I was pleased to read in today's local paper that, finally, there will
be justice for Nikko the husky. One good thing came out of a sad incident,
at least.
Back in February, a local woman left her two-day-old child on the floor
in her home and left the room for a few minutes. During that time,
something happened (nobody knows what) and the dog, a young-adult husky,
bit the child. The child died, and the neighbors started
campaigning for this obviously-dangerous dog to be euthanized. (There
had been no previous behavior problems with the dog.)
When the police arrived at the house they found that Nikko, the newest
of the family's four dogs, had a broken leg and was in a home-made splint.
The mother and/or boyfriend asserted that they had taken the dog to the
vet for the broken leg, but nobody could produce any supporting evidence,
such as the name of the vet they went to.
The dog was taken by animal control and went into limbo while the courts
figured out what to do.
I'm not a parent so I don't know these things, but I'm told that
the mother should have known not to leave a newborn child completely
unattended on the floor. (She has two other children, but she's also
21.) Nobody was charged with anything like negligence or endangerment of
a child.
Of course she lost her child, a terrible thing to be sure, but it seems like
the legal consequences for the humans in this story were pretty
light compared to what they could have been.
Not so for the dog. Nikko has been examined by experts in animal
behavior who have said that this is not a dangerous dog -- neglected or
abused probably, but not dangerous. But until yesterday
the several court hearings on his fate have all ended with "dunno, we might
still blame and kill the dog; ask again in a few weeks". Yesterday a judge
ruled that Nikko would not be killed, but he would also not stay in the
local area. Instead, Nikko is going to an animal sanctuary that
specializes in dogs that need a little extra care, such as ex-fighting dogs.
This seems like a good and proper outcome all around, and I hope Nikko lives
out a long and happy life there.
This child was not killed by a dangerous dog; it died from human error.
But it's easier to blame the dog. I'm glad the courts saw
a solution in this case, and I hope the parents -- who have two children
and three dogs remaining -- are more careful in the future.