Pit Bull helps woman.

zoiks

Lifer
Jan 13, 2000
11,787
3
81
Text


Protective pit bull helps case
WOMAN'S DOG FOUGHT OFF INTRUDER, PROVIDED DNA CLUE THAT LED TO SUSPECT'S ARREST
By Sean Webby
Mercury News
Article Launched: 10/26/2007 01:36:15 AM PDT

Maya, the pitbull who fended off an attacker from her owner. Police found blood on the dog's...

This was a pit bull mauling everyone can cheer.

Except Anthony Easley.

Easley, 37, was arraigned Thursday on charges of an attempted sexual assault and burglary that took place four months ago in San Jose. It was an attack stopped, and ultimately solved, authorities say, by the ferocious protectiveness of Maya, a 4-year-old pit bull who ended up with the suspect's blood on her face.

The sun was just coming up June 17 and the 31-year-old single mom - who asked not to be identified - was coming back to an empty house. Although she had spent the evening celebrating her birthday at the San Pablo Casino, her spirits were low - she had recently lost her job.

As she started to unlock her front door, she saw a shadow out of the corner of her eye. Someone shoved her from behind.

"My boyfriend works for the police department," she screamed at the mysterious intruder, "and he will be home any minute."

The desperate fib died in her throat as the man began strangling her. "Shut up," he growled as she tried to stab him with her keys.

"Then, I saw my dog's white streak coming from the other room," the victim said. "Maya," she gurgled, "get him!"

Maya attacked. She had always been a gentle dog, ever since the victim adopted the pit bull mix as a puppy from the Humane Society, falling in love with the white dog with brown spots and floppy ears.

Now, Maya was tearing and ripping the stranger's arms.

The man tried to fight off
Advertisement
Maya with one hand while keeping his other hand around the woman's throat.

"That's when I grabbed him," said the victim, "where the sun doesn't shine."

At that very painful moment, the attacker let her go.

With Maya snarling and snapping, the attacker gave up. The victim held Maya by her collar as the attacker fled.

When San Jose police officers Iain Fry and Chris Kubasta arrived at the house they didn't find much beyond the signs of a violent struggle. But then, they noticed what looked like a smudge of red above the dog's right eye - possibly the suspect's blood and DNA evidence.

Because Maya was frenzied the victim had to hold her behind a door, while the officer reached around and swabbed a spot just above the dog's snapping teeth - once, twice, three times.

Even Fry didn't think much would come of the sample.

"We never thought they would even run 'em," Fry said of the swabs. "I mean, there's no way - you are talking about one drop of blood on a dog's head. A million to one."

The victim's descriptions helped create a composite sketch.

After checking all sex registrants and other violent parolees in the area, detective Ryan Kimber ran out of leads within a few days.

"In these stranger cases, where there is no relationship between the attacker and the victim, well, those can be very difficult to solve," said Lt. Mark McIninch, who heads San Jose police's Sexual Assault Investigations Unit.

Maya was now hyper-protective, snarling at anyone who came too close to the house or to the woman and her 11-year-old son. Always proud of her strength and independence, the woman said that after the attack, she was scared, depressed, barely able to get out of the house and crying all the time.

"I thought he would come back all pissed off," she said, "and finish off what he did."

But months later, Fry and Kubasta's diligence paid off.

The Santa Clara County crime lab extracted human DNA from the swab. It was then matched through the state's database of samples taken from anyone convicted of a felony and those arrested or charged with a homicide or sex offense. Ultimately, all information led to Easley, police and prosecutors said.

"It was the saving grace and one of those 'above and beyond' efforts," Kimber said of the police work. "It's what saved this case."

Easley was previously convicted of two sexual felonies in Solano County, according to court documents. He also was convicted of robbery in Contra Costa County. Now, as a third striker, he faces life in prison if convicted, said Santa Clara County prosecutor Michael Fletcher.

When San Jose police called detective J. Melville in Vallejo, he volunteered to find the suspect. Several hours later, he did. Easley lived near the police department.

Kimber told the victim, who had bought a two-pound steak for Maya after the attack.

The woman went home and cried. She hugged Maya.

