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Cop shoots innocent familys dog

Hayato

New member
COOKEVILLE, Tennessee (CNN) -- Police video released Wednesday showed a North Carolina family kneeling and handcuffed, who shrieked as officers killed their dog -- which appeared to be playfully wagging its tail -- with a shotgun during a traffic stop.
The Smoak family was pulled over the evening of January 1 on Interstate 40 in eastern Tennessee by officers who mistakenly suspected them of a carjacking. An investigation showed James Smoak had simply left his wallet on the roof of his car at a gas station, and motorists who saw his money fly off the car as he drove away called police.

The family was driving through eastern Tennessee on their way home from a New Year trip to Nashville. They told CNN they are in the process of retaining a lawyer and considering legal action against the Cookeville, Tennessee, Police Department and the Tennessee Highway Patrol for what happened to them and their dog.

In the video, released by the highway patrol, officers are heard ordering the family, one by one, to get out of their car with their hands up. James Smoak and his wife, Pamela, and 17-year-old son Brandon are ordered onto their knees and handcuffed.

"What did I do?" James Smoak asks the officers.

"Sir, inside information is that you was involved in some type of robbery in Davidson County," the unidentified officer says.

Smoak and his wife protest incredulously, telling the officers that they are from South Carolina and that their mother and father-in-law are traveling in another car near them.

The Smoaks told CNN that as they knelt, handcuffed, they pleaded with officers to close the doors of their car so their two dogs would not escape, but the officers did not heed them.

Pamela Smoak is seen on the tape looking up at an officer, telling him slowly, "That dog is not mean. He won't hurt you."

Her husband says, "I got a dog in the car. I don't want him to jump out."

The tape then shows the Smoaks' medium-size brown dog romping on the shoulder of the Interstate, its tail wagging. As the family yells, the dog, named Patton, first heads away from the road, then quickly circles back toward the family.

An officer in a blue uniform aims his shotgun at the dog and fires at its head, killing it immediately.

For several moments, all that is audible are shrieks as the family reacts to the shooting. James Smoak even stands up, but officers pull him back down.

"Y'all shot my dog! Y'all shot my dog!" James Smoak cries. "Oh my God! God Almighty!"
"You shot my dog!" screams his wife, distraught and still handcuffed. "Why'd you kill our dog?"

"Jesus, tell me, why did y'all shoot my dog?" James Smoak says.

The officers bring him to the patrol car, and the family calms down, but still they ask the officers for an explanation. One of them says Patton was "going after" the officer.

"No he wasn't, man," James Smoak says. "Y'all didn't have to kill the dog like that."

Brandon told CNN that Patton, was playful and gentle -- "like Scooby-Doo" -- and may have simply gone after the beam of the flashlight as he often did at home, when Brandon and the dog would play.

The Tennessee Department of Safety, which oversees the Highway Patrol, has said an investigation is underway.

'Could have been avoided'

Cookeville Police Chief Robert Terry released a statement on the department's Web site Wednesday night describing the department's regret over the incident. The Cookeville Police Department site was not responding Thursday morning.

"I know the officer wishes that circumstances could have been different so he could have prevented shooting the dog," Terry wrote. "It is never gratifying to have to put an animal down, especially a family pet, and the officer assures me that he never displayed any satisfaction in doing so."

Terry said he and the vice-mayor of Cookeville met with the family before they left "to convey our deepest sympathies" for the loss of their dog.

"No one wants to experience this kind of thing, and it's very unfortunate that it occurred," he wrote. "If we had the benefit of hindsight, I'm sure some -- if not all of this -- could have been avoided. I believe the Tennessee Highway Patrol feels the same way."

The department is conducting an investigation to determine what, if anything, could have been done differently, he said. Police also plan to be in contact with the Smoak family, Terry said.

The Smoaks buried their pet at home. A white cross marks the grave.
 
i heard about that this morning, very sad indeed, i hope they sue their asses off, what kind of dog was it?
 
Yeah I heard that shit this morning as well, thats just sad.

The dog looked as if it was wagging its tail, froliccing on the shoulder

Why or how the fuck did the cop feel threatened.

If thats the kind of officers we have that cant make a judgement call this is a sad thing and I hope he does not make that bad judgement call towards a person.
 
I hate those trigger happy pigs. That cop should be sent killed.
 
These cops are related to the dumbasses that would search a persons's house because they use steroids.
 
