Jump to content

Two Met Police Dogs Left In Unventilated Vehicle Die


RottnBullies
 Share

Recommended Posts

LINK

Two Metropolitan Police dogs - a German Shepherd puppy and a working Belgian Malinois - have died after being left in an unventilated private vehicle.

Officers, who forced their way into the vehicle after being alerted, found both dogs collapsed on Sunday.

They were taken from the dog training centre in south-east London to an emergency vets, where both later died.

An inquiry into the incident has begun and the Independent Police Complaints Commission has been made aware.

The RSPCA, also investigating the incident at Keston, near Bromley, where temperatures reached almost 30C on Sunday, advised people not to leave dogs in vehicles "for any length of time" during hot weather.

'Tip of iceberg' An RSPCA spokeswoman said: "Every year, the RSPCA receives about 6,000 calls from members of the public worried about dogs that have been left in cars during hot weather.

"But this may only be the tip of the iceberg and many cases may be unreported.

"Even when it is just 22C outside, the heat in a car can rise to 47C within 60 minutes," she said.

The RSPCA reminded dog owners that leaving a window open or a bowl of water in the car makes little difference.

The spokeswoman added: "All dogs will suffer although some are more prone to heatstroke than others. Those which are old, young, short-nosed, long-haired, overweight, heavily muscled or with certain health conditions are more at risk."

It is the second time he has been responsible for the death of a dog left in a vehicle

LINK < More here

:mad

Link to comment
Share on other sites

That is heart breaking. I can only imagine what those poor dogs went through in that car. I feel for the Kennel attendants and police officers who tried to save them

Obviously he is remorseful and devastated as he tried to commit suicide but in the end he should have known after the first time.

RIP Puppies

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I can't believe a dog training institution would allow this to happen . . . how could they keep a trainer employed after he had killed a couple dogs by heat exposure . . . how could this have happened at a training facility? I'd say the system is broken . . .

They say : Mr Craven, 49, one of the country’s most experienced dog trainers, could face prosecution for animal cruelty when an inquiry by the RSPCA is completed. He also faces an internal misconduct investigation.

Why didn't this happen the first time he killed dogs by heat exposure?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share

×
×
  • Create New...