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Woman's dog mistaken for coyote, set loose in wild

tricksterpup

I has nuttin to Say.
I just dont undersstand the stupidity of some people. Who here wouldn't be pissed off beyond belief and be talking to a lawyer right about now?

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100723/ap_on_fe_st/us_odd_not_a_coyote/print

Woman's dog mistaken for coyote, set loose in wild

Fri Jul 23, 5:53 pm ET



FRANKFORT, Ky. – An American Kennel Club-registered dog has been turned loose in the wild after the Frankfort Humane Society mistook her for a coyote. Copper is a female Sheba Inu.
Lori Goodlett told The State-Journal her pet of 11 years disappeared from her fenced back yard on July 3. It was after she put up posters that a police officer recognized Copper as the dog he had taken to the shelter. A shelter worker later called police and said it had to be picked up because coyotes weren't allowed there.
The department turned the animal loose behind a home improvement store after consulting with a wildlife expert who said coyotes were nuisance animals and should be returned to the wild or killed.
Humane Society board chairman John Forbes said he backs the shelter's decision.
"If our manager assessed the animal to be a coyote, then it is against the law for it to be at the shelter. We rely on the people who work there," Forbes said.
Goodlett, however, said she can't understand how her dog was misidentified.
"People would say when Copper was young, she looked like a fox with her pointy ears and red coloring," Goodlett said. "But no one has ever mistaken her for a coyote."
Frankfort Police Maj. Frank Deaton said the dog didn't have a collar or other identification. He said he doubted it was a coyote since it peacefully went with the officer who released it.
"Fortunately, the officer had the foresight to photograph the dog," he said.
Police and volunteers are helping Goodlett search for her pet and have set cages in hopes of capturing her.
"I know in my head Copper is gone for good, but in my heart I would like to think some nice family found her and took her in," Goodlett said.
___
 
Here is the ap picture.. i hope it shows. this is the photo the cop took.

capt.4741a4fc7dd74683a2bcae4e4128c4fc-dac59bad097546e3857315792d5cb3f3-0.jpg
 
That dog doesn't look like a coyote... Poor puppy. I would definitely be calling a lawyer.
 
Wow... They both have pointy ears. Must be a coyote for sure. Some people are sooo dumb.
 
That dog doesn't look like a coyote... Poor puppy. I would definitely be calling a lawyer.

yeah especially when this is a AKC registered dog. Some one is going to be paying for it. The dog didn't have a collar on because it was in a Fenced in backyard.
 
derp I'm the Frankfort Humane Society I'm sooo glad the doctor stapled my butt to my back or I probably wouldn't be able to find it derrrrrrrp
 
The department turned the animal loose behind a home improvement store after consulting with a wildlife expert who said coyotes were nuisance animals and should be returned to the wild or killed.

What kind of wildlife expert would say that? That's the mentality that caused wolves and coyotes to be hunted to near extinction.
 
Seriously!!!! Shiba Inu's do not look like coyotes, at all.. This person obviously has no clue as to what they are talking about.. WOW!!! I hope she finds her baby.. And I would sue too..
 
Shibas look as much like coyotes as my Black GSD. That story made me sick. I feel so sad for his owner and for him. I think that humane society had better get people in there who can actually tell what types of dogs they are dealing with. I would SO be contacting a lawyer if that happened to me.
 
I'm shocked every day how stupid people can be...its like every time I think it can't get any worse, it does. Poor poor dog, and poor poor owner! I hope he is found again soon.
 
He basically trespassed onto HER property, and took her dog.
Great, just great.

I would sooo be not only contacting a lawyer, but every media outlet I could get my hands on.....

Things like this are why if I had a dog, that dog would either be inside or with me when I'm not home....anything can happen to a dog left alone in a yard...
 
He basically trespassed onto HER property, and took her dog.
Great, just great.

I would sooo be not only contacting a lawyer, but every media outlet I could get my hands on.....