AROUND THE CORNER FROM ME, A ROTTWEILER WAS IN HIS FRONT YARD. THE OWNER WASNT HOME. THE DOG WAS WELL TRAINED AND DIDNT LEAVE HIS YARD. A JOGGER WAS RUNNING ON THE SIDEWALK IN THE YARD THAT THE DOG WAS IN. I'M NOT SURE WHAT TRANSPIRED BETWEEN THE DOG AND JOGGER BUT I DO KNOW NOONE WAS BITTEN OR ANYTHING LIKE THAT.

ANYWAY, THE DOG WENT BACK IN THE HOUSE (THE DOOR WAS CRACKED OPEN, THATS HOW HE GOT OUT) AND WENT UPSTAIRS. THE DOOR WAS NOW CLOSED. THE DOG MUST HAVE CLOSE IT WHILE TRYING TO GET BACK OUT OR SOMETHING. MY DOG REGULARLY CLOSES MY KITCHEN DOOR BY PUSHING ON IT.

WELL, THE COPS WERE CALLED. PEOPLE SAW A COP GO INSIDE THE HOUSE AFTER OPENING THE DOOR. OF COURSE THE DOG IS GOING TO GROWL WHEN A STANGER COMES IN ALONE SO THE COP SHOT THE DOG IN THE MOUTH.

THE DOG DIDNT EVEN DIE. IT HAD TO BE TAKEN TO THE VET AND PUT TO SLEEP. THE COP ENTERED THE HOUSE AFTER THE DOOR WAS CLOSED AND SHOT THE DOG CUZ HE "SHOWED AGGRESSION". OF COURSE HE IS GOING TO SHOW AGGRESSION. ITS HIS FUCKING HOUSE!!!

THE JOGGER WAS THE ONE WHO CALLED THE POLICE AND MADE A BIG SPECTACLE ABOUT THE DOG. THE COPS DIDNT EVEN PAY FOR THE VET TO PUT THE DOG DOWN. I WOULD HAVE KILLED THAT FUCKING COP. A YOUNG, GUNG HO COP JUST TRYING TO BE COOL. HE SHOULDNT HAVE EVEN WENT BACK INTO THE HOUSE ONCE HE SAW THE DOOR WAS CLOSED AGAIN.



KAYNE


PS...IT NVR MADE ANY PAPERS THOUGH.
 
2Thick said:
Kayne, that's bullshit!!

The dog was just protecting the house from an illegal entry.

WHATS BULLSHIT? MY ACCOUNT OF THE INCIDENT? OR THE COP SHOOTING THE DOG?


KAYNE
 
2Thick said:


You are one defensive, bastard.

Of course I was talking about the cop killing the poor dog.


LOL........FORGIVE ME IF I HAD A CYNICAL VIEW TOWARDS YOUR POST.

YEAH, THATS WHAT I WAS SAYING. THAT FUCKING COP SHOULDNT HAVE EVEN WENT INTO THE HOUSE ONCE HE SAW THE DOOR WAS CLOSED. FUCKING BASTARD COP.

HE TRIED TO SHOOT THE DOG IN THE HEAD. HE HIT HIM IN THE JAW. I WOULD HAVE KILLED THAT COP.


KAYNE
 
holy ass

i'm in knoxville and that was in the paper here - the article ran said they officers thought the dog was a pit bull. that dog looked like a joke, and it was wagging its tail... i may be a 3 year old retarded chimp, but i was always under the impression wagging tails = happy, tail between legs = mad.
 
What a bitch cop. How many paperboys, mail carriers, joggers, etc. have to deal with dogs running at them every day? Maybe they should all start carrying shotguns also.
 
Murdering dogs - afraid that I would be in favour of capital punishment in this case. That cop deserves to be kneecapped for what he did....
 
watched the video this morning, i don't have sound on my computer at work, but that just makes my heart ache, i saw nothing agressive about the dogs actions. were there children in the car who had to witness this act? the cops seemed very agressive toward the man, i wonder what will happen with their so called "investigation"
 
Those pigs are still in denial. Watch the video and then read the official Cookeville Police Department statement below. They are fucking liars.

Rarely do we like to issue statements regarding a situation that's under investigation. But in an attempt to help clarify some of the information that has already been made public, I would like to share with the citizens of Cookeville what we currently know about the I-40 incident regarding the Smoak family as they traveled through here on Jan 1.

