“Alligators regularly use the drainage system to travel. When you are trying to target a specific gator is really difficult to catch it,” Morse said.

Tensions mounted on Monday night, when residents reported that the alligator ate a mixed breed dog who was running free near the canal. Then, the alligator was reportedly glimpsed the next morning near Tony’s Meat Market.

But when Charles Carpenter, the alligator hunter, arrived on the scene, the culprit was nowhere to be seen.

Morse said some people have been reportedly feeding the renegade gator, making his capture even more complicated, because he is eluding bait traps.

“He’s not hungry and he’s got a lot of places to hide.”

Carpenter told the St. Petersburg Times he plans to use a hunting rifle or semi-automatic pistol to take down his prey.

“He’s good at not getting caught,” Carpenter said.


Dogs Automatically Imitate People

July 29, 2010 in Health & Science News, News

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By Jennifer Viegas For Discovery.com

If imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, dogs often shower us with praise. New research has just determined dogs automatically imitate us, even when it is not in their best interest to do so.

The study, published in the latest Proceedings of the Royal Society B, provides the first evidence that dogs copy at least some of our body movements and behaviors in ways that are spontaneous and voluntary.

In other words, they can’t really help themselves when it comes to copying people.

“This suggests that, like humans, dogs are subject to ‘automatic imitation;’ they cannot inhibit online, the tendency to imitate head use and/or paw use,” lead author Friederike Range and her colleagues conclude.

It’s long been known that humans do this, even when the tendency to copy interferes with efficiency.

“For example,” according to the researchers, “if people are instructed to open their mouths as soon as they see the letters ‘OM’ appear on a screen, responses are slower when the letters are accompanied by an image of an opening hand than when they are accompanied by an image of an opening mouth.”

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World’s Biggest Lapdog: Funny Video

July 29, 2010 in Fun Videos, News

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Beagle Vs. Pillow: Cute Video

July 29, 2010 in Fun Videos, News

Nemo the Beagle in a grudge match with an evil pillow!

Cats & Dogs: The Revenge of Kitty Galore: Video

July 29, 2010 in Entertainment, Fun Videos, News

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Coming to theaters July 30th!


UPDATED: Trial Over Miami-Dade Police Dog’s Death Begins

July 29, 2010 in Dog Safety, Endangerment, Inhumane Practices, Law Enforcement, Legal News, News

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UPDATE: Miami-Dade officer accused of killing K-9 gets misdemeanor charge

Read more: http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/07/30/1752997/miami-dade-officer-accused-of.html#ixzz0vALLDlyT

By David Ovalle For The Miamiherald.com

A judge on Thursday tossed out a felony charge against a former Miami-Dade police sergeant on trial for allegedly killing his police dog, but allowed a misdemeanor animal cruelty charge to go forward.

Allen Cockfield is accused of viciously kicking his K-9 partner, Duke, during a training session in June 2006, killing the Belgian Malinois.

He was charged with a felony count of killing a police dog, and a misdemeanor charge of animal cruelty.

Prosecutors rested their case Thursday, after presenting two days of testimony from eyewitnesses and medical experts who said that Duke died from a disruption to the heart caused by the kick.

But Cockfield’s defense lawyer, Douglas Hartman, argued Thursday afternoon for an acquittal on the felony charge because the state did not prove that the longtime canine handler intended to kill the dog.

He said the charge required proof of intent.

“This was a training accident,” said Hartman, who contends that Cockfield was trying to protect himself from Duke’s attacks.

Miami-Dade prosecutor Isis Perez, after researching the issue, agreed, and Circuit Judge Antonio Arzola threw out the charge.

But Arzola declined to issue an acquittal on the misdemeanor charge, meaning jurors will decide Cockfield’s fate.

Cockfield is charged with a first-degree misdemeanor.

The charge is punishable by up to one year in jail.

The trial will likely finish late Thursday or Friday.

Trial Over Miami-Dade Police Dog’s Death Begins

By David Ovalle For The Miamiherald.com

Duke was a young, rambunctious Miami-Dade police K-9 felled by a series of vicious kicks from his frustrated human partner during an ill-fated training session, according to prosecutors.

“Duke was unjustly killed,” Miami-Dade prosecutor Isis Perez told jurors Tuesday. “And that kick is what caused his death.”

But the defense painted Duke, a Belgian Malinois, as a troubled and aggressive 70-pound canine who attacked police Sgt. Allen Cockfield, an experienced handler who felt threatened.

“He was simply trying to save himself,” defense attorney Douglas Hartman said.
The lawyers offered their versions of events in the opening of Cockfield’s trial for the June 2006 death of Duke, a 2 ½-year-old rookie police dog.

Charged with misdemeanor animal cruelty and a felony count of killing a police dog, Cockfield could face jail or prison time, plus the loss of his state police certification, if he is convicted.

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