Things like this are why if I had a dog, that dog would either be inside or with me when I'm not home....anything can happen to a dog left alone in a yard...

We keep our 5 dogs inside when we aren't home for that very reason, don't want them getting out of the fence while we're not here or god forbid dog-napped right out of our yard...
 
He basically trespassed onto HER property, and took her dog.
Great, just great.

I don't think the story says it was taken from her property, just that it disappeared. The dog could have escaped and was picked up by animal control. It would take a very special kind of stupid to capture a dog (irrelevant of the breed/species) from a fenced-in back yard without first contacting the owner of the property. Otherwise I believe that to be an illegal search and seizure.
 
I don't think the story says it was taken from her property, just that it disappeared. The dog could have escaped and was picked up by animal control. It would take a very special kind of stupid to capture a dog (irrelevant of the breed/species) from a fenced-in back yard without first contacting the owner of the property. Otherwise I believe that to be an illegal search and seizure.

That is true...
however I think that all these people involved, the "wildlife experts" and the people whose job involves dogs of all types, I think that every one of them is a "special kind of stupid" anyway!

I am just a lowly business owner, not any kind of "wildlife expert" and even I can tell a shiba inu from a coyote!
 
What kind of idiot sees a Shiba and thinks coyote? This picture is from puppydogweb:
shibainu_cox.jpg


They're very distinctive dogs, and they look NOTHING like coyotes. I hope Copper is found alive, unfortunately an elderly HOUSE PET probably doesn't stand a great chance in the WILD.
 
I guess I'm the only one that see's the resemblance...

from this picture, of a young, groomed, Shiba no, but...
shibainu_cox.jpg


In this picture, of the actual dog in question, yes, I can see the mistake, the coat is matted, she is very old in the face and the tail doesn't have the signature curl to it, not to mention her coat has a darker, tri-color look to it.
capt.4741a4fc7dd74683a2bcae4e4128c4fc-dac59bad097546e3857315792d5cb3f3-0.jpg


Yes, someone messed up particularly the shelter worker but those are often volunteers and are not well trained in dog breeds. If the animal was found with out tag or collar the biggest indicator that the dog was not a stray was her willingness to come up to the officer and her friendly disposition. The nuisance wildlife control specialist was correct to say that Coyotes are to be killed or release, from my understanding he did not see the animal and was strickly going off what his professional knowledge of Coyotes, and to who ever related wolves to coyotes there is a huge difference especially in population numbers. I'll probably get flamed pretty good for this post but from what I see as a dog owner, wildlife trapper, and having sent lots of time in the woods watching coyotes, I in my personal and professional experience can see how the mistake occurred.
 
What, have these people never SEEN Coyotes? That dog looks "mutt" or "husky cross" or somesuch to me (not classic Shiba like I'm used to seeing at dog shows), but I would NEVER mistake it for a Coyote! Ears too small, muzzle not pointy enough, head and ear set too wide, build too stout, etc. Not to mention TAME. Even "pet" coyotes and coydogs never truly calm down--they always have that nervous look about them.... Eeedjits! They make me boil!

I would sue everyone involved, and keep suing until they were all broke and learned their lessons, the smug SOB's. They (Animal Control, shelter workers, cop-types who don't usually work with animals, etc.) all act as if they are the end all and know all of the creatures who cross their paths and that they could never, Dog forbid, actually make a MISTAKE. My dogs are my world. Anyone who set one of mine loose in the wild would pay for it, one way or another. Especially an old dog who has never known another way of living! How long would that old girl survive in the wild? Not long, I'm thinkin'.
 
The mistake I blame them for is thinking they were dealing with a coyote when the animal was TAME! Coyotes & coydogs aren't. That should have told them this was a stray dog of some sort.

The other issue is that many so-called shelters make little or no effort to locate an animal's owner, they just get rid of them as fast as possible. That's a whole 'nother story but probably contributes to why this poor dog was released "into the wild".
 
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