"What," she said "would I do without you?"
 

d33pt

Diamond Member
Jan 12, 2001
5,654
1
81
what a nice story. good change of pace from the "all pitbulls should die" stories.
 

zinfamous

No Lifer
Jul 12, 2006
110,806
29,557
146
I have a feeling there are more of these stories out there, maybe at least as many as there are for attacks. the uninformed media/public, however, choose to stick to the isolated attack stories.
 

HN

Diamond Member
Jan 19, 2001
8,186
4
0
wtf does the author keep splitting up the quotes?
"My boyfriend works for the police department," she screamed at the mysterious intruder, "and he will be home any minute."
"Maya," she gurgled, "get him!"
"That's when I grabbed him," said the victim, "where the sun doesn't shine."
"I thought he would come back all pissed off," she said, "and finish off what he did."
"What," she said "would I do without you?"

it's really that last one that bugs me. oh, and what kind of doggy name is Advertisement Maya? i need coffee.
 

djheater

Lifer
Mar 19, 2001
14,637
2
0
Pit bulls are game defenders of their family.

The problem is that a pit won't stop attacking once it starts, and this one is likely no exception. for example she was unable to settle the dog when the officers came...
While it's great that she was defended if the pit miscues on a strange child in the yard...

If she wants that protection get a german sheperd, or a doberman...

 

Captante

Lifer
Oct 20, 2003
30,305
10,804
136
Originally posted by: zinfamous
I have a feeling there are more of these stories out there, maybe at least as many as there are for attacks. the uninformed media/public, however, choose to stick to the isolated attack stories.


Unfortunately these type of stories arn't as good for ratings.
 

0roo0roo

No Lifer
Sep 21, 2002
64,862
84
91
ugh dogs other than pitbulls will also protect their owners. so i don't see how this makes up for all the innocent people killed or maimed.
 

Turin39789

Lifer
Nov 21, 2000
12,219
8
81
Originally posted by: 0roo0roo
ugh dogs other than pitbulls will also protect their owners. so i don't see how this makes up for all the innocent people killed or maimed.

dogs other than pit bulls will kill or maim innocents
 

Triumph

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
15,031
13
81
Well the pitbull still had a taste for blood. It's like using the dog's powers of evil for good.
 

tranceport

Diamond Member
Aug 8, 2000
4,168
1
81
www.thesystemsengineer.com
We have a pit bull mix. She would get a long with the devil. We have an 8 month old in the house. The 2 get a long fine. I'd love to make a website that has pictures of young kids and pit bulls getting a long to strike back at the media.. But I'm lazy. This post will have to do.




edit: Oh yea. My dog has a tattoo. That makes her badass.
 

zinfamous

No Lifer
Jul 12, 2006
110,806
29,557
146
Originally posted by: tranceport
We have a pit bull mix. She would get a long with the devil. We have an 8 month old in the house. The 2 get a long fine. I'd love to make a website that has pictures of young kids and pit bulls getting a long to strike back at the media.. But I'm lazy. This post will have to do.




edit: Oh yea. My dog has a tattoo. That makes her badass.


that sounds like a badass dog

:beer:
 

Tiamat

Lifer
Nov 25, 2003
14,074
5
71
"Kimber told the victim, who had bought a two-pound steak for Maya after the attack."

It was all for the steak.
 

pulse8

Lifer
May 3, 2000
20,860
1
81
It helped her by mauling someone in defense. It's not like it helped her carry her groceries or saved her from a burning house. The dog simply mauled the right person this time. This doesn't prove that pit bulls can't be dangerous dogs.
 

jonmcc33

Banned
Feb 24, 2002
1,504
0
0
Pit bulls are great animals that are protective of their owners. This was a fine example. The dog would have given it's life to save it's owner if needed. It's only the thugs and piece of crap in the world that realized how much these dogs are capable of to please their master so they turn them violent. Dogs are man's best friend for a VERY good reason: Unconditional love and sacrifice for their master.
 

BUTCH1

Lifer
Jul 15, 2000
20,433
1,769
126
Originally posted by: djheater
Pit bulls are game defenders of their family.

The problem is that a pit won't stop attacking once it starts, and this one is likely no exception. for example she was unable to settle the dog when the officers came...
While it's great that she was defended if the pit miscues on a strange child in the yard...

