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

Firefighters Rescue 34 Dogs from Florida House Fire

APRIL 20, 2016 UPDATE: “I was only gone for an hour, and I came back and the house was in flames,” Loretta Murray, owner of the house that caught on fire, told WPLG Local 10 today. Many of the dogs that were rescued are now in need of foster or permanent homes. For more information, contact Abandoned Pet Rescue at 954-728-9010 or Florida Cocker Spaniel Rescue at 813-245-1833.

As firefighters approached a burning house in Dania Beach, Fla., last night, several dogs ran toward them.

Inside the house were even more dogs, “many unconscious and unresponsive,” Broward Sheriff’s Fire Rescue spokesman Mike Jachles told Inside Edition. “There were dogs everywhere in the house. They were still finding dogs an hour and a half or so (into the rescue).”

More than 34 dogs were rescued from the house in what Jachles described as “an endless chain of dogs. It was pretty bizarre. Any of us that were at the scene last night have never seen anything like this.”

Some dogs were given oxygen. The fire truck was equipped with only one pet oxygen mask, so officers had to use larger ones designed for children and adults on the other dogs.

Five of the dogs were in critical condition. Those and four others were taken to a local animal emergency hospital. Only one dog died.

“Considering we had 34 dogs in a house filled with fire and full of smoke, that only one dog perished, that was pretty remarkable,” Jachles told Inside Edition.

There is no limit to the number of pets you can have in Broward County. The homeowner, who wasn’t there at the time of the fire, operated a dog rescue from her house.

“We have seen all of these dogs before. They are well cared for,” Animal Care and Adoption Division spokeswoman Lisa Mendheim told Inside Edition. “Any of them that were in need of medical services were under veterinary care, so there is no issue of cruelty.”

Dennis Hartling, a neighbor who called 911, said it was a hoarding situation.

“It’s not the first time that they’ve hauled this many dogs off their property,” he told WSVN. “The city hasn’t done anything about it, and tonight is just another example of what she’s up to.”

The cause of the fire is not yet known. Hartling said it started near the air-conditioning unit.

“Just tonight, I just so happen to be on my way out to the store, and I could smell the smoke, I could see it, I could hear the crackling from the fire,” he told WSVN. “I walked down the sidewalk to the building in the back, the side of the house. Part of it was on fire from the AC unit.”

As the injured dogs recover, Jachles told Inside Edition the fire department may bring their fire rescue dog to visit them.

Photo via Twitter

Watch Rescuers Save Great Dane Stuck in Tree

For a Great Dane, Kora has some amazing climbing skills.

Her dog dad, Wes McGuirk, couldn’t find her when he returned to his Louisville, Neb., home Saturday night. But he and his roommate, Jack Armstrong, could hear her whimpering in the distance.

“Then all of the sudden we realized it was coming from up there,” Armstrong told KMTV. They shined a flashlight up a tree, and there was Kora looking down at them. She had somehow managed to jump a 5-foot-high fence and climb the tree, perhaps chasing a squirrel or raccoon.

After trying unsuccessfully to get Kora down from the tree, they called the Cass County Sheriff’s Office. The first responders suspected it could be a prank.

“I’ve been doing this job for 12 years and when they told us it was a 120-pound Great Dane, 20 feet up a tree, that math usually doesn’t add up,” Lt. Jon Hardy of the Plattsmouth Volunteer Fire Department told KMTV. “It’s one of those things that will be talked about down here for quite a while, I’m sure,”

Using a rope, ladder and a harness from the Cass County Sheriff’s Office K-9 handler, rescuers from the Plattsmouth Volunteer Fire Department and Elmwood Volunteer Fire and Rescue were able to lower Kora from the tree. But before she reached the ground, the harness broke. Fortunately, some of the firefighters were holding a tarp just in case she fell.

“She never hit the ground,” Hardy told USA TODAY. “It worked like we hoped.”

Kora bounced off the tarp and “trotted away as if she’d never been stuck in a tree,” KMTV reports.

Photo via Twitter

Lucky Dog Survives 300-Foot Fall from Cliff

Toby may be an English Sheepdog/Poodle mix, but he apparently has something in common with cats: nine lives. And he just used up one of them during a hike with his family near Zion National Park in Utah.

As the McInnes family walked along a Gooseberry Mesa trail April 7, their 1-year-old, 75-pound pup saw something — a squirrel, perhaps? — and took a leap off a cliff. He fell 150 feet, then tumbled down another 150 feet.

“For a split second you hope that he landed on something, but I knew there was nothing over there,” Ben McInnes, Toby’s dog dad, told KSL. “It was awful. You could hear him sliding and bouncing and yelping.”

Meg McInnes, Toby’s dog mom, called 911. The dispatcher couldn’t promise her that a search-and-rescue team would show up to save Toby.

But, about an hour later, the rescuers arrived.

“When those things happen, we try and help them out,” Deputy Darrell Cashin, with the Washington County Sheriff’s Office, told KSL. “It’s not something we normally do, just going to rescue a dog, but it’s just the complication of: If we don’t, who else is going to try and get down to him?”

Mike Thomas, the first responder to reach Toby, carried him all the way back up the steep cliff.

Toby suffered head, brain and eye injuries, as well as a lot of scrapes, but he will live to bark about his plunge. He’s now resting at his home in Eagle Mountain, Utah, according to the Associated Press.

“I’ve been doing this for 25 years, and I’ve had patients fall 20 feet and die,”  Dr. Kelly Houston, the veterinarian who treated Toby, told KSL. “I’ve never had one do what Toby did and survive.”

Here’s to a speedy recovery. And here’s hoping that on future hikes, the McInnes family keeps Toby on a very short leash.

Photo via Twitter

The Top 35 Words We Say to Our Dogs

If your dogs are anything like mine, some of the most common words they hear (besides, of course, “I love you soooo much”) are “OFF!” and “DOWN!”

Yet these two words are nowhere to be found on a list compiled by researchers Alexandra Horowitz and Julie Hecht from Barnard College’s Dog Cognition Lab. In a new study examining how dogs and people play, they watched 187 videos of people, from the ages of 8 to 75 and in 19 different countries, playing with their dogs, and noted the words most commonly used.

The researchers also looked at how people interacted with their dogs during playtime. While only half of the men touched their dogs, two-thirds of the women did. Dog professionals, such as veterinarians, trainers and groomers, tended to stay in closer proximity to their dogs than did other pet parents.

The mood of the person also had an affect on the interaction, the researchers discovered. Pet parents who appeared to be happy touched their dogs more often and played more actively. Not surprisingly, as for the four-legged players, “Dog affect was overwhelmingly positive,” the researchers noted.

These were the words most commonly said by pet parents to their dogs in the videos:

  1. You
  2. Good
  3. It
  4. Get/got
  5. Gonna
  6. Come/C’mon
  7. (Dog’s name)
  8. Girl
  9. Yay/yeah
  10. That
  11. Here
  12. I
  13. On
  14. Oh
  15. Are/aren’t/’re
  16. Ready
  17. Boy
  18. The
  19. Give me/gimme
  20. Play
  21. Okay
  22. What/whatcha/what’s
  23. Me
  24. To
  25. Yes/yea
  26. Do/does
  27. Wanna/want
  28. Where/where’s/where’d
  29. Your
  30. Drop
  31. Is
  32. No
  33. Ball/bally
  34. Am/’m
  35. This

As Discover Magazine reports, since more dogs are being trained to become human helpers, studies like this are useful in gaining a better understanding of how dogs and their owners interact.

Photo credit: Tony Crescibene

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