Hero Pit Bull Mix Honored for Saving Family from Home Intruders

When Theresa Lero went outside to feed her horses one morning two weeks ago, two armed and masked young men entered her Gulfport, Miss. house.

“The dog came trotting down the hall, growling at the door, and I said, ‘What is it, Leon?'” Lero told the Sun Herald. “I went over to the window to look at the door and facing me in my pass-through window was a man in a ski mask with a gun. I said, ‘What?’ Then I said, ‘Out!'”

Lero ran to her bedroom to wake her husband, Brickford, who was still sleeping.

“She woke me up basically screaming, ‘Get the gun, get the gun,’ and they took off,” Brickford Lero told WDAM.

She grabbed a gun and told Leon, their 2-year-old Pit Bull mix, to “Get ’em.” The two chased after the intruders.

Lero tried to fire her gun at the two men, but there wasn’t a bullet in a chamber. “They shot at me and I just went clickety, clickety, click,” she told the Sun Herald.

The intruders began shooting. Lero said one bullet whizzed by her on the right, one on the left — and a third struck Leon in the head.

“Even after he was wounded, he was after them,” Lero told WDAM.

“You shot my dog. I’ll kill you myself,” Lero yelled at the intruders. Her neighbors heard her threat and called 911.

The intruders were chased away, and the Leros rushed Leon to a vet. Miraculously, the bullet had skidded along the top of the dog’s skull and exited out his ear, narrowly missing his brain.

“He actually walked into the ER,” Lero told the Sun Herald. “I said, ‘How many gunshot-wound-to-the-head victims walk in to the ER? Leon says, ‘I do.'”

Lero and her husband rescued Leon from a shelter. Thinking he was a Redbone Coonhound, they named him after the singer Leon Redbone. But it turns out that Leon really may be a red-nose Pit Bull (but they probably won’t change his name to Rudolph).

The intruders, Adam Lee Kennedy and Jonathan Hunter Wesley, were later arrested by police. They had intended to steal drugs and money from another house, but the door was locked, so they went next door to the Leros’ house. Cocaine and $5,000 in drug money were seized from the house they originally targeted.

For his heroic deed, Leon received a framed certificate of bravery Thursday from Harrison County Sheriff Troy Peterson.

The certificate honors Leon “for his courage, bravery and self-sacrifice on March 21, when he protected his family during a home invasion without regard for his own safety. Even after receiving serious wounds during the attack, Leon continued to pursue the criminals, exhibiting a deep love and devotion for his family.”

Peterson told the Sun Herald that Leon is “undoubtedly a hero.”

There are three words this hero will never hear again, Lero told the Sun Herald: “Go get ’em.”

“It nearly got my dog killed,” she said. Although she used to consider Leon just a pet and not a “real dog,” she said she’s changed her mind, now that the rescue dog returned the favor by rescuing his family.

“I guess he showed me,” Lero told the Sun Herald. “He’s my pet and my real dog.”

Photo via Facebook

Cop Drives Pit Bull to Home Nearly 800 Miles from Crash Site

While returning from spring break in Florida to the University of Arkansas, where she was a student, 19-year-old McKenzie Catron crashed her car into a utility pole in Dothan, Ala., last weekend. Catron, who was from Bentonville, Ark., was killed. Her 19-year-old passenger and her Pit Bull, Kai, survived.

But, spooked by the crash, Kai ran off.

Sgt. Jonathon Whaley and another sergeant were the first to arrive at the scene of the accident. “We felt we needed to find the dog,” Whaley told FOX 5. “We were going to do whatever we needed to do to reunite this dog with this family.”

Whaley and other officers, along with firefighters and dozens of other community members, volunteered their time to search for Kai. A local law firm offered a $1,000 reward for Kai’s safe return. A “Help Find Kai” Facebook community was created.

Two days after the crash, Benjamin Irwin — the attorney who had offered the reward — and another volunteer found Kai, but the dog ran off. Irwin’s wife and other volunteers pursued him “for over a mile and up and down too many city streets,” Irwin wrote on Facebook, “and made multiple attempts to catch Kai, until we finally created a loving wall when she went inside a person’s shelter in their backyard. … We apologize to all the cars and other people we cut off or just plain ignored while we focused solely on recovering Kai.”

A veterinarian who examined Kai said that except for being dehydrated and fatigued, the dog was in good shape.

The next step — and it was a big one — was to reunite Kai with her family in Arkansas, 770 miles away.

Whaley quickly volunteered to make the trip with his family. “I felt God impressing on me that we needed to make this trip,” he told FOX 5.

Kai returned home Tuesday night. “For us, [Kai] was just a part of her. And we found it. And now we can kind of start healing,” Catron’s mother, Kendra Mulherin, told KHBS.

The name of the “Help Find Kai” Facebook page has been changed to “We Found Kai.” Irwin said he’s donating the reward money to the Rogers Animal Shelter, from which Kai was adopted.

“Dotham, Alabama, you guys are God’s gift to Earth,” Catron’s family wrote on Facebook. “You will always have a special place in our hearts.”

According to her obituary, Catron worked as a lifeguard and did volunteer work to help make the world a better place. While her death is tragic, it’s heartening to know her spirit of giving continues to live on.

Photos via Facebook

3-Legged Senior Pit Bull Saves Couple from Armed Robber

As Bob Stenzel and Darcy Cherry sat at a table in their Janesville, Wisc., home at dinnertime last week, a man with a gun entered their house through an unlocked door.