If she wants that protection get a german sheperd, or a doberman...

We had a Shepard for 12 yrs and now have a pit for 2 yrs. The Shepard was more
intelligent but didn't like anything coming around the house. Our pit will react if it
detects anything unusual, ie; I came home with groceries the other day and by accident
a juice bottle slammed the door just as I was opening it, my pit quickly ran to the door
with a loud bark to defend if necessary. I can go to work knowing my wife is protected
without her having to learn to use a gun, which she will not. Although ours is small (42lbs)
she can move incredibly fast and has the chops to back it up..
 

AnonymouseUser

Diamond Member
May 14, 2003
9,943
107
106
There are other dogs that are protective of their owners. These other dogs also rarely turn on their owners. They also kill far fewer people.

This story doesn't change the fact that all pitbulls should be destroyed.
 

MegaVovaN

Diamond Member
May 20, 2005
4,131
0
0
All pit bulls should die anyway.
Woman just got lucky that it was attacker mauled, not an innocent person.
And now pit bull would growl and maybe attack everyone - it got a sweet taste of blood.
 

BUTCH1

Lifer
Jul 15, 2000
20,433
1,769
126
Originally posted by: MegaVovaN
All pit bulls should die anyway.
Woman just got lucky that it was attacker mauled, not an innocent person.
And now pit bull would growl and maybe attack everyone - it got a sweet taste of blood.

Did you read the OP's post?? the woman was being "STRANGLED" when the dog
attacked!, "lucky" had nothing to do with it, would you like your dog to lick someone
face if they were trying to rape your SO???geez..
 

MegaVovaN

Diamond Member
May 20, 2005
4,131
0
0
Originally posted by: BUTCH1
Originally posted by: MegaVovaN
All pit bulls should die anyway.
Woman just got lucky that it was attacker mauled, not an innocent person.
And now pit bull would growl and maybe attack everyone - it got a sweet taste of blood.

Did you read the OP's post?? the woman was being "STRANGLED" when the dog
attacked!, "lucky" had nothing to do with it, would you like your dog to lick someone
face if they were trying to rape your SO???geez..

Guess I didn't word it well. In this particular case, the evil powers of pit bull were used for good, to save the woman. That alone does not make up for all the problems pit bulls have caused and have potential to cause in future.
 

moshquerade

No Lifer
Nov 1, 2001
61,713
12
56
Originally posted by: zoiks
Text


Protective pit bull helps case
WOMAN'S DOG FOUGHT OFF INTRUDER, PROVIDED DNA CLUE THAT LED TO SUSPECT'S ARREST
By Sean Webby
Mercury News
Article Launched: 10/26/2007 01:36:15 AM PDT

Maya, the pitbull who fended off an attacker from her owner. Police found blood on the dog's...

This was a pit bull mauling everyone can cheer.

Except Anthony Easley.

Easley, 37, was arraigned Thursday on charges of an attempted sexual assault and burglary that took place four months ago in San Jose. It was an attack stopped, and ultimately solved, authorities say, by the ferocious protectiveness of Maya, a 4-year-old pit bull who ended up with the suspect's blood on her face.

The sun was just coming up June 17 and the 31-year-old single mom - who asked not to be identified - was coming back to an empty house. Although she had spent the evening celebrating her birthday at the San Pablo Casino, her spirits were low - she had recently lost her job.

As she started to unlock her front door, she saw a shadow out of the corner of her eye. Someone shoved her from behind.

"My boyfriend works for the police department," she screamed at the mysterious intruder, "and he will be home any minute."

The desperate fib died in her throat as the man began strangling her. "Shut up," he growled as she tried to stab him with her keys.

"Then, I saw my dog's white streak coming from the other room," the victim said. "Maya," she gurgled, "get him!"

Maya attacked. She had always been a gentle dog, ever since the victim adopted the pit bull mix as a puppy from the Humane Society, falling in love with the white dog with brown spots and floppy ears.

Now, Maya was tearing and ripping the stranger's arms.

The man tried to fight off
Advertisement
Maya with one hand while keeping his other hand around the woman's throat.

"That's when I grabbed him," said the victim, "where the sun doesn't shine."

