
Originally Posted by
meldae
I have a pit bull who is very loving and has been in our family for four years. He is around my children and their friends and cousins. Many, many people have been introduced to him and he has always been very well behaved. Two years ago he suddenly started exhibiting dog aggression so I took him to a behavior training course. I learned about changes that I need to make as a responsible owner and things have been great. He is still dog aggressive but that's natural and I no longer allow him to run free at the dog parks or anywhere. Things were going very well until last weekend. I just moved into my mom's house and my aunt lives in the house next door. Since the yard is so big and pretty remote from any other neighbors, I felt safe to let him off the leash one night and play with him. My aunt was in her driveway but we didn't see her because it was dark. When she said hello, my dog snapped and barrelled down the hill barking at her and charging towards her. He would not respond to my calls. He toppled my aunt over and tore at her pants which left some scratches on her leg. There was no major injury to her but it scared both of us. She has decided to call the police who called animal control.They came and asked me questions and I told him that I had decided to put my dog up for adoption since he did not listen to me at all and it frightened me. He said that he felt we were over-reacting. After informing me that the SOP is to quarantine my dog for 10 days and that I needed to pay the licensing fee for this county he said good day. Now my aunt is claiming that I need to file some report or else I will get charged with a misdemeanor. Does anyone know what she's talking about? What are my responsibilities as an owner? I am willing to do whatever it takes to prove that I am taking responsibility for my pet.
I investigate a LOT of dog related injuries every year - a LOT of them!
My thoughts are (and you may not want to hear them) - now that you are on notice that your dog can behave in this matter if it happens again you are 100% liable. That includes pain, suffering, medical bills, corrective surgery. And your homeowners insurance can refuse to further insure you so you'll be paying the bills yourself. I don't know if your particular company knows you have a dog and checks with the local authorities to see if there are any reports when it's time for renewal. It's your choice whether you want to expose your children to this dog - but I wouldn't be exposing their friends (or cousins).
The thought that you are thinking of finding another home for this dog when you've had it for some years and can't control it is simply passing the buck - and if the dog attacks/bites under the care and control of the new owner you are 100% responsible unless you have told them every detail of every problem. This also does the dog no favor - pulling it out of its home and placing it with strangers is NOT going to improve it's temperament.
Everyone has a thought on Pits and I certainly have mine but NO dog should suddenly "lose it" and then "barrel" anywhere, knocking people down. I'm sure your animal trainer told you that Pits can become problems when they become mature - usually around 2. Sudden the aggressive nature comes out.
You are not taking responsibility for your dog if it is off the leash - sorry, but you are not, no matter what the circumstances. A responsible owner also licenses the dog, doesn't wait for Animal Control to tell them it's necessary.
I'm not unsympathetic to your problem. I have two German Shepherds, over 100 pounds each, so I know the problems and pitfalls and how much care and time it takes to train and supervise them. They also can be aggressive dogs and I've always found it's half in the breeding and half in the training - I've never had a problem, never even had a complaint.
No one ever thinks that their dog is going to be the dog that rips the face off a child - but you have now been warned. (And I have seen horrendous dog attack injuries)
I will say that the #1 breed for dog bites I have investigated is - believe it or not - labs because there are more of them and when people don't know what the breed is it's classified as a lab. The worst bite I've ever seen was an Akita, the second worst a Pit. Akitas and Pits seem to attack - other breeds seem to bite (and judging by the injuries there is a difference).