Jeepers! Man Drives Vehicle off Tow Truck to Save Dog

Was it an act of bravery — or stupidity?

Victor Jaime of Hammond, Ill., brought a friend and George, his English Bulldog, along to pick up some food on the night of March 29. He parked his Jeep Wrangler in a Walgreens parking lot, and left George inside with the engine running while he and his friend walked over to the nearby Portillo’s restaurant.

Just a few minutes later, a tow truck from the Lincoln Towing company had hooked up the Jeep, with George still inside it.

When Jaime saw what was happening, he ran and jumped into the driver’s seat of his Jeep. He honked the horn and shouted at the tow truck driver to stop.

“He could definitely hear me. I was yelling at him,” Jaime told DNAinfo. “He was blatantly looking at me when he backed up.”

After traveling about a block, the tow truck finally stopped — but then the driver raised the hook, hoisting the Jeep even higher off the ground.

“I think the guy might force me out, or even have a gun,” Jaime said.

He decided to put the Jeep in drive and hit the gas. “It was a huge drop,” he said. “Once I landed, I checked George, and that’s when I took off.”

Tony Marengo, who lives in an apartment across the street, heard Jaime yelling and recorded the incident on his cell phone. His video has been viewed more than 2.1 million times.

“We are used to seeing cars get towed out of the Walgreens lot next door with lightning speed,” Marengo wrote on YouTube. “Usually NOT WITH A PERSON IN THE CAR, though. And this guy definitely didn’t want to get towed…”

Jaime told DNAinfo his car wasn’t damaged and, most importantly, George wasn’t harmed.

“I’m no hero,” he said. “I’m a dog lover.”

After speaking to a lawyer and the Illinois Commerce Commission, Jaime found out the tow truck driver broke the law, which states, “No vehicle shall be relocated where the owner of the vehicle or the owner’s agent is present or arrives on the scene before the vehicle is completely removed from the private property, produces the ignition key to the vehicle, and the owner or agent is able and does immediately remove the vehicle from the private property.”

However, Jaime was also in the wrong — not just for leaving George in a vehicle with the engine running, but for parking in the Walgreen’s lot, which has signs warning it’s for store customers only.

“It was A LEGAL TOW are you reading what I am typing HE LEFT THE CAR WHERE HE WASN’T SUPPOSED TO so we made it right AND TOWED IT,” wrote kballard27, who may or may not work for Lincoln Towing, in a comment on YouTube.

“I hope you understand there are 2 sides to every story the white knights side and the towing company side THE LEGAL side.”

There’s also a third side to the story, but unfortunately, George can’t talk. If he could, he’d likely tell Jaime to just leave him at home the next time he has to run an errand.

Photo via YouTube

Shelter Dogs Score with MLB Opening Day Home Runs

Some shelter dogs have good reason to ruff-ruff-ruff for their home teams as the 2015 Major League Baseball season begins. For every home run hit during an opening day game, Merrick Pet Care is donating $1,000 in food to a local shelter.

So far, the “Home Runs for Shelters” campaign has scored $14,000 for shelters, thanks to 14 home runs during April 5 and 6 opening day games (including a game-winning, three-run homer yesterday by the Dodgers’ Jimmy Rollins — Go Dodger Blue!).

The remaining MLB opening day games are on April 9, 10 and 13. You can nominate and vote for shelters via the Merrick Pet Care Facebook page.

At the end of April, the shelter with the most votes will get a special food delivery from Merrick. (As of this morning, Midwest Dachshund Rescue is the leader with over 1,775 votes.)

You can use the hashtag #HomerunsForShelters on social media to spread the word about the campaign.

Photo via Twitter

‘White God’ Stars 250 Former Shelter Dogs

In the film “White God,” which opens this week in some theaters, new legislation in Hungary means the owners of any dogs who are not purebred must pay fines. To avoid the penalty, many mixed breeds end up getting dumped.

Among those dogs is Hagen, who belonged to 13-year-old Lili (Zsófia Psotta). Outraged that her father — who is divorcing her mother — dumped Hagen instead of paying the tax, Lili takes off in search of her beloved dog. At the same time, as Hagen tries to find his way back home, he eventually joins hundreds of other abandoned dogs in a revolt.

A ‘Stark, Beautiful Metaphor’

“White God” is “a story of the indignities visited upon animals by their supposed human superiors, but it’s also a stark, beautiful metaphor for the political and cultural tensions sweeping contemporary Europe,” according to its press kit. The film won both the Palm Dog and Un Certain Regard awards at the 2014 Cannes Film Festival.

“I have chosen animals as the subject instead of minorities,” director and co-writer Kornel Mundruczó said in a statement. “I did this because I wanted to focus freely on this sensitive subject; as freely and with the least number of taboos as possible. Therefore, I tell the story of animals, a dispossessed species that was once man’s best friend. But man has betrayed them, and in turn, they revolt against their former masters and companions in order to validate their existence.”

As for the title, Mundruczó said he wanted to “place the film in a perspective where we understand that the dog is the symbol of the eternal outcast whose master is his god. I was always very interested in the characteristics of God. Is God really white? Or does each person have their own God? The linked words of the title harbor many contradictions, and that’s why I found it so fascinating.”

