Small Dog Safe After Owner Shoots Himself at End of L.A. Car Chase

A man wanted for assault with a deadly weapon led police on a car chase through the San Fernando Valley early this afternoon. When it ended in a hour-long standoff on an Arleta, Calif., street, a passenger could be seen through a tinted window of the suspect’s utility truck — a small, white dog.

The window was rolled all the way up on an 85-degree day, and the dog appeared to running back and forth inside the cab.

When video taken from a helicopter showed the suspect to apparently be bleeding and unconscious, SWAT team members approached the truck and opened the passenger-side door. The dog watched them from the driver’s seat. An officer attempted to open the driver’s-side door, but it was locked.

After a couple of minutes, the dog jumped out of the passenger side of the cab and bolted down the street.

“Here’s the moment poor pup ran out of the truck,” tweeted FOX 11 reporter Gigi Graciette.

Another reporter following the chase, Kristine Lazar of KCBS, tweeted, “Pursuit update: The dog is safe! But he ran off and wouldn’t come to me!”

After a few minutes, KTLA tweeted that the dog returned to the truck and jumped inside the cab, where the driver remained.

The dog then jumped out of the cab again. “Officers still trying to capture dog running near truck following standoff,” KTLA tweeted four minutes later.

The suspect reportedly shot himself in the head and has died. Animal control officers were able to capture his dog, who appeared to be terrified.

#LAPD thanks our animal regulations partners for safely getting dog from pursuit,” the LAPD tweeted. The dog has been reunited with family members, according to news reports.

If you lead police on a car chase, you’re an idiot. If you bring your dog along, you’re an even bigger idiot.

“Some think sympathy should be for suspect, not dog. Not me,” Graciette tweeted. “Sad for his family, YES but he made those choices, including the one where he endangered so many lives by speeding thru our city streets. Dog had no choice. The end.”

Hear, hear. I hope the dog ends up in a home with a responsible pet parent.

Photos via @tarawallis@GigiGraciette, @CBSLAKristine@KTLA, @KTLA, @LAPD HQ

Meet ‘Spot,’ a 160-Pound Dog Robot

A dog named Spot isn’t exactly what you’d call cuddly. The 160-pound, electrically powered, hydraulically actuated robot dog was introduced today by Boston Dynamics, a company bought by Google last year.

“Our mission at Boston Dynamics is to develop a new breed of rough-terrain robots that capture the mobility, autonomy and speed of living creatures,” states the company, which makes robots for the military. “The goal is to achieve animal-like mobility on rough and rugged terrain, terrain too difficult for any existing vehicle.”

Boston Dynamics previously created a robot named BigDog — the “Most Advanced Rough-Terrain Robot on Earth” — that weighs a whopping 240 pounds and can carry 340 pounds. But BigDog isn’t as agile or quick as Spot, who has a sensor head that helps it navigate and negotiate rough terrain.

A video rather disturbingly shows Spot getting a gentle kick, and then, moments later, a really hard kick. I know, I know, it’s just a cyberdog, but I bet that made you gasp, too. For a robot, Spot’s movements are remarkably doglike.

“No robots were harmed in the making of this video,” Boston Dynamics assures us. Uh, okay.

Photo via YouTube

Did Brian Williams Really Save Pup(s) from a Fire as He Claimed To?

Brian Williams announced today that he’s taking a break from anchoring NBC News while he’s under investigation for lying about being in a helicopter that was shot in Iraq in 2003.

Williams has also claimed that he saw a dead body float down a French Quarter street while he was covering Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans. However, that area of the city wasn’t flooded during the disaster. Hmmm.

But that’s not all. Ten years ago, Williams told Esquire Magazine that, as a teenager, he rescued two puppies from a house fire while serving as a volunteer firefighter with the Old Village Fire Company in Middletown, N.J.

“All I ever did as a volunteer fireman was once save two puppies,” Williams said at the time.

Six years later, while retelling his brave rescue tale for USA TODAY, the two puppies became one puppy.

“I remember one such house fire … conducting a search on my hands and knees, when I felt something warm, squishy and furry on the floor of a closet,” Williams wrote in 2011. “I instinctively tucked it in my coat. When I got outside, I saw two small eyes staring up at me, and I returned the 3-week-old and very scared puppy to its grateful owners.”

The Old Village Fire Company has not commented on the anchorman’s conflicting puppy tales — and has yet to confirm that he actually ever rescued any puppies at all.

What do you think — was “Lyin’ Brian” at it again?

Photo collage by Laura Goldman. Photos: David Shankbone (Brian Williams); Jenn Durfey (helmet); ManuelFD (puppy)

Milk-Bone Survey Ranks the Most Puppy-Loving US States (Congrats, California)

California pet parents are the most loving to their dogs, according to the Milk-Bone “Doggy Love Index.” (Woo hoo! As a resident, that’s no surprise to me.)

The ranking is based on a December 2014 survey of 3,000 pet parents across the country, conducted by PRH Data Insights. The results were calculated “by averaging the percentage of a state’s dog parent population that says they regularly engage in seven different loving behaviors with their dog,” according to Milk-Bone.

