Fort Worth Police Officers Stop Highway Traffic to Rescue Small Dog (VIDEO)

Officers Allen Speed and Paul Garcia of the Fort Worth Police Department quickly went into action when they saw a small Rat Terrier running on busy Interstate 30. The rescue was captured on their patrol car’s dashboard camera.

The officers blocked traffic with their patrol car, got out and, after a bit of coaxing, lured the female stray to their car. The stopped drivers cheered and tooted their horns to show their appreciation for the two heroes.

Speed and Garcia, who named the dog “Beach” since they rescued her near Beach Street, took her to the Humane Society of North Texas (HSNT).

“These men are true heroes!” the HSNT posted on its Facebook page today. “They even came back to check in to make sure she was doing well days later. Beach is one lucky lady!”

The Fort Worth Star Telegram reported that Beach was adopted Feb. 5.

Photo via Facebook

Dog Dumped with Suitcase at Train Station Has New Forever Home

Remember this heartbreaking photo of Kai, the Shar Pei mix who was abandoned last month with a suitcase filled with his belongings at a Scotland train station?

Kai will never be dumped again. After receiving hundreds of adoption requests from around the world, the Scottish SPCA has selected Ian Russell as Kai’s new dog dad, it announced in a press release.

“I’m over the moon and very shocked that I was chosen out of everyone who wanted him,” Russell said.

“My Dalmatian named Mica passed away just before Christmas and I was left heartbroken. I had her for 15 years and she was the apple of my eye. We pretty much spent 24 hours a day together. When I heard about Kai, I knew the little guy needed a break but I never thought in a million years I’d get him.”

Russell, a hydraulic engineer who works outdoors all around Scotland, said Kai will accompany him wherever he travels.

“When it’s appropriate, I’ll let him out [of the van] to run around and play safely while I work,” he said. “Then we’ll jump back into the van together and head to the next place. We’ll be able to hang out all the time.”

Kai was found Jan. 2 with his leash tied to a railing outside the Ayr train station in South Ayrshire. The suitcase next to him contained a pillow, toy, food bowl and food.

A week after a photo of him went viral, the woman who left him at the station came forward. Fin Raynor told the Daily Record she had seen a dog advertised for sale online. When she went to the train station to buy him, it was a different dog than the one in the photograph. She said she refused to pay for the dog, and his owner took off. She had to hurry to catch the next train home, so she tied Kai to the railing. “I told somebody, I made sure the dog was safe,” she said. The case is still under investigation.

Alan Grant, senior animal care assistant for the Scottish SPCA, said the shelter got adoption offers from as far away as the Philippines.

“Kai’s story was really sad, and many people likened him to Paddington Bear, given he was found alone at a railway station with his suitcase,” Grant said.

He said Russell was chosen to be Kai’s new dog dad because “he said he was interested in re-homing Kai, but he would take our advice if we thought one of the many other dogs in our care would suit him better. It was really important for us to select an owner who wanted Kai for all the right reasons and had really thought through their decision to take on a rescue dog.”

Russell said he hopes all the people who offered to adopt Kai will find other homeless dogs to welcome into their families.

Photos via Facebook

NFL’s Terrence Cody ‘Intentionally Tortured’ and ‘Cruelly Killed’ his Dog, Indictment Says

MARCH 24, 2016 UPDATE: Terrence Cody was sentenced today to nine months in the Baltimore County Detention Center.

Disturbing details were released today regarding the Baltimore County grand jury indictment against Terrence Cody. The NFL player, who was cut from the Baltimore Ravens last week, is facing 15 charges, including two felony aggravated cruelty charges involving his dog.

Monday’s indictment, published today by the Baltimore Sun, alleges that between Dec. 19, 2014 and Jan. 19, 2015, Cody “did intentionally torture” and “did intentionally cruelly kill” his dog, resulting in the two felony counts. (His dog, named Taz, is referred to as a Presa Canarios Mastiff, not a Bullmastiff, as previously reported.)

The five misdemeanor animal abuse counts are for inflicting unnecessary suffering or pain on his dog; not providing his dog with nutritious food in sufficiency quantity; not providing proper drink; not providing proper space; and not providing necessary veterinary care.

Cody’s agent, Peter Schaffer, insisted last week that Taz died from worms. “If the dog was being treated cruelly, why take it to a vet?” he said, according to TribLIVE Sports. “When the dog passed away, Terrence was in tears.”

But an unidentified source told Aaron Wilson, who covers the Ravens for the Baltimore Sun, that Taz was severely underweight.

“Dog that died owned by Terrence Cody was roughly 50 pounds, should have had a body weight at least twice as high, per source,” Wilson tweeted today.

The source said a bone was discovered in Taz’s stomach, which may have been causing him not to eat. Taz died shortly after he was finally taken to a veterinarian.

If Cody is convicted, he faces a maximum of six years in prison and up to a $5,000 fine for the felony animal cruelty counts, and up to 90 days in prison and a maximum $5,000 fine for the five misdemeanor counts. He is also charged with misdemeanor animal abuse and neglect counts related to his pet alligator.

Cody could also be disciplined with a suspension or fine under the NFL’s recently toughened-up personal conduct policy. “If another teams signs him, he would be held accountable under the policy,” NFL spokesman Greg Aiello wrote in an email to the Baltimore Sun.

Cody is free on $10,000 bail. He has not commented on the charges, and has not yet been assigned an arraignment or court date.

Photo via Twitter

Coast Guard Rescues Dog from Icy Michigan Lake (VIDEO)

Just a few days ago, Los Angeles firefighters heroically rescued a Shiba Inu who was being swept away in the L.A. River. (The pup, who they named “Lucky,” has not yet been claimed by his owner.)

Halfway across the country today, the U.S. Coast Guard came to the rescue of a yellow Labrador Retriever who found herself in a similar predicament. But instead of falling into raging water, the Lab fell through ice into frigid Betsie Lake in Frankfort, Mich.

The dog has been named “Betsie” after the lake she fell into, but she really should be named “Extra Lucky.” She just happened to fall close to a U.S. Coast Guard station. When crew members witnessed it, they rushed to her rescue.

Tim Putnam, a boatswain mate third class, swam out about 200 feet to grab the Lab.

“I had to push a lot of the ice out of the way. It was pretty exhausting,” he told NBC News. As he approached Betsie, she swam toward him.

“It was almost like he knew it was his last chance,” said Putnam, who initially mistook Betsie for a male. “Luckily we got him out in time. It didn’t look like he had too much left in him.”

Betsie was taken to the Benzie County Animal Shelter in Beulah, Mich. She had no ID tags or microchip, so shelter staff are trying to locate her owners.

If no one claims Betsie, Putnam wants to adopt her himself. “Maybe it was just meant to be,” he told NBC News. (Okay, she really needs to be named Extra Extra Lucky.)

Over on the East Coast, yet another dog was saved today by firefighters. The dog, named Lucy, was walking with her family along the frozen Mystic River in Arlington, Mass., when she saw a swan and bolted onto the ice.

The ice broke, and Lucy fell into the icy water. Firefighters put on “warm suits” and were able to successfully save Lucy about 30 feet from the shore, according to WCVB. The dog was checked by a veterinarian and has been reunited with her family.

Maybe they should start calling her Lucky Lucy. Just sayin’.

Photo via YouTube

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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