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18/1/02
German
dog owner shot dead
A
RETIRED German dog owner has been shot dead by his neighbour who had a
pathological hatred of dogs. The dog owner, - identified only as Peter
W was walking his Boxer dog ‘Beauty’
in the idyllic Oberusel, near Frankfurt, Main one morning when the attack
occurred. He was enjoying his retirement, having sold the cinema he owned
and managed the previous year and was now happy to spend time with his
wife and his dog.
Beauty was running ahead when she started sniffing in some nearby bushes
and discovered Peter’s neighbour, Dieter F. ‘Beauty’, recognised the man
and jumped up happily to say hello to him. But retired engineer Dieter
F, also 60, hated dogs and had lain in wait for Peter and Beauty, armed
with a 6.35 calibre pistol.
He aimed the pistol at the dog and fired, but Beauty ran off, escaping
being shot. F then coolly inserted a new magazine into the gun and fired
12 shots into Peter W, hitting him at close range in the head and chest.
As Peter lay bleeding and dying in the snow, Dieter F ran off. Beauty
returned to her fallen owner’s side, whining and barking until passers-by
made the grim discovery.
Police officers attended the scene and a forensic team conducted a thorough
examination of the crime scene, covering Peter’s body with a plastic sheet.
As a result, Dieter F was arrested shortly afterwards and confessed after
questioning at a local police station.
A police inspector dealing in the murder inquiry told newspapers that
Dieter F had a history of wanting to harm animals: “He had repeatedly
gone after pets with a knife. Four cases have been brought against him.”
Dieter F’s mental state was even worse now, as his wife had left him two
weeks previously.
A
friend of Peter W and his wife described her neighbour as a kind and gentle
man. “Beauty was like a child to him,” she said. The friend is now looking
after Beauty.
Main
Police spokesman Helmut Klinger said that Dieter’s F’s motives were unknown,
but that his actions were deliberate. “This was not self defence, the
dog had not attacked him. Obviously he had driven to the field on purpose
and waited for his victim” said Mr Klinger.
The
case has caused shock and outrage throughout Germany, with even the anti-dog
media, including the most vociferous, Bild maintaining a sympathetic stance
towards the victim who’s only ‘crime’ had been to walk his dog.
Horror
Marcus
Dowe, spokesman for the anti-fighting dog law pressure group DominoDogs
Deutschland expressed his horror at the incident.
“We
are shaken by the news about the newest escalation of violence against
dog-owners in Germany. Unfortunately we have the first victim who died
because of violence. A sixty year-old owner of a Boxer who left his house
in the early morning hours to take a walk with his dog was shot.
“For
the past eighteen months we have complained that dog owners are being
abused, threatened and have been the victims of acts of violence. The
seriousness of the situation and our fears were not seen by politicians
and the media.
“For
the past eighteen months we have advised dog owners to walk in groups
for their own safety, but often this is not possible. We are sure that
the sixty year old man would still be alive without the media campaign
against dog owners!
“As
so often when a tragedy happens, newspapers look for more stories. Since
that incident acts of violence against dog owners are now published by
newspapers. The media tries now to damn the acts of violence against dog
owners. But it is a bad sign for our society that people only begin to
think about this after a man has been murdered.”
Dowe’s
sentiments are, of course, entirely accurate. A similar situation existed
in the UK in the early years of the Dangerous Dogs Act until some of the
outrages perpetrated by the authorities against dogs and their owners
began to be reported by the national media (the canine media having reported
such abuses form the very beginning). This changed public and media opinion
against the draconian DDA and led, eventually, to the Government feeling
sufficiently pressurised into amending the Act.
Peter W’s untimely death at the hands of an obviously unhinged neighbour
is a tragedy. But perhaps some good can come from such a wanton act of
evil. If the German public and media opinion towards dogs and dog owners
changes as a result of this crime, then perhaps, in time, the German Federal
Government and States Governments will come under pressure to change the
Fighting Dog laws and cease their campaign of discrimination against dog
owners. This year is an election year in Germany, so never has the time
been better for campaigners to put pressure on politicians to reverse
the cruel and unjust laws and climate of hatred towards dogs which led
to an innocent man being killed.
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