The first thing I would like to address is the fact that the Cookeville
Police Department was called in as back-up by the Tennessee Highway Patrol on this matter. Based on the information we were provided, our role was secondary to what the THP termed as a "felony" stop, a possible car-jacking. We provided this back-up, and were never in primary control of the scene.

Unfortunately, during the THP's process of gaining control of the situation, a very rare thing occured. The Smoaks had been traveling with family dogs, and one of them got loose. It appeared to be a pit bull, and as it exited the car, it clearly approached one of our officers in a threatening manner. Our officer first tried to call the dog down, but after it kept approaching aggressively and started to circle him, the officer took the only action he could to protect himself and gain control of the situation.

I know the officer wishes that circumstances could have been different so he could have prevented shooting the dog. It is never gratifying to have to put an animal down, especially a family pet, and the officer assures me that he never displayed any satisfaction in doing so.

Before the Smoak family left Cookeville, I, along with our Vice-Mayor, met with them personally to convey our deepest sympathies for their loss and for their experience. No one wants to experience this kind of thing, and it's very unfortunate that it occurred. If we had the benefit of hindsight, I'm sure some - if not all of this - could have been avoided. I believe the Tennessee Highway Patrol feels the same way.

Our investigation is underway to determine what, if anything, could have been done differently. We will also continue to be in contact with this family. I know it's small consolation to the Smoaks, but we want to learn from this situation and try to make sure it never happens again.

Chief Robert E. Terry
 
the link to the video is on the first page of this post freakmonster



regarding the statement, there is no way that dog looked like a pit, and i'm thinking the officer there had a better view than i would from this computer screen i'm sitting in front of. that dog looks like some sort of lab mix, and was obviously wagging his tail, and acting very non-agressively.
 
I am a huge Dog lover.
I am very upset over this entire situation
We will never know if the Dog was harmless and the cop made a big mistake, or it just looked so.
Please don't hold the real life logical response I am making.

My Shepherd/Lab mix has protected our property from trespassers on many occasions aggressively
and her tail is wagging the whole time as she runs after them.
She does not growl or bark until she is very close.
She is trained not to touch them unless ordered to do so or the family is threatened.

This is exactly the TYPICAL method of aggresive attack for American Staffordshire Terriers(Pits)..

Police make mistakes probably every minute across the country.
Some of them deadly for people. They are only human.
I'm sure there are hundreds if not thousands of cases of mailmen, UPS/fedEx and Police Officers getting tore up when doing thier jobs by family pets that justify the training and split second response training.
Cops get BS every day from criminals so unfortunatly it is Guilty until you are restrained in a felony stop if they have probable cause.
He is not going to leave you alone so he can ensure the safety of your pet in the car.

I also believe him when he states he feels bad for shooting the pet, but he made a split second decision in a dangerous Felony stop situation.

Regardless, it is a Sad story for everyone...
:bawling:
 
The Dept may not Legally be liable for replacement cost of the pet, or pain and suffering. The police officer has probable cause to pull them over.

I am sure they will settle something with the family out of court unless they have no compasion.

Yes, Sent Email's demanding compensation for the family for this mistake..
 
That's fucked up. This is one case where I hope the family sues the living shit out of those motherfuckers.

Goddamn, that's a sad story.
 
Here are more of their pussy excuses and a link to their website - anyone scared of a dog that small SHOULD BE embarassed, and SHOULD NOT BE a cop.

http://www.cookevillepolice.com/
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A37943-2003Jan10.html

NASHVILLE, Tenn. –– A traffic stop following erroneous reports of a robbery ended in heartbreak when the family dog bounded out of the car, his tail wagging, and was shot to death by police.

Now, the dog's owner wants the police officers punished, and the officer who pulled the trigger says he's been getting death threats.

"I don't ever want to see this happen to anybody else. That's why we can't let this go away," said James Smoak, who owned the 1½-year-old pit bull-boxer mix named Patton.

Cookeville Police Officer Eric Hall, who shot the dog, said Thursday that people are misjudging him.

"It's been very difficult, but a lot of people who've made comments don't know me," Hall said on WTVF-TV in Nashville. "It's kind of taken a life of its own where people are judging without knowing all the facts."

Smoak, a seafood salesman from Saluda, N.C., said he has contacted attorneys about the New Year's Day shooting and plans legal action.

He describes the family's ordeal as "a nightmare we can't wake up from," and says he will never forget having to load the dead dog into the car for the ride home.

