Press "Enter" to skip to content

Sioux Falls Kills Senator’s Vicious Dogs

At the end of July, two big, expensive Tibetan mastiffs owned by Senator R. Blake Curd (R-12/Sioux Falls) got loose, biting a female pedestrian and a police officer. The woman went to the hospital. The policeman shot twice at the dog that bit him but missed. The animals were apprehended and taken to the pound.

That Sioux Falls paper reports that the owner (the paper does not name Senator Curd) chose not to keep the animals, which city ordinance would have allowed him to do under certain conditions. The city thus killed the dogs.

SFPD spokesman Sam Clemens tells the paper that Sioux Falls police do not have authority to kill vicious animals:

“We don’t have the authority to euthanize vicious animals,” Clemens said in an email. “We will work with people who are trying to decide if they want to keep the animal or give them time to meet all of the stipulations. In cases where they do not want the animal, the animal is then euthanized” [Katie Nelson, “Police: Dogs Involved in July Attack Were Euthanized,” that Sioux Falls paper, 2015.09.16].

That’s not quite accurate. Ordinance 90.003(f) says, “Any vicious animal not in compliance with this article shall be seized by the animal control officer or any police officer and impounded. If the animal cannot be captured, it may be destroyed.” That wording suggests Sioux Falls police must first attempt to capture the vicious animal but may kill the beast if capture isn’t working. The ordinance does not specify how long a police officer must try to capture the creature, so I would assume that had the Sioux Falls officer who was bitten hit his target on the dog’s second attack, this ordinance would have given him cover for his on-the-spot euthanization of the attacker.

Besides, state law says police really do have authority to euthanize dangerous critters:

Any peace officer, officer or agent of a humane society, or agent of the board may use all necessary means to control a dangerous animal so as not to immediately jeopardize the health or safety of themselves or others. Any officer or agent of a humane society, agent of the board, or peace officer may enter, search, and investigate premises, take testimony from owner and witnesses and seize, impound, or euthanize a dangerous animal [SDCL 40-1-24].

Rapid City police apparently have a better grasp of that statute and better aim:

Authorities say a Pennington County sheriff’s deputy and an animal control officer were trying to catch the dog that had escaped from Morrow’s house on Wednesday. They say it lunged at them and that the deputy was forced to shoot it five times.

…Capt. Jay Evenson, with the Pennington County Sheriff’s Office, said his deputy acted responsibly because the dog resisted every attempt to be captured without violence and had to be shot after it charged at the deputy [“Deputy Shoots Pit Bull in Rapid City; Owner Mad,” AP via Pierre Capital Journal, 2015.09.12].

Related Legal Reading: State law makes clear that police may kill a dog that is attacking big game, and any person may kill a dog that attacks domestic animals. Plus, our animal cruelty laws specifically exempt “any reasonable action taken by a person for the destruction or control of an animal known to be dangerous, a threat, or injurious to life, limb, or property.”

12 Comments

  1. Flipper 2015-09-21 07:19

    I thought it was quite interesting that the paper did not name the owners. Thanks for bringing that to light.

  2. Nick Nemec 2015-09-21 08:45

    The Argus really does appear to be protecting Sen. Curd. The fact that the dogs were owned by an elected official would seem to be an important aspect of this story.

  3. Amanda 2015-09-21 09:58

    “The deputy was forced to shoot it five times.”

    These are the people that are supposed to serve and protect? If they pumped five bullets into a dog, how many would they fire into a human if they felt it necessary?

  4. mike from iowa 2015-09-21 11:05

    Wouldn’t look good if the story said SENATOR BLAKE CURD-R had vicious animals running loose.. That might be considered unfairly targeting the loose running,vicious dogs owner.

  5. Sam@ 2015-09-21 13:24

    I thin the Sioux Falls Police department needs to practice their shooting skills. How can you miss a big mean dog at a short range.

  6. Deb Geelsdottir 2015-09-21 15:42

    Although it does seem like the cop should have been able to pop the dog, it’s not always that simple.

    When a human being is suddenly threatened with an vicious attack, adrenaline instantly surges through the blood fast and in significant quantities. It’s very common for that to cause severe shaking. I mean “severe.” The shaking doesn’t stop until the adrenaline surge does.

    When the hero of an action movie smirks, calmly takes aim and shoots the instant before being killed himself, that is fake. When the victim of an assault can’t get the keys in the ignition of her car to escape, that is real.

    (“He” for the hero and “she” for the victim because that’s the bogus stereotype.)

    I was a pretty good shot with my trusty 12 gauge at pheasants that were flying Away From Me. I was also a pretty good shot with my trusty 273 rifle at deer that were 100+ feet Away From Me and primed to Run Away at first sound.

    Shooting at a vicious assailant coming for you with hatred/harm on his/its face is an entirely different thing. Granted, police are trained for just that situation. It’s just not all that simple and easy.

  7. Deb Geelsdottir 2015-09-21 15:44

    If the paper’s policy is to include the name of the animal’s owner, it should have done so in this case too. That would have avoided the appearance of protecting the elected official in this story.

  8. mike from iowa 2015-09-21 15:50

    Ms Deb-it is O Fish Oil-Snott Wanker is out of the running.

  9. Deb Geelsdottir 2015-09-21 17:22

    I just saw that on Wapo Mike. Oh, I am just heartbroken about it. I’m looking forward to getting over to the beauty parlor to read what Miss JJ and her merry band of followers have to say about it.

  10. caheidelberger Post author | 2015-09-21 22:57

    Deb, interestingly, the paper did name Curd in its initial coverage. Why they wouldn’t use that name here, just to make clear to readers that they are talking about that specific case, escapes me.

  11. Dominic from Sioux Falls SD 2015-11-25 23:03

    How did it get loose.

  12. caheidelberger Post author | 2015-11-26 07:03

    Good question, Dominic. Funny the local press didn’t go ask that question or take some pictures of the dog fence.

Comments are closed.