加拿大安大略省有一个56岁的人,帮一个朋友看管一只狗。他把这只狗用短绳栓在自家的院子里。因为狗对他叫,还咬他,他就用电工胶布把狗的嘴鼻封住。两小时后当他回来再看时发现狗死了,因此他被控虐待动物,前几天被判处4个月监禁加两年监视,并禁止他10年内不得拥有或住在有宠物的住所!
这条狗可能因为口鼻被封住窒息而死,也可能因为绳子太短使得狗无法转身,在恶劣的天气里憋死,因此当地曾经讨论立法,规定栓宠物的绳子长度不得少于多少长度,否则违法!
但不管这条狗的死因如何,很明显的是这不是蓄意谋杀,而是过失杀狗。这条不会说人话的狗,在加拿大已经受到了加拿大法律的保护。它的冤死已经逼着害它的人去坐牢了…
看了这条新闻让我感慨万千!在千里之外的祖国,那个被城管打死的瓜农,那个“被上吊”李旺阳,还有许许多多不知名的屈死鬼,他们曾经都是有血有肉的人,都是伟大祖国的公民,但他们的冤死却没有任何结果,谁都知道施暴者是谁,但施暴者依然逍遥法外,谁能够为他们的冤死伸张正义?
普通中国公民的尊严还不如人家的一条狗!
新闻来源如下,
A Belle River man convicted of killing a
dog by taping its muzzle shut served only four hours of a four-month jail
sentence Wednesday before being freed on bail pending appeal.
John Mackenzie,56, is appealing his
conviction for killing a dog and causing unnecessary pain and suffering to an
animal. In April 2012, he volunteered to look after a 40-kg German shepherd for
a friend who was in jail. Mackenzie kept the dog tied to a tree in the front
yard of his home on County Road 22.
The dog was on a short lead attached to a
choke collar.
The dog was barking and bit him, so
Mackenzie wrapped electrical tape around the dog’s muzzle. When he checked on
the animal hours two hours later, the dog was dead.
Ontario court Justice Gregory Campbell
called Mackenzie’s handling of the dog “wanton and callous.” He sentenced
Mackenzie to four months in jail followed by two years’ probation. He
prohibited Mackenzie from owning or living in a home with a pet for 10 years.
Mackenzie’s lawyer, Frank Miller, had
appeal paperwork ready before Campbell even passed sentence. Mackenzie appeared
in Superior Court later the same day when, on the consent of the Crown, Justice
Joseph Quinn granted him bail pending the outcome of his appeal.
Mackenzie was released on $2,000 bail. He
did not have to deposit any money with the court, but may be forced to pay it
if he fails to attend on future dates.
Quinn also prohibited Mackenzie from
living in a home with a pet.
When the same prohibition was imposed
earlier in the day, defence lawyer Frank Miller said it may lead to the
euthanizing of Mackenzie’s female Weimaraner, who recently had a litter of
puppies.
At the sentencing hearing, Miller called
Mackenzie a “responsible” pet owner.
But the sentencing judge said taping the
dog’s muzzle shut was “cruel.” Leaving the dog in that condition while tethered
to a tree with a choke collar was “reckless and criminal.”
“It was carried out with indifference to
the foreseeable consequences.”
Mackenzie has a long criminal record with
29 convictions spanning 40 years. When he killed the dog, Mackenzie was on
probation for assault.
He has not criminal record for animal
abuse.
“Mr. Mackenzie is not a person who runs
around hurting dogs,” Miller said.
“Mr. Mackenzie left a dog on a choke
chain and the dog strangled itself… It’s not like microwaving a cat.”
In his submissions to the judge, Miller
said, “there is a difference between the recklessness Your Honour found an
egregious act of cruelty.”
Campbell imposed the same jail term
handed to a Windsor man who tied a condom to his dog’s penis. In that 2010
case, Anjalo Abeywickrema was trying to prevent the Labrador retriever mix from
urinating and ejaculating in his apartment.
The dog ran away with the contraption
attached. Abeywikrema chased after the dog, but suffered a heart attack and had
to be hospitalized.
The dog was found a day later, its penis
bleeding and blackened. It was euthanized.
Assistant Crown attorney Scott Pratt said
there were mitigating factors not present in Mackenzie’s case. Abeywickrema
showed remorse by pleading guilty.
Pratt asked for a jail sentence of six
months and three years’ probation.
“Mr. Mackenzie created the situation that
killed the dog,” Pratt said.
But Mackenzie, addressing the court,
insisted he had not meant to kill the dog.
“I’m sorry what happened to the dog,” he
said. “It was an accident…I feel bad.”
Melanie Coulter, executive director of
the Windsor-Essex County Humane Society, said, despite Mackenzie’s release, she
is satisfied the courts were taking the case seriously.
“We’re pleased that the justice system
has said animal cruelty is an offence that should be punishable by a jail
sentence.”
She said Mackenzie should never be
allowed to own or live with animals again. “A prohibition is a key component
we’d like to see,” she said. “We think it should be for a lifetime.”
ssacheli@windsorstar.com
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