The incident began when Tennessee state troopers and Cookeville police stopped the Smoaks' green station wagon as they were returning from a vacation in Nashville.

Another motorist had reported seeing money flying from the vehicle as it sped down Interstate 40, and authorities feared there had been a robbery.

They later discovered that the money – about $445 – was fluttering from Smoak's wallet, which he had mistakenly left on the car roof after pumping gas.

The patrol car videotape of the stop, released Wednesday by the Tennessee Highway Patrol, shows troopers ordering James and Pamela Smoak and their teenage son, Brandon, out of the car, and the three emerging with their hands up, getting on their knees and being handcuffed.

Then Patton bounds out, his tail wagging, and races toward Hall.

The video shows Hall stepping back, then firing his shotgun. Hall said he thought the dog was a pit bull and that he was about to attack him.

"I noticed that it trained in right on me; the dog's coming right at me," he said. "I yelled at the dog as I was backing up. I screamed at it; it kept advancing and barking in an aggressive manner. It's unfortunate what happened after that."

Hall, who said he has received death threats, was assigned to administrative duties pending an independent review. An internal police investigation found he didn't use excessive force.

The Tennessee Highway Patrol also concluded its troopers had probable cause to conduct the stop, though officials were still trying to determine how the Smoaks were suspected in a robbery that never happened.

Officers recovered most of the lost money, Smoak said, and officials later apologized, but he said the apologies rang hollow.

"At the scene they told us they made a mistake and that we were free to go," Smoak said. "No one was moved to say they were sorry."

"The dog was wagging his tail," he said. "It was completely trained."

Hall said he felt terrible when he learned that the Smoaks were innocent but maintains he reacted appropriately.

"With the knowledge I had at that time, I was so limited that I felt I did what I had to do," Hall said.

"If you could have felt what I felt after the whole incident was over," he said, "I thought, 'Oh, my goodness, how unfortunate for that family.'"

© 2003 The Associated Press
 
supernav said:
Cops slam little black kids heads into cars, stick plungers into their asses, and shoot and kill unarmed black men...

and you're expecting them to be civil to a barking dog????

of course it's gonna shot. Motor Vehicle laws require the family to have kept the dog secure inside the car. Ignorance of the law is what got their dog killed.

-= nav =-

This analogy makes no sense. What cops do to criminals has nothing to do with shooting a small dog in the head with a shotgun. Bottom line is that cop was a trigger happy redneck who just wanted to shoot something. Have you seen the video? The cop looks at least 6 feet tall and at least 200 lbs. All cops wear steel toed boots. The dog is TINY. He killed it because he wanted to. If the dog did actually bite him, one swift kick would have sent that thing running.
 
He could have waited til the dog was trying to attack (which it didnt).... or used his shotgun like a stick or bat if it attacked, he didnt need to shoot it. What a fucker...
 
supernav said:
I like how people keep failing to post that it was a pitbull.

If i'm walking to my car, and a pitbull barks and charges me...bet your ass i'm shooting it.

This was not some cute little fluffy lassie dog or a 10lb chihuahua.

-= nav =-

It wasn't a pit bull. It was a bull dog mix. It doesn't matter what you mix a bull dog with, it will still be a tame unagressive dog. Even if it was a pure bred pit, they are dog agressive not people agressive. Regardless of any of that, you can clearly see in the video that the dog wasn't charging.
 
supernav said:
I like how people keep failing to post that it was a pitbull.

If i'm walking to my car, and a pitbull barks and charges me...bet your ass i'm shooting it.

This was not some cute little fluffy lassie dog or a 10lb chihuahua.

-= nav =-

It looked like a small long-haired collie. Plus it is the cop's fault for not closing the door when the owner told them about the dog.
 
skaman607 said:
the reason that police departments have to hire cops like this are because no one wants the job

That is not true. Lots of people apply to be cops. Maybe everyone in his town is a redneck just like him. But to say nobody wants the job is incorrect. I know because I am trying right now.
 
skaman607 said:
but a lot of people flunk out of police academy, or don't pass the poly

Very true. For example: The police here will start with a pool of 500 people for two positions. The test will knock out 200. The interview will knock out another 200. The background check will knock out 90. The rest will enter the academy.
 
so let me rephrase that: the reason the police have to hire cops like that is because no one qualified wants the job.
 