“He had his gun drawn on us and demanded us to the ground, and repeatedly asked us, ‘Where’s the safe?’ and ‘Where is the money?'” Stenzel told KTRK.

“I was just praying and praying and praying for us all to be safe,” Cherry added.

Levi, their 15-year-old, three-legged Pit Bull, began to growl and bark at the intruder. The man ran off, but not before shooting at Levi’s head. Fortunately, the bullet only grazed the top of Levi’s head and lodged in his shoulder.

After being treated for his wounds, Levi the hero dog is doing well and expected to make a full recovery.

“It’s a feeling you can’t really express in words,” Stenzel told KTRK. “I mean, thank God he was here.”

Levi is “as loving as a dog can get,” according to GazetteXtra reporter Frank Schultz.

“Levi got up on his three legs and hobbled over to nuzzle the legs of a Gazette photographer and reporter as they entered his house,” Schultz wrote Jan. 23. “Not bad for a dog who was shot in the head four days earlier.”

This was actually the second time Levi was a hero. On a mountain hike with Cherry and her son in 2014, Levi took a fall off a steep trail. One of his legs was shattered and had to be amputated. Cherry told KTRK she believes Levi protected her son, who was walking right behind the dog, from falling first.

Stenzel and Cherry rescued Levi when he was a puppy and had been abandoned in an apartment building.

“He is amazing. He bounces back so fast,” Cherry told Channel 3000. “I wish I could have his strength and his mobility to just come back and be so loving natured.”

According to the Janesville Police Department, the armed robber was white, 5’7 to 5’8 tall with a slender build, and between 20 to 30 years old. Anyone with information is asked to call the police department at 608-755-3100 or Janesville Crime Stoppers at 608-756-3636.

Photo: YouTube

Hero Pit Bull Saves Teen from Stabbing Attack

“This is for my daughter,” said Jason Perez as he suddenly started stabbing a 19-year-old who was walking his 5-year-old Pit Bull, Droogie, in West Covina, Calif., Saturday afternoon.

It was apparently a case of mistaken identity. The unidentified victim, who was taking a walk with Droogie, his mom and a smaller dog named Pebbles, first encountered Perez a few minutes before the attack. Perez complimented Droogie at the time.

A few minutes later, Perez approached the teen again and asked if his name was Christian, which it is not.

The third time Perez approached the teen, he pulled out a screwdriver and started his unprovoked attack.

“I was backpedaling. I ended up tripping,” the victim told the San Gabriel Valley Tribune. His mother tried to block some of Perez’s swings, and then Droogie came to his rescue by pouncing on the attacker.

“The guy attacking me was on the ground,” the victim told NBC Los Angeles. “Droogie was on top of him still attacking him. I remember standing up and then hearing my mom just scream, ‘Run, run.'”

The victim grabbed Droogie’s leash and ran, as Perez continued chasing him. Fortunately the victim’s brother happened to drive by, and drove his family to safety.

Police responding to 911 calls took Perez into custody, charging him with attempted murder and assault with a deadly weapon. Perez was hospitalized and treated for bites to his buttocks, torso, arms and legs, West Covina Police Lt. Dennis Patton told the Tribune.

The victim was treated for non-life-threatening puncture wounds on his upper body. “I’m feeling fine today,” he told the Tribune the day after the attack.

Droogie, who had previously never shown aggression, suffered a minor stab wound to his neck, but is otherwise doing fine. The victim said his hero dog is getting plenty of rewards for saving him.

“We gave him leftover food last night, sausages this morning and a lot of treats in between,” he told the Tribune.

Photos via TwitterTwitter

Dog Leads Police Officer to Trapped Buddy

The dog mom of a little terrier named Jacques might want to think about changing his name to Lassie.

When the elderly woman had to be rushed from her Orange, Mass., home to a hospital by ambulance Tuesday, she was concerned that Jacques and his BFF, another terrier named Annabelle, escaped from the yard.

She had nothing to worry about, thanks to Orange Police Officer Chris Biceglia. “I’m committed. I’m staying here,” he said via radio communication, Fire Chief Craig Lundgren told WHDH.

As temperatures dropped below freezing, Biceglia kept his word, waiting in the woods for Jacques and Annabelle.

Hours passed. Finally Biceglia saw something — but it was only Jacques.

“He’d bark. He’d come toward me and then he’d run away,” Bisceglia told CBS Boston. “And he continued to do this.”

Jacques led Bisceglia to an embankment.

“The female terrier was down the embankment, stuck on a downed tree and trapped, surrounded by water,” Bisceglia told CBS Boston. “And it was all ice, a steep embankment, so she couldn’t get back up.”

Biceglia contacted the fire department, and responders pulled Annabelle to safety. She was checked out by a vet and is okay.

Animal Control Officer Jennifer Arsenault told CBS Boston she wasn’t suprised by Jacques’ Lassie-like action to help rescue his buddy.

“Especially dogs that have been together for a long time, they become very bonded with each other and they’re very intelligent,” she said. “People don’t give dogs half the credit they deserve.”

According to WHDH, Jacques and Annabelle’s dog mom has been released from the hospital.

“I mean you hear of things like this, with, of course, Lassie,” her son, Gene Fraser, told WHDH.

Along with Jacques, he gave Biceglia credit for helping to save Annabelle’s life.

“For an officer to come back an hour later, and not giving up, and turning around and coming back again, he’s the key really to having this all come into play,” Fraser said.

Photos via TwitterTwitter

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