First Time 250 Real Dogs Featured in a Film

All 250 of the dogs in “White God” are real; CGI was not used. The filmmakers want to reassure everyone that none of the dogs were harmed during the production, which they say “followed the American film industry’s strictest codes of conduct and humane treatment for animal performers.”

Mundruczó said it is the first time so many real dogs have been featured in a film.

“The task was new for even the most experienced dog trainers and crew members,” he said. “No one had ever shot a film with 250 dogs before. Usually, dogs are only around in films to snatch a birthday cake off the table.”

The dogs were all found in animal shelters. By the time filming ended, all 250 of them had forever homes.

Animal trainer Teresa Miller said she spent two months researching hundreds of adoptable dogs for the part of Hagen, starting with animal shelters in California.

“It was important to not only find that unique dog that would stand out in a pack of 200 dogs, but also a dog that had a photo double,” she said. “The amount of work that the dog had to do in this film would have been nearly impossible without the help of a double.”

Miller finally found two 9-month-old Labrador/Sharpei/hound-mix brothers, Luke and Brodie, to play Hagen. After a couple months of training, the two dogs joined the other dogs who’d been trained by Arpad Halasz in Hungary.

Working with Dogs ‘Therapeutic’

Mundruczó described working with the four-legged cast members as a therapeutic experience. “It was like coming into contact with Mother Nature herself or even a bit of the universe,” he said. “It was a shooting process where we had to adjust to them, and not the other way around. The film is an outstanding example of the singular cooperation between two species.”

The two-legged stars of “White God” had no problem working with the dogs. “In a sense, the dogs became actors and the actors became dogs,” Mundruczó said.

Reviews of the film have been positive. The New York Times called it “a fierce and beautiful parable.” It’s an “emotionally rousing, technically masterful man-vs.-dog adventure,” according to Variety.

“My intention was to demonstrate that mankind and beasts share the same universe,” Mundruczó said. “Only if we are able to position ourselves in the place of different species do we have the chance to lay down our arms.”

Photos courtesy of Magnolia Pictures

‘Pawculus’ is First-Ever Virtual Reality Game for Dogs

“The Pawculus Rift is going to revolutionize the dog gaming industry. Mainly, because there isn’t one,” said Eric Webster, vice president of technology for marketing studio Cramer, in an announcement today about the company’s unique new virtual-reality (VR) game.

Dubbed “the future of fetch,” Pawculus will make dogs think they are actually running around a dog park, when in reality they’re sitting on couches next to their lazy pet parents.

“Our past R&D cycle was focused heavily on discovering the brand experiences made possible through VR technology,” said Brent Turner, vice president of solutions. “One thing kept coming up in our research. There were virtual gaming options for nearly every demographic out there, yet an important market remained untapped: dogs.”

A focus group of dogs helped developers determine what scene would be featured in the game. (The dog park narrowly won out over the beach.)

Also currently in the works is a “cone of shame” extension for the Pawculus headset. “It keeps their mind off the stitches,” explained Joe Lovett, vice president of strategic planning.

Happy April Fools Day!

Photos via cramer.com

Proposed PAWS Act Would Protect Pets of Domestic Violence Victims

About half of all women living with abusive partners choose to stay in the relationship because they are afraid to leave their pets behind, according to the ASPCA. Only 3 percent of U.S. shelters for victims of domestic violence currently allow pets.

Most of the women who do go to shelters said their abusive partner also threatened, harmed or killed a family pet. And 25 percent of those women return to the abuser because they fear for their pets’ lives.

To change these sad statistics, the Pet and Women Safety (PAWS) Act of 2015 (H.R. 1258) was reintroduced in Congress on March 5 by Reps. Katherine Clark (D-Mass.) and Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-Fla.). It is intended to “protect the pets of victims of domestic violence, sexual assault, stalking and dating violence,” according to the bill text.

The PAWS Act was initially introduced last year, but failed to pass.

“Sadly, domestic violence is something one in every four women will experience at some point in their lives,” said Clark in a press release. “This isolating experience is made even worse for those who fear for the safety of their pet. Most pet lovers, including me, consider their beloved dog or cat a part of their family. No one should have to make the choice between leaving an abusive situation and ensuring their pet’s safety.”

Specifically, the PAWS Act would:

  • “Prohibit threats or acts of violence against a person’s pet under the offenses of stalking and interstate violation of a protection order,” according to the bill text. It would requires the abuser to pay the “full amount of the victim’s losses,” including the costs for veterinary services.
  • Provide grants from the Dept. of Agriculture to create programs that would provide housing assistance and support services to victims and their pets.
  • Strongly assert the need for states to expand legal protections for the pets of domestic violence victims. Only about half of all U.S. states currently have laws protecting the pets of domestic violence victims.

On March 23, the legislation was referred to the Subcommittee on Livestock and Foreign Agriculture.

The PAWS Act is supported by many groups, including the National Network to End Domestic Violence; the ASPCA; the Humane Society of the United States; and the American Veterinary Medical Association.

“Too many victims feel compelled to stay in abusive relationships to protect their pets,” said Ros-Lehtinen in the press release. “This bill protects both victims and pets. We should continue to work for the day when victims of domestic violence will not be hindered in their decision to leave an abuser.”

Photo credit: Michelângelo Mazzardo Marques Viana

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