Those “loving behaviors” included:

  • Telling their dog “I love you” at least once a month — Once a month? More like once an hour! Am I right, my fellow Californians?
  • Buying their dog a gift at least once a month — Um, premium dog food counts as a gift, right?
  • Allow their dogs to sleep with them at least once a month — Again, once a month?!

Congrats to California and the other nine states that made the top 10 puppy-loving list:

2.  New York
3.  Washington
4.  Tennessee
5.  Florida
6.  Massachusetts
7.  Texas
8.  Missouri
9.  Ohio
10.  Arizona

Here’s a Milk-Bone infographic with detailed results of the Doggy Love Index…and an ad for Milk-Bone products. (Incidentally, Big Heart Pet Brands, the company that makes Milk-Bones as well as Pup-Peroni, Kibbles ‘n Bits and Meow Mix, is being bought by J.M. Smucker, the Washington Post reported yesterday.)

If you want to be extra loving to your pup, google “homemade dog treats.”

Photo credit: Eric Danley

USDA Orders Pittsburgh Zoo to Stop Stressing Elephants with Herding Dogs

For three years, the Pittsburgh Zoo & PPG Aquarium has used siblings Major and Zeta — who are Australian Cattle Dogs — to herd its elephants. It’s the only zoo in the Northern Hemisphere that uses dogs in such a capacity.

The herding dogs are a safety measure for its elephant handlers, Tracy Gray told the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette last November.

“These relationships can be thought of in terms of traditional shepherding practices,” she said. “In this case, our primary elephant keeper represents the shepherd; the elephants represent the flock; and the Australian Cattle Dogs assist the shepherd.”

The dogs are apparently keeping the elephant handlers safe, but what about the safety of the dogs, and the stress they cause to the elephants?

“Video footage shows elephants displaying obvious signs of distress, including flapping their ears and trumpeting, as they’re chased and apparently nipped by dogs at the command of zoo staff,” stated People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) in an October 2014 press release. “In addition to the obvious stress that this causes the elephants, the dogs are in danger of being accidentally stepped on and killed or purposely attacked and thrown in the air by the agitated elephants.”

CBS Pittsburgh — which recorded the video PETA referred to — reported in May 2014 that Major and Zeta were trained “to handle massive elephants. They charge and nip at the elephants’ feet and trunks. The elephants have such respect for the dogs that even if they hear a handler say the name Major or Zeta, they take notice.”

Using the dogs as elephant herders is also against Pennsylvania state laws, which prohibit dogs from pursuing wildlife.

In November, PETA filed a complaint with the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture (USDA). According to the Associated Press, officials with the department’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service investigated the Pittsburgh Zoo last month. A USDA inspection report dated Jan. 7 and released today by PETA notes that the officials asked an unidentified elephant manager for a demonstration of how the dogs herd the pachyderms.

The report said one of the dogs “showed aggressive behavior, growling and lunging at one elephant and entering its enclosure before being called back by the manager.” The manager told the officials the dogs had previously bitten the elephants doing the course of their work.

Based on these observations and facts, the USDA concluded that, effective immediately, the zoo must handle the elephants in a way that does not create undue stress — in other words, without dogs nipping at their feet.

Pittsburgh Zoo President and CEO Barbara Baker issued a statement today, defending the canine elephant herders.

“The dogs read the behavior of the animals and alert the keepers to any disruption in the heard, preventing potential safety concerns for the staff and elephants,” she stated. “This method of animal management, in the livestock field, is referred to as a low-stress method.”

Baker said the demonstration USDA officials observed was not an example of the dogs’ usual work. “Our elephant manager demonstrated a drill simulating the dog’s response to a keeper being in an extreme and unlikely situation. We showed how valuable the dogs can be should a keeper’s safety be in question.”

She said the zoo is now working with the USDA on a study “that examines a variety of facets regarding the welfare of elephants, including a unique examination of stress.”

Even without Australian Cattle Dogs nipping at their feet, elephants in zoos are already under a lot of mental and physical stress. In the wild, elephants walk up to 30 miles a day. Being forced to live inside a small enclosure — alone or with just one or two other cellmates — makes for some very unhappy elephants. (Just imagine if you had to spend your life walking around in circles in your bathroom.)

Of course, the safest alternative is to release the elephants to a sanctuary — a humane action that, fortunately, is being taken by more and more zoos. But since that’s not likely to happen, a better way to increase the safety of zoo employees would be to follow the lead of more than half of all accredited U.S. zoos, and use what is called protected contact.

Protected contact uses physical barriers to separate employees from elephants, and employs positive reinforcement methods.

The Pittsburgh Zoo currently uses both protected and unprotected contact.

“Both methods use vocal commands, praise and food rewards,” zoo spokewoman Gray said last year. “If an elephant does not want to work with the keeper, the keeper leaves the area. We never punish our elephants for not cooperating.”

Photos via CBS News

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