The owners of the dead and injured dog, Margaret Speer and Joe Ellis, as well as witnesses and supporters, spoke at the Sierra County Commission regular meeting, Tuesday, Sept. 17. They urged the county to adopt a local dog ordinance requiring they be on leash in public spaces, among other measures.
The County Commission decided to hold a public workshop and do research to determine if a county law should be enacted and what it might contain and if it would require forming a whole new animal-control department.
Both Speer and Ellis pointed out they and others were bitten, yet the offending dogs had not been quarantined for 14 days, as required by state law, to determine if they were rabid. Nor have they been told if the offending-dogs owners’ had produced evidence their dogs had current rabies vaccinations.
Sheriff Glenn Hamilton, whose deputies responded to the calls, said the offending dog involved in the Ellis incident was not taken at the scene because it had been mortally injured and was allowed to be taken to a veterinarian.
Ellis said the dog was off leash, looked like a pit bull and he used his pocket knife on it while defending his small, elderly dog.
“My dog and myself were bleeding profusely,” Ellis said. The attacking-dog’s owner “was yelling,” and has since “made death threats and is unremorseful on Facebook.”
Hamilton did not explain why the offending dog in the Speer incident had not been picked up at the scene, nor why neither offending dog has been picked up and quarantined subsequently. Speer’s incident occurred August 9 and Ellis’ about two weeks later.
The Speer incident report was included in the County Commission packet, but not for the Ellis incident, and a public records request was not fulfilled by press time. It is therefore unknown who the offending dog owner is for the Ellis attack.
Robert Gagnon is the offending-dog owner in the Speer incident.
Gagnon gave a false or old address to Deputy Grant Taylor, who responded to the Speer incident. Speer did not stick around, but drove her dog to a veterinarian in Las Cruces for emergency care. Speer’s son and his friend represented Speer when Taylor arrived at the scene. Gagnon and his friend also spoke to Taylor at the scene.
Speer, in a separate interview, said Taylor later told her he didn’t take the offending dog because Speer wasn’t at the scene.
Speer’s dog was a 17-pound blue heeler mix named Simon. His injuries were too great and he was put down 14 days after the attack. Speer said the attack dog looked like a pit bull. She “emptied two cans of pepper spray into the dog’s eyes,” but it wouldn’t let go. According to the deputy’s report, Gagnon’s friend choked it, the dog releasing Simon to breathe.
According to Taylor’s report, Gagnon and his friend said the dog was on a leash in the back of the truck, but broke the leash, escaping up a hill and then veering to attack Speer’s dog.
“He had a choker collar on the pit bull,” Speer said, in a separate interview. “All he had to do was put a leash on it and I would still have my dog.”
County Commissioner Frances Luna pointed out the county has had an Animal Control Joint Powers Agreement with the city for many years, which states dogs needing to be quarantined will be picked up by the city Animal Control Officer for a fee. “I hope these dogs were not picked up because we were too cheap to pay a $30 fee,” she said.