Hard to say, the news shows a picture of the dog as a puppy, but in reality the dog was a full grown pit bull, it came out of the car waging it's tail, then when it sees the cop it looks like it went into attack mode.....still, if you kill a cop dog you get 1st degree murder, what happens when you kill a mans best friend, a family pet? i would be very mad, and want to kill the cop, but you can't do anything about it.
 
mr's, and mr'ss... guns are bad things and kill family pets in the wrong hands. if a americans-police-mounty person ever pulled a gun on doby my doberman i would lose it and say bad things which may indeed make that person turn on me and kill me instead.either way i lose...moral:guns kills dems tins.

me no want karma for dis statement, my dog made me say it., he deserve karma, not scream.
 
supernav said:
I like how people keep failing to post that it was a pitbull.

If i'm walking to my car, and a pitbull barks and charges me...bet your ass i'm shooting it.

This was not some cute little fluffy lassie dog or a 10lb chihuahua.

-= nav =-

PLEASE!!! that dog looked more like a golden lab than a pit to me... That wagging tail must've looked REAL threatening :rolleyes:
 
Wow-- so next time I kill someone I can say "Wow, in hindsight, I'm sure I wouldn't have killed this person... I can honestly say... in hindsight, I wouldn't have killed them... I'm sorry for this tragedy... I hope we can all get on with our lives..."

C-ditty
 
Too often today I see in the news where police aren't getting proper credit, or are getting picked on by the media.

Well, I read a story of how your police department pulled over a family (suspected of a crime) and shot their family dog... good job. You have effecitvely killed a family dog. It is always good to see taxpayer dollars put toward a greater cause.

I would also like to thank you for the new legal defense you have provided for felons. "I am sorry for killing person X... but, in hindsight, I'm sure I would not have killed that person and would have done things differently... I hope we can all get back on with our lives."

Your's in Sport

Citruscide

=== My e-mail to them
 
A cop shot my grandma's dog. It ran away and got covered in leaves and apparently he thought it was a swamp monster. Cause you know dirty brown poodles just scream swamp monster. Nothing happened to him.
 
supernav said:
I like how people keep failing to post that it was a pitbull.

-= nav =-

It was not a pit bull. I saw the in-dash video on CNN and it was obvious the cop screwed up. What pissed me off was the cop who was smiling will the driver was chewing his ass out.

If it was legal, I would hunt the fucker down and shoot his ass.....
 
Hayato said:
COOKEVILLE, Tennessee (CNN) -- Police video released Wednesday showed a North Carolina family kneeling and handcuffed, who shrieked as officers killed their dog -- which appeared to be playfully wagging its tail -- with a shotgun during a traffic stop.
The Smoak family was pulled over the evening of January 1 on Interstate 40 in eastern Tennessee by officers who mistakenly suspected them of a carjacking. An investigation showed James Smoak had simply left his wallet on the roof of his car at a gas station, and motorists who saw his money fly off the car as he drove away called police.

The family was driving through eastern Tennessee on their way home from a New Year trip to Nashville. They told CNN they are in the process of retaining a lawyer and considering legal action against the Cookeville, Tennessee, Police Department and the Tennessee Highway Patrol for what happened to them and their dog.

In the video, released by the highway patrol, officers are heard ordering the family, one by one, to get out of their car with their hands up. James Smoak and his wife, Pamela, and 17-year-old son Brandon are ordered onto their knees and handcuffed.

"What did I do?" James Smoak asks the officers.

"Sir, inside information is that you was involved in some type of robbery in Davidson County," the unidentified officer says.

Smoak and his wife protest incredulously, telling the officers that they are from South Carolina and that their mother and father-in-law are traveling in another car near them.

The Smoaks told CNN that as they knelt, handcuffed, they pleaded with officers to close the doors of their car so their two dogs would not escape, but the officers did not heed them.

Pamela Smoak is seen on the tape looking up at an officer, telling him slowly, "That dog is not mean. He won't hurt you."

Her husband says, "I got a dog in the car. I don't want him to jump out."

The tape then shows the Smoaks' medium-size brown dog romping on the shoulder of the Interstate, its tail wagging. As the family yells, the dog, named Patton, first heads away from the road, then quickly circles back toward the family.

An officer in a blue uniform aims his shotgun at the dog and fires at its head, killing it immediately.

For several moments, all that is audible are shrieks as the family reacts to the shooting. James Smoak even stands up, but officers pull him back down.

"Y'all shot my dog! Y'all shot my dog!" James Smoak cries. "Oh my God! God Almighty!"
"You shot my dog!" screams his wife, distraught and still handcuffed. "Why'd you kill our dog?"

