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

Dog Run Over by 13 Trains Lives to Bark About It

Loki, a 14-month-old Pit Bull/American Bulldog mix, escaped from his yard in Kuna, Idaho, the morning of Feb. 17, and wandered to the train tracks about 100 yards away.

Around 10:30 a.m., he was struck by a train. And then another. And then 11 more throughout the day.

“They hate hitting animals, but they can’t stop that train,” Loki’s dog dad, Ryan Rossi, told ABC News today. “They just considered [Loki] was dead after they hit him.”

Finally, around 4:30 p.m., the conductor of the 13th train that hit Loki saw the dog lift his head. The conductor called animal control.

Rossi and his wife, who had spent the day looking for Loki and posting Lost Dog messages on social media, got a phone call that evening that Loki had been hit by a train.

“Oh my god. It was devastating,” Rossi told KTVB.

Fearing the worst, Rossi, his wife and their two kids drove to the WestVet Animal Emergency Center.

“When we went back to say our final goodbye, he lifted his head and smiled,” Rossi told ABC News. “If he’s fighting, we’re fighting.”

Loki was laying in the middle of the train track when he was run over multiple times. “He’s not a huge dog, and so thank god he was low enough,” Rossi told KTVB.

Although he lost his rear left leg, left eye and tail, Loki is making a remarkable recovery. The Rossi family brought him home from the hospital Saturday, and by the next day, Loki was having no problem getting around on three legs.

“Every day I look at him and he’s moving more and more,” Rossi told ABC News. “He’s adapting so quickly. It’s just a miracle.”

A “Lucky Loki” GoFundMe page has been created by a family friend to help cover the cost of Loki’s surgeries. As of this morning, about $7,100 of the $10,000 goal has been raised.

Photos via Twitter; Twitter

Dog Who Went Missing During California Wildfire Reunites with Family 4 Months Later

When the devastating Valley Fire wildfire swept through Northern California in September, destroying more than 1,200 houses, Darci Andrews was out of town. Not only did she lose her Hidden Valley home, but she also lost her pets who were locked inside the house, including Tia, a 7-year-old Siberian Husky/Pit Bull mix.

Or so Andrews thought.

In December, three months after the wildfire, Tyler Wages found a lost dog in the woods not far from Andrews’ former home. He spent the next month leaving food out for the scared dog and trying to lure her to him with treats.

Wages was finally able to coax the dog into his house last week. She was wearing an ID tag with Andrews’ name on it, but the landline phone number was no longer working due to the house being destroyed.

Wages didn’t give up. He used Facebook to track Andrews down where she worked, Twin Pines Casino, and gave her a call.

“He said she kind of looked like a wolf, with one blue eye and a blue collar. I started crying,” Andrews told the Press Democrat.

She rushed over to Wages’ house. “I go inside and they bring out my Tia. I started bawling!” Andrews told ABC News. “She came up to me, wagging her tail, and licked my face.”

Every day for the past four months, Andrews said her boyfriend, Bernie Hosmer, would return to her property “and sift through the ashes to see if he could find the remains” of her pets. He did find the remains of another dog, Bosko, who was inside a kennel cage, but there was no sign of Tia and another dog, or of Andrews’ other pets, two cats and two rats.

“I created this flyer and posted it up. I posted their pictures on all of the Facebook sites. We chased down every lead,” Andrews told ABC News. “It would break our hearts every single time.”

Andrews, her adult daughters and Hosmer were about to give up hope. One of Andrews’ daughters got a tattoo of Tia in her beloved dog’s memory, and they both gave their mom a Pit Bull puppy named Layla to help lessen the pain of the loss.

“If somebody thinks there’s a chance their pet is still out there, they shouldn’t give up,” Andrews told the Press Democrat.

Considering her ordeal, Tia is doing remarkably well, according to her veterinarian, Joanna Holtz. Tia lost weight and suffered some minor burns, but is otherwise doing fine.

Holtz told the Press Democrat a few other pets were reunited with their owners after the Valley Fire, but none after such a long time as Tia. And Tia is the only pet she knows of who somehow managed to escape out of a locked house.

“Tia was out there for 116 days. She made it out of a burning house, out of a burning neighborhood,” Andrews told ABC News. “She’s our own personal little miracle.”

And as for Tia’s rescuer, Andrews said Wages is her hero. “I can’t believe what he did for us,” she told the Press Democrat.

Photo via Twitter

This Dog Who Can ‘Say Cheese’ on Command Won’t Be Homeless for Long

Herbert has a very charming skill: The 5-month-old Pit Bull mix can show his pearly whites when told to “Say cheese.”

Herbert is temporarily homeless, but since his video has been viewed over 10.8 million times on Facebook, it’s extremely likely he’ll have a forever home soon.

say cheese

Posted by Amanda Robles on Saturday, January 9, 2016

 

“This little rock star will be up for adoption in about two weeks,” wrote his foster mom, Amanda Robles, in a Facebook post. “He’s such a sweet boy and always wants to sleep in your lap. Now that he made u laugh, help find him a home!”

Herbert will be available later this month from PAWS Chicago. Hopefully the potential adopters who don’t end up with this particular rock star will consider another charming homeless dog from this rescue, or any other rescue or shelter across the country.

As PAWS Chicago wrote on its Facebook page, “For folks outside of the Illinois area, check your local shelter for a pet who will give you years of happiness, even if they can’t share a cheesy grin.”

Photo via Facebook

Off-Duty Cop at Dog Park Shoots Deaf Woman’s ‘Aggressive’ Service Dog

At first LaToya Plummer of Greenbelt, Md., couldn’t figure out why her service dog, a Pit Bull mix named Cleo, was limping and bleeding as they left a dog park Sunday.

Because she is deaf, Plummer could not hear the gunshot that sent a bullet into Cleo’s side. It was fired by an unidentified off-duty Metropolitan Police Department officer who claims Cleo, with her teeth bared, aggressively charged her and her small dog.

Plummer finds this difficult to believe. “She is the most calm and gentle of my dogs,” she told WUSA 9 through an interpreter.

The officer immediately reported that she’d shot a dog, but by the time Greenbelt Police officers arrived, Plummer — thinking Cleo had been bitten by another dog — had rushed her injured dog to a vet.

It’s unfortunate that no one witnessed the shooting. Even if Cleo did run toward the officer, it seems both dangerous and unnecessary to fire a weapon at such a public place.

“I think she should be charged with felony animal cruelty,” Plummer told WUSA 9.

Plummer said Cleo was walking behind her when the shooting occurred. She didn’t say why she wasn’t keeping an eye on her or why Cleo was off-leash outside the dog park.

The Greenbelt Police Department is investigating the case and has not yet filed any charges.

As for Cleo, WUSA 9 reports she is a very lucky dog and is making a “remarkable” recovery.

“I love Cleo,” Plummer told WUSA 9. “I cherish my dogs.”

Photo via Twitter

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