fizzle7033
07-29-2010, 05:34 PM
This happened a couple of counties over from me. It makes me furious!!! And, to make matters worse, this lady is a National Gaurdsman. The Humane Society has been completely rude and hateful to her! I mean seriously, have they ever SEEN a coyote? Franklin County is full of them!
http://www.state-journal.com/news/article/4863825
Beloved pet called a coyote, sent into the wild
By Kay Harrod
July 22, 2010
Copper, a female Shebu Inu, is still missing after being released behind Home Depot off U.S. 127, after the Humane Society mistook her for a coyote.
Copper, a female Shebu Inu, is still missing after being released behind Home Depot off U.S. 127, after the Humane Society mistook her for a coyote.
A little lost dog named Copper is in the middle of a bureaucratic snafu stemming from a mistaken identity that involves city and county governments, Frankfort police and others.
“We don’t take coyotes,” a Frankfort Humane Society employee told a Frankfort police officer, who brought an animal later identified as Copper to the Kentucky Avenue shelter.
“If it’s a coyote, either shoot it or release it back to the wild,” Wildlife Solutions told a police sergeant who called the business for advice after Copper was turned away.
Animal activist Trudi Johnson summed up Copper’s dilemma: “This story just goes downhill and at the bottom of that hill lays the Humane Society’s inability to recognize a dog from a coyote.”
“People would say when Copper was young, she looked like a fox with her pointy ears and red coloring,” said Copper’s owner, Lori Goodlett, about her Sheba Inu, a female officially registered with the AKC.
“But no one has ever mistaken her for a coyote.”
The debacle, which could end badly, began Saturday, July 3.
Goodlett said she returned to her Cloverdale home around 3 p.m. after being away for the night to find Copper gone from her fenced yard. A veterinarian friend told her to call the Humane Society to see if Copper had been turned in.
Goodlett says the person who answered said, “We haven’t gotten a stray dog today,” and that ended the conversation.
Goodlett phoned again to leave her name, number and Copper’s breed.
“I was able to get out the breed of the dog, but the person reiterated they didn’t have one and once again hung up.”
Goodlett says she’s unsure how Copper could have escaped since the gate of the chain-link fence has a clip that has to be released to open it. She also checked to see if Copper had wiggled under the fence but found nothing.
“I’ve had her 11 years, and she has never jumped the fence.”
On Sunday, Goodlett posted missing signs along with Copper’s picture around the west Frankfort neighborhood.
Monday, Goodlett said she was gone with her children to King’s Island for most of the day.
A Frankfort Police officer patrolling Cloverdale saw Goodlett’s posted signs and took one to the downtown station.
According to Maj. Fred Deaton, Copper was indeed the dog picked up by a police officer.
The veteran officer and his captain drove to the Goodlett home and related the chain of events.
“Honestly, if the police had not come to my house I would have not known any of the events,” Goodlett said. “They have been so forthcoming and offered so much help.”
A Frankfort police officer had been summoned to a Gramma Drive address on Saturday morning to take a dog from a woman’s yard. The officer put the dog in his car and waited until after noon when the Humane Society opened and took the dog there.
According to Deaton, the dog did not wear any identification or a collar. However, he said he doubted if the animal were a coyote it would have gone peacefully with the officer.
Animal Control Officer Mark Pardi, who normally responds to calls, was on vacation that weekend.
The officer left the dog at the Humane Society only to be called back and told the animal had to be removed from the shelter because it was against the law to shelter a coyote.
The police officer, currently on military leave, refused to take the dog back.
His captain, Ray Kinney, was called and was told by the Humane Society Director Regina McDaniel that the coyote had to go, according to Deaton.
In the meantime the police, since the Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources was closed, contacted Wildlife Solutions, a private business, and were told a coyote was considered a nuisance and could be shot or returned to the wild.
http://www.state-journal.com/news/article/4863825
Beloved pet called a coyote, sent into the wild
By Kay Harrod
July 22, 2010
Copper, a female Shebu Inu, is still missing after being released behind Home Depot off U.S. 127, after the Humane Society mistook her for a coyote.
Copper, a female Shebu Inu, is still missing after being released behind Home Depot off U.S. 127, after the Humane Society mistook her for a coyote.
A little lost dog named Copper is in the middle of a bureaucratic snafu stemming from a mistaken identity that involves city and county governments, Frankfort police and others.
“We don’t take coyotes,” a Frankfort Humane Society employee told a Frankfort police officer, who brought an animal later identified as Copper to the Kentucky Avenue shelter.
“If it’s a coyote, either shoot it or release it back to the wild,” Wildlife Solutions told a police sergeant who called the business for advice after Copper was turned away.
Animal activist Trudi Johnson summed up Copper’s dilemma: “This story just goes downhill and at the bottom of that hill lays the Humane Society’s inability to recognize a dog from a coyote.”
“People would say when Copper was young, she looked like a fox with her pointy ears and red coloring,” said Copper’s owner, Lori Goodlett, about her Sheba Inu, a female officially registered with the AKC.
“But no one has ever mistaken her for a coyote.”
The debacle, which could end badly, began Saturday, July 3.
Goodlett said she returned to her Cloverdale home around 3 p.m. after being away for the night to find Copper gone from her fenced yard. A veterinarian friend told her to call the Humane Society to see if Copper had been turned in.
Goodlett says the person who answered said, “We haven’t gotten a stray dog today,” and that ended the conversation.
Goodlett phoned again to leave her name, number and Copper’s breed.
“I was able to get out the breed of the dog, but the person reiterated they didn’t have one and once again hung up.”
Goodlett says she’s unsure how Copper could have escaped since the gate of the chain-link fence has a clip that has to be released to open it. She also checked to see if Copper had wiggled under the fence but found nothing.
“I’ve had her 11 years, and she has never jumped the fence.”
On Sunday, Goodlett posted missing signs along with Copper’s picture around the west Frankfort neighborhood.
Monday, Goodlett said she was gone with her children to King’s Island for most of the day.
A Frankfort Police officer patrolling Cloverdale saw Goodlett’s posted signs and took one to the downtown station.
According to Maj. Fred Deaton, Copper was indeed the dog picked up by a police officer.
The veteran officer and his captain drove to the Goodlett home and related the chain of events.
“Honestly, if the police had not come to my house I would have not known any of the events,” Goodlett said. “They have been so forthcoming and offered so much help.”
A Frankfort police officer had been summoned to a Gramma Drive address on Saturday morning to take a dog from a woman’s yard. The officer put the dog in his car and waited until after noon when the Humane Society opened and took the dog there.
According to Deaton, the dog did not wear any identification or a collar. However, he said he doubted if the animal were a coyote it would have gone peacefully with the officer.
Animal Control Officer Mark Pardi, who normally responds to calls, was on vacation that weekend.
The officer left the dog at the Humane Society only to be called back and told the animal had to be removed from the shelter because it was against the law to shelter a coyote.
The police officer, currently on military leave, refused to take the dog back.
His captain, Ray Kinney, was called and was told by the Humane Society Director Regina McDaniel that the coyote had to go, according to Deaton.
In the meantime the police, since the Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources was closed, contacted Wildlife Solutions, a private business, and were told a coyote was considered a nuisance and could be shot or returned to the wild.