ABAJ: Courts are awarding significant damages to families whose dogs are killed by police

ABAJ: Courts are awarding significant damages to families whose dogs are killed by police by Arin Greenwood:

On Feb. 1, 2014, a Maryland police officer investigating a robbery shot and killed a family’s beloved dog.

Officer Rodney Price, who’d been on the force for a year, was in the waterfront neighborhood of the Baltimore suburb of Glen Burnie searching for witnesses. Price encountered Vern, the Reeves family’s 4-year-old Chesapeake Bay retriever, in the yard after knocking on the front door. He shot Vern twice after the dog went at him, he claimed.

. . .

According to the Baltimore Sun, Price said at the time that Vern had “confronted and attacked” him, provoking the shooting. “I unloaded on your dog. Your dog attacked me, and I killed it,” Price reportedly told the family.

The Reeves family filed suit against Anne Arundel County and Price. More than three years later, in May 2017, a jury awarded Michael Reeves, Vern’s primary owner, $1.26 million, the largest civil judgment in U.S. history for a pet’s death at the hands of police.

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