At that very painful moment, the attacker let her go.

With Maya snarling and snapping, the attacker gave up. The victim held Maya by her collar as the attacker fled.

When San Jose police officers Iain Fry and Chris Kubasta arrived at the house they didn't find much beyond the signs of a violent struggle. But then, they noticed what looked like a smudge of red above the dog's right eye - possibly the suspect's blood and DNA evidence.

Because Maya was frenzied the victim had to hold her behind a door, while the officer reached around and swabbed a spot just above the dog's snapping teeth - once, twice, three times.

Even Fry didn't think much would come of the sample.

"We never thought they would even run 'em," Fry said of the swabs. "I mean, there's no way - you are talking about one drop of blood on a dog's head. A million to one."

The victim's descriptions helped create a composite sketch.

After checking all sex registrants and other violent parolees in the area, detective Ryan Kimber ran out of leads within a few days.

"In these stranger cases, where there is no relationship between the attacker and the victim, well, those can be very difficult to solve," said Lt. Mark McIninch, who heads San Jose police's Sexual Assault Investigations Unit.

Maya was now hyper-protective, snarling at anyone who came too close to the house or to the woman and her 11-year-old son. Always proud of her strength and independence, the woman said that after the attack, she was scared, depressed, barely able to get out of the house and crying all the time.

"I thought he would come back all pissed off," she said, "and finish off what he did."

But months later, Fry and Kubasta's diligence paid off.

The Santa Clara County crime lab extracted human DNA from the swab. It was then matched through the state's database of samples taken from anyone convicted of a felony and those arrested or charged with a homicide or sex offense. Ultimately, all information led to Easley, police and prosecutors said.

"It was the saving grace and one of those 'above and beyond' efforts," Kimber said of the police work. "It's what saved this case."

Easley was previously convicted of two sexual felonies in Solano County, according to court documents. He also was convicted of robbery in Contra Costa County. Now, as a third striker, he faces life in prison if convicted, said Santa Clara County prosecutor Michael Fletcher.

When San Jose police called detective J. Melville in Vallejo, he volunteered to find the suspect. Several hours later, he did. Easley lived near the police department.

Kimber told the victim, who had bought a two-pound steak for Maya after the attack.

The woman went home and cried. She hugged Maya.

"What," she said "would I do without you?"

awesome :thumbsup:
 

SuperFreaky

Golden Member
Nov 1, 1999
1,985
0
0
Originally posted by: pulse8
It helped her by mauling someone in defense. It's not like it helped her carry her groceries or saved her from a burning house. The dog simply mauled the right person this time. This doesn't prove that pit bulls can't be dangerous dogs.

Thats what I was thinking...
 

Turin39789

Lifer
Nov 21, 2000
12,219
8
81
Originally posted by: pulse8
It helped her by mauling someone in defense. It's not like it helped her carry her groceries or saved her from a burning house. The dog simply mauled the right person this time. This doesn't prove that pit bulls can't be dangerous dogs.

I dont know too many dogs that carry groceries, sometimes I try to balance things on my great danes back, but he's not great at carrying stuff.

As far as pit bulls saving people from fires -

Dog Saves Family From Burning House

Dog Tries To Save Owner In Burning House




Pit bulls only as dangerous as their owners, ASPCA tells city

"More people are killed by lightning each year," she said. But the media quickly picks up on pit bull attacks, she noted, even when other, more severe dog attacks occur. On June 9, she said, 41 publications covered a girl who was seriously, but not critically, injured by two pit bulls. On the same day, a boy who needed 300 stitches after being mauled by a Labrador retriever-mix drew coverage from only two papers.

"In the '70s, it was the doberman," VanKavage said. "In the '80s, it was the German shepherd. In the '90s it was the rottweiler and now it's the pit bull. But getting rid of the breed doesn't get rid of the problem."

So if it's not any one breed, what makes a dog likely to attack? The two women listed three main factors.

? 90 percent of fatal dog attacks came from animals that were not spayed or neutered.

? 81 percent of fatal dog attacks came from animals that were not maintained as a pet, but were instead isolated from the family and regular human contact.

? 61 percent of those attacks came from animals that were not humanely controlled, or had in some way been abused or neglected.

 
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