Deputy Saves Mastiff from Burning Car at AKC Dog Show

As an American Kennel Club dog show was getting underway yesterday morning at Chesapeake City Park in Virginia, Christina Neff left her 10-month-old English Mastiff, Lemon Chiffon, in her SUV while she showed another dog in the ring.

When she saw four deputies running toward her car, her heart sank.

“I was thinking, ‘Oh my god, my dog’s dead,’” she told WAVY.

Master Deputy Wayne Spencer was the first to see the smoke coming from Neff’s SUV and race to it. He and three other deputies from the Chesapeake Sheriff’s Office were all volunteering their time at the event.

“It was brown smoke,” Spencer told WAVY. “It turned to black smoke. It got smokier and smokier.”

Not only did Spencer pull Lemon Chiffon out of the car, he got in and drove it away from the park — as flames were leaping out of the glove box.

“Cars and vans and tents were all around the vehicle,” Spencer said. “There was a lot of people around here, too. It could have been a very nasty situation.”

Spencer was able to park the SUV a safe distance away and get out before it became fully engulfed in flames.

After that ordeal, Lemon Chiffon received the show’s top prize. The four volunteer deputies were also honored for saving the dog’s life.

“Due to their quick thinking and quick reaction, no lives nor dogs were lost,” one of the dog show’s organizers said, according to WAVY.

Spencer said he doesn’t really think of himself as a hero. “We’re too old to go back in the military and too old for Boy Scouts, so we do this,” Spencer told WAVY, describing the deputy volunteers.

“It was very amazing,” Neff said. “‘Thank you’ does not cut it.”

Neff and Lemon Chiffon participated in another dog show today, getting there thanks to a loaner car provided by a local dealership.

Hopefully Neff won’t leave her dog in the car again — not only because of the rare chance of another fire, but because the morning temperatures in Chesapeake have been in the high 70s, which is too warm for a dog, especially a large one like Lemon Chiffon, to be left in a car, even with the windows cracked open.

Just two weeks ago, another Virginia officer performed a heroic deed, although it wasn’t quite as dramatic as Spencer’s.

When Officer J.T. Kulish of the Roanoke Police Department saw two lost dogs wandering near railroad tracks, he invited them into his air-conditioned patrol car, located their owners and gave them a ride home.

Yes, Virginia, there really are great cops in that state!

R.I.P. Gracie, Vick Dog Who Became Vicktory Dog

Gracie, one of the 50 Pit Bulls rescued in 2007 from Michael Vick’s Bad Newz Kennels in Virginia, crossed the Rainbow Bridge today.

“This morning, little, old, bow-legged Gracie passed away and got her angel wings,” according to the Gracie’s Guardians Facebook page.

Named in her honor, Gracie’s Guardians, an initiative of the Richmond Animal League, is focused on improving the welfare of Pit Bulls in the Richmond, Va., area.

“Any words we write here could never begin to express the profound, positive and lasting impact that this little, black Pit Bull had on so many people who encountered her or heard the story of her suffering and triumph. We are and will be forever grateful for this little, broken black dog and everything she personified.”

According to the Gracie’s Guardians website, Gracie was chosen as its namesake “in tribute to her perseverance and that of countless other Pit Bulls who have suffered or continue to suffer at the hands of people, yet whose spirits and love for humans remains untarnished.”

Gracie was adopted by Sharon Cornett, who told CBS 6 news in April 2014 that of all the dogs she’d ever had, Gracie was probably the most docile. “Honestly, I think her legacy is to show that the public has absolutely nothing to fear,” Cornett said.

Will Lowery, co-founder of Gracie’s Guardians, agrees. He told CBS 6 that the successful rehabilitation of the Vick dogs has led to more adoptions of abused dogs.

“I think everybody involved would probably admit that there’s a lot learned about these dogs, and how to handle them, and what their future might hold,” Lowry said.

Prior to 2007, most dogs rescued from fighting operations were euthanized. Even Wayne Pacelle, president of the Humane Society of the United States, said back then that the rescued Vick dogs would never be suitable as pets, and should all be destroyed.

But dog experts at animal welfare organizations like the Richmond Animal League, Best Friends Animal Society and BAD RAP knew better. They took in the Vick survivors, rehabilitated them and found loving forever homes in which many of these “unadoptable” survivors thrived.

Along with Gracie, another of those lucky dogs was Jonny Justice, who was awarded the prestigious ASPCA Dog of the Year award last year. Yet another was Hector, a Vick dog who became a therapy dog. Hector died three months ago.

The CBS 6 news report below from April 2014 features Gracie and more Vicktory dogs who defied the odds. It also shows the horrors inside the Bad Newz Kennels, including the trees from which Vick himself hanged dogs who weren’t good fighters.

The property has been transformed into the Good Newz Rehab Center, which treats abused dogs who have been kept in chains or pens.

Rest in peace, Gracie. To make a donation to Gracie’s Guardians, click here.

Photos via Facebook

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