Basically, this young woman found a lost dog. She says she looked for the owner, but it
turns out the owner lived near her and he reported the dog missing to the
county animal shelter and checked in there regularly, and she apparently never
contacted the shelter as she should have done about finding the dog. He also says he put up signs in the
neighborhood and he posted an ad about the lost dog on Craig’s List. So there is some question about whether or
not she even looked for the owner.
She decided to train the dog to be her service dog because
she has asthma. She says she trained him
to bring her an inhaler when she needs it.
I’m not sure why she cannot carry her own inhaler in her pocket or something
and most people with asthma are not considered disabled by it, not under the
Americans with Disabilities definition, so there is also some question about
her need for a service dog. But she says
the dog is now her service dog.
Then one day at a coffee shop, she and the dog happened to
cross paths with the original owner, who recognized his dog. He spoke to her and she agreed to return the
dog to him the following day. She did
not return the dog, though; instead, she went out and bought a license for the
dog (which by law she should have done long before then). The previous owner had purchased a license
for the dog when he was supposed to do so, but the new owner only did it when
her ownership of the dog was challenged.
The new owner says since she’s had the dog for a year, and
since she needs him because he is her service dog, she should get to keep
him. The previous owner says that since
he reported the dog lost and since he does not think the new owner really
looked for the dog’s owner when she found the dog, she should give him
back. The county animal control people
investigated and they agree with the original owner. They told the new owner to return the dog.
But she didn’t.
Instead she hired a lawyer and they are fighting about it.
Recently, she was arrested for refusing to return the dog
and the dog is now being kept at the animal shelter until the case is resolved.
She is also now alleging that the original owner abused the
dog by kicking him, beating him, and urinating on him and that because he
abused the dog, she should not have to give the dog back. I think it’s unlikely that a dog that has
been severely abused had the temperament to become a service dog. I also think it’s a bit odd that she’s only
now making these accusations of abuse.
Of course, the fact that she trained the dog, or says she
trained him, to be her service dog is not really relevant. Animals, including service dogs, are
considered to be personal property. It
doesn’t matter in the eyes of the law if the man lost his wallet, his pet dog,
or his service dog. It doesn’t matter
how the young woman has used the property she found, whether she trained the
dog to be a service dog or a circus dog or whatever. The issue is who is the rightful owner of the
property.
Here are some links to some articles if you want to read
more about the case.
This is why my pets are microchipped.
ReplyDeleteMicrochips are definitely a good idea! I don't know if it would have helped in this case, though, since the woman that found the dog didn't bother to check with the local animal shelter. Would she have bothered to take the dog somewhere to be checked for a microchip? At this point, she's not disputed that the dog used to belong to this guy. She's just saying she shouldn't have to give it back to him because she found it, she needs it to carry her inhaler, and he used to abuse it.
ReplyDeleteIsn't the microchip traceable? So the owner could locate the dog.
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