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Friday, January 31, 2014

Sleeping Elderly Woman Awakes to Police Dog Attack

BY : Amanda Warren

Katharina Lambert, age 88, was sleeping in her own home in San Bernardino, California.

At around 11:30 p.m. on Jan. 23rd, 2013, her silent burglar alarm allegedly went active.

If true, as police say, this does not explain the way they responded. With no warrants, no pressing circumstances, no announcement and no warning about a dog; three officers entered her home and officer J. Echevarria released an attack dog that quickly went to her bedroom.

Lambert awoke to vicious bites to her arm and shoulder causing serious injuries like puncture wounds and severe bruising, she says. Echevarria had to physically remove the dog from Lambert to stop the attack.

She also claims that medical treatment was delayed and that the department knew about her severe hearing impairment. She doesn't pull punches when it comes to accountability. She is personally zeroing in on everyone involved and believes that the culture of San Bernardino police encourages the idea that "it is permissible to unlawfully enter a person's home, deploy a police K-9 to attack innocent people, refuse to accommodate a disabled person, and delay prompt medical care."


She is now suing San Bernardino, Police Chief Robert Handy and Officers J. Castro, S. Aranda and J. Echevarria, in Federal Court. She seeks punitive damages for "unlawful entry, excessive force, municipal liability, supervisor liability, Americans with Disabilities Act violations, strict liability, battery, intentional infliction of emotional distress and negligence." (Source)

Whether the victims are sleeping or not, the more police sic attack dogs on citizens, the less it appears accidental. Here is a sampling of sleeping victims, sometimes with deadly results:
An officer who defended a police dog that attacked a playing child came up with some excuses for the incident. One of them was that a police dog "can’t differentiate between a playing boy and a crime suspect." Comforting revelation. And, "Anything running, they’re trained ... could be a potential threat. And all he’s doing is reacting and doing what he was trained to do."

Okay - setting aside the whole debacle of police breaking into homes in SWAT-style raids - then why are police dogs increasingly attacking sleeping people - often innocent people? Notably, police dogs and their handlers are often defended for "proper procedure," meanwhile, police often shoot homeowners' dogs on leashes.

Image source: DailyMail

Recent other articles by Amanda Warren

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