Maybe not so crazy. In our legal system who is the responding police officers, the prosecutors, the judge, or the jury going to believe. A Cop or guy who just shot the K9.amber wrote:That's crazy! If an off duty cop robs a bank and the guard shoots him, will the guard get the death penalty for shooting a cop?MoJo wrote:By Texas law, a K9 IS a police officer the punishment for killing/injuring a K9 is one level below a human officer. Go talk to the deputy or pick a new route to walk your dogs. If the dog or dogs are K9s shooting one could wind up costing you dearly.
Not your typical dog question
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Re: Not your typical dog question
Liberty''s Blog
"Today, we need a nation of Minutemen, citizens who are not only prepared to take arms, but citizens who regard the preservation of freedom as the basic purpose of their daily life and who are willing to consciously work and sacrifice for that freedom." John F. Kennedy
"Today, we need a nation of Minutemen, citizens who are not only prepared to take arms, but citizens who regard the preservation of freedom as the basic purpose of their daily life and who are willing to consciously work and sacrifice for that freedom." John F. Kennedy
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Re: Not your typical dog question
This is an old myth. By Texas law, a human is a human and a police service animal is a police service animal. The penalties are different and in some cases higher than doing the same thing to an officer. For example, it is a crime to taunt a police animal, but not a human officer. It is a second degree felony to kill a police service animal.MoJo wrote:By Texas law, a K9 IS a police officer the punishment for killing/injuring a K9 is one level below a human officer. Go talk to the deputy or pick a new route to walk your dogs. If the dog or dogs are K9s shooting one could wind up costing you dearly.
Interestingly enough, the law does not require the killing or injury to be due to the status of the animal as a police service animal. It does require the killing or injury of the police officer to be directly related to his duties as a police officer to be eligible for the upgrades in penalties (which answers the question about shooting the cop robbing the bank).
Also, interestingly enough, the law specifically allows for other than dogs. It mentions horses but includes any animal trained to work as in law enforcement. Theoretically, if I could teach a parrot to attack you on command, it would come under these rules.
Check the Penal Code at Section 38.151
Steve Rothstein
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Re: Not your typical dog question
If he is a K9 unit, I cannot imagine him not having a take home unit. Liability and all in travelling to and from work.
BrassMonkey, that funky monkey....
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Re: Not your typical dog question
MoJo wrote:By Texas law, a K9 IS a police officer the punishment for killing/injuring a K9 is one level below a human officer.

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Re: Not your typical dog question
I've got an African Grey who's 90% there...srothstein wrote:Theoretically, if I could teach a parrot to attack you on command, it would come under these rules.
Re: Not your typical dog question
Since when does an African Grey need a command to attack?KBCraig wrote:I've got an African Grey who's 90% there...srothstein wrote:Theoretically, if I could teach a parrot to attack you on command, it would come under these rules.
Liberty''s Blog
"Today, we need a nation of Minutemen, citizens who are not only prepared to take arms, but citizens who regard the preservation of freedom as the basic purpose of their daily life and who are willing to consciously work and sacrifice for that freedom." John F. Kennedy
"Today, we need a nation of Minutemen, citizens who are not only prepared to take arms, but citizens who regard the preservation of freedom as the basic purpose of their daily life and who are willing to consciously work and sacrifice for that freedom." John F. Kennedy
Re: Not your typical dog question
Now that you point it out, the other 10% involves getting him not to.Liberty wrote:Since when does an African Grey need a command to attack?KBCraig wrote:I've got an African Grey who's 90% there...srothstein wrote:Theoretically, if I could teach a parrot to attack you on command, it would come under these rules.
Re: Not your typical dog question
Here's my take on it.
When it happened:
If they charged at you, you have every right to shoot the dog to protect yourself. If the dog was coming after your dog, you still have a right to defend yourself, claiming you didn't know if it was you or the dog (because you really didn't).
Followup today or near future:
After I got back home, I would have called animal control to notify them of the aggressive dogs and the behavior. Then, I would call the Police to notify them of the situation so that THEY can go talk to the owner. You could choose to go talk to them, but the LEO may not have been welcoming of you talking about his animals, K9 Officers or not.
When it happened:
If they charged at you, you have every right to shoot the dog to protect yourself. If the dog was coming after your dog, you still have a right to defend yourself, claiming you didn't know if it was you or the dog (because you really didn't).
Followup today or near future:
After I got back home, I would have called animal control to notify them of the aggressive dogs and the behavior. Then, I would call the Police to notify them of the situation so that THEY can go talk to the owner. You could choose to go talk to them, but the LEO may not have been welcoming of you talking about his animals, K9 Officers or not.
"How a politician stands on the Second Amendment tells you how he or she views you as an individual... as a trustworthy and productive citizen, or as part of an unruly crowd that needs to be lorded, controlled, supervised, and taken care of." - Fr. TX Rep. Suzanna Hupp
!حان أن أحصل على بعض
!حان أن أحصل على بعض
Re: Not your typical dog question
He does have a unit at his house. That is the only reason I know he is a Travis County Sheriff Deputy. What I did not pay much attention to is if it says K9 on the unit anywhere.BrassMonkey wrote:If he is a K9 unit, I cannot imagine him not having a take home unit. Liability and all in travelling to and from work.