"Jesus, tell me, why did y'all shoot my dog?" James Smoak says.

The officers bring him to the patrol car, and the family calms down, but still they ask the officers for an explanation. One of them says Patton was "going after" the officer.

"No he wasn't, man," James Smoak says. "Y'all didn't have to kill the dog like that."

Brandon told CNN that Patton, was playful and gentle -- "like Scooby-Doo" -- and may have simply gone after the beam of the flashlight as he often did at home, when Brandon and the dog would play.

The Tennessee Department of Safety, which oversees the Highway Patrol, has said an investigation is underway.

'Could have been avoided'

Cookeville Police Chief Robert Terry released a statement on the department's Web site Wednesday night describing the department's regret over the incident. The Cookeville Police Department site was not responding Thursday morning.

"I know the officer wishes that circumstances could have been different so he could have prevented shooting the dog," Terry wrote. "It is never gratifying to have to put an animal down, especially a family pet, and the officer assures me that he never displayed any satisfaction in doing so."

Terry said he and the vice-mayor of Cookeville met with the family before they left "to convey our deepest sympathies" for the loss of their dog.

"No one wants to experience this kind of thing, and it's very unfortunate that it occurred," he wrote. "If we had the benefit of hindsight, I'm sure some -- if not all of this -- could have been avoided. I believe the Tennessee Highway Patrol feels the same way."

The department is conducting an investigation to determine what, if anything, could have been done differently, he said. Police also plan to be in contact with the Smoak family, Terry said.

The Smoaks buried their pet at home. A white cross marks the grave.


How tragic. I wish all the US soldiers who died in Afghanistan and will die In Iraq to receive this kind of coverage.

Police did the right thing! Sueing the police is the worst you can do. Without the police keeping peace, all anarchy will break loose.

Police thought that this was a legit bust. If the dog charged them, and it did - it had to be put down. The dog isn't your cutie little harmless chuhuahia anyhow.
 
Re: Re: Re: Cop shoots innocent familys dog

2Thick said:


You're a bit slow, eh?

Have you ever gone through one of those shooting trials where you have about 2 seconds to react before someone bad blows you away or you shoot a pregnant woman by mistake?

If you had a dog run in front of you, would you swerve into a child into order to avoid hitting the dog?

Whatever, the possible danger to the cop was real. Maybe you haven't seen dog bites that ripped off the lower lip of a child or large gapes in someone's arm, but many people have.

Drug dealers often train their dogs to attack and kill, so there was no way for the cop to know what he was facing. Hindsight is wonderful.


You take NO chances when dealing with real criminals!

I can understand why it was done. Arresting police cannot predict a dog's behavior and will not take a chance of being attacked. I believe this is actually part of their professional training.
 
2Thick said:
Alex,

Common sense. Who carjacks someone or robs someone with their whole family and dogs with them? You have to be an idiot to assume that. Those cops were idiots. They deserve to be fired.

2Thick,

some criminals resort to stupid, and desperate measures.

Also, what kind of criminals have you ever encountered? What police procedures do you know? Maybe the cops went by the book, in which case it was not their fault. Are you saying that you know more than those policemen? What rank are you?


Maybe the family deserve to be fined for not properly securing a dog!
 
SSAlexSS said:


2Thick,

some criminals resort to stupid, and desperate measures.

Also, what kind of criminals have you ever encountered? What police procedures do you know? Maybe the cops went by the book, in which case it was not their fault. Are you saying that you know more than those policemen? What rank are you?


Maybe the family deserve to be fined for not properly securing a dog!

I am sending you a PM.
 
SSAlexSS said:




Maybe the family deserve to be fined for not properly securing a dog!


MAYBE YOUR FATHER DESERVES TO BE SUFFACATED WITH A PLASTIC BAG FOR NOT SPERMING ON YOUR MOMS FACE INSTEAD OF PROCREATING TO MAKE YOU.


KAYNE
 
KAYNE said:



MAYBE YOUR FATHER DESERVES TO BE SUFFACATED WITH A PLASTIC BAG FOR NOT SPERMING ON YOUR MOMS FACE INSTEAD OF PROCREATING TO MAKE YOU.


KAYNE

No shit. What a fucking Tool.
 
they never responded to my e amil. anybody else get one back? and i can't recall the last time i saw an "attack dog" wagging its tail.
 
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