|
Cruelty's legacy
The torture and death of puppy in Kansas has revived
calls to toughen penalties
BY TINA SUSMAN |
STAFF CORRESPONDENT
-
August 26, 2005
WICHITA, Kan. - Few thought the
tortured puppy would survive when he was brought, burned and bound with
wires, to the Heartland Animal Hospital on Aug. 1.
When veterinarians removed the ligatures, though, the black lab
struggled to his feet, despite a broken leg, wagged his tail, and licked
hospital manager Julie Breault's fingers.
The vets abandoned thoughts of euthanasia, the determined little dog was
dubbed Magnum, and his path toward recovery began dominating the news,
at times even eclipsing stories about Wichita's infamous BTK serial
killer, Dennis Rader.
It was fitting, then, that when
Magnum died of his hideous wounds five days later, Wichitans, hundreds
of whom attended a memorial for the puppy, were more than
grief-stricken. They were angry - so angry that they raised more than
$18,000 in reward money for information leading to Magnum's killer, and
have revived a long-fought battle to make animal cruelty a felony in
Kansas.
"I knew it would be taken a certain way. I just didn't know it would be
taken to this level," said Drew Bessey, superintendent of the Wichita
Animal Shelter, who in 14 years on the job had never seen anything like
it. The shelter's phone lines were tied up for days with people calling
in tips.
Since Magnum's discovery, four other dogs with chemical burns similar to
his have been brought to shelters in Wichita and neighboring Newton,
though officials don't know if the cases are related.
Kansas is one of nine states that still considers animal cruelty a
misdemeanor, so if any of the abusers are caught, they could receive
just a $2,500 fine and a year in jail. Even where animal cruelty is a
felony, some states, such as New York, consider it a felony only when
certain animals - usually dogs, cats or guide animals - are abused.
Attitudes are changing. A Wisconsin man got 12 years in 1997 for killing
a puppy and several cats, and in 2004, a California man who beheaded a
dog was given 25 years under the state's three-strikes law.
Still, animal advocates say the system lags behind a society that no
longer sees pets as mere property. "It really reflects misplaced
priorities when you can go to jail for a longer time for burning a
photograph of someone's dog than for burning a dog," said Michael
Markarian of the Humane Society of the United States. "The laws just
need to catch up with society's values."
Just as important, said Markarian, is the link psychologists and law
enforcement officials have found between people who abuse animals as
children, and who become violent adults. That has resonated loudly here
in Kansas, where Rader, who was sentenced to 10 life terms Aug. 18 for
the torture-murders of 10 people, told police he strangled dogs and cats
before moving on to people.
Kansas Sen. Dennis Haley, who for years has championed Scruffy's Law,
which would make animal cruelty a felony, said he hoped the revelation
"finally will give Scruffy's Law some legs" when he reintroduces the
legislation in January.
The bill arose from the 1997 death of Scruffy, a Yorkshire terrier, in
Kansas City, Kan. Four men, aged 17 to 21, shot the dog, then placed him
still alive into a bag and set it afire.
They filmed the entire event.
Haley, a Democrat in a Republican-dominated state, blames the bill's
failure to pass on several factors, including a "narrow, myopic agenda"
by some conservative lawmakers who he said want to link it to other
issues, such as abortion. Several of the scores of letters that people
have written to Kansas newspapers about Magnum's death, for example,
have lamented the public outcry over animal abuse at a time when
abortion is legal.
Animal-rights advocates say the law has faltered because some don't
consider it harsh enough. Under the class of felony mandated by
Scruffy's Law, first-time offenders could get probation, not jail time.
Haley prefers it that way. "I'd rather see a constructive attempt to
rehabilitate a person, not have them sitting in prison getting angrier
at animals," he said. Better, he said, to require animal abusers to get
professional counseling - as mandated in many states that consider
animal cruelty a felony.
At the Aug. 11 memorial for Magnum, animal lovers collected signatures
for petitions demanding passage of Scruffy's Law. They also passed out
Wanted posters advertising the reward money and showing Magnum, wrapped
in blankets, his forehead scorched to the skin and an IV tube protruding
from his tiny body.
Magnum was found when passersby heard pants coming from a trash bin.
When Animal Control officers brought the puppy to Heartland, Breault
said, he was covered in maggots and chemical burns. His legs had been
bound with wires that sliced into his skin. One paw had been stuffed
into his mouth.
He appeared to be recovering but took a turn for the worse Aug. 5 and
died.
At the memorial, mourners watched as his ashes were scattered beneath a
tree in the garden outside the animal hospital. Those who couldn't
attend dropped by later, bearing chew bones, dog dishes and animal
treats, which they placed under the tree. Many wept.
"No living being deserves to be treated like that," said Ashley Peckman,
a Heartland receptionist.
By Aug. 15, Bessey said, Animal Control officials were following several
leads, and he was hopeful the reward money would lead to Magnum's
killer.
"Somebody will rat out somebody," he said.
|