Jun 28, 2006 Pit bull impounded after attack, police say
WHEELING — Authorities have impounded a pit bull owned by a Wheeling woman who was cited last week with failing to keep her dog on a leash and failing to have a valid Cook County rabies tag after the animal bit a 72-year-old man, police said Tuesday.
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Chicago Tribune Accessed: 2012-04-22. (Archived by WebCite® at http://www.webcitation.org/677Z0KFl2)
Jun 06, 2006 Three Wheaton Pit Bulls Attack Poodle
Wheaton - Tootsie was clearly outnumbered.
The small Maltese poodle saw the three pit bulls coming and tried to hide behind a bush in Wheaton. But before she knew it, one pit bull had her on one end, and the second had her other end.
"They were pulling on her just like a rag doll," said Tootsie's neighbor Keith Kolar.
Kolar and Tootsie's owner, Frank Cacciato, wouldn't let Tootsie go down without a fight.
The two men, who had been working in their front yards in the 2300 block of Albright Lane on Friday evening when they saw the pit bulls attack, ran after them, trying everything they could to pull Tootsie away.
Cacciato ended up with a broken finger and sprained hand; Kolar, with bites in his hand, forearm and leg. Tootsie was left with bite marks across her neck, and 30 doggie stitches to boot.
One of the pit bulls met his end with Cacciato's bat. A second was taken away by Wheaton Animal Control. The third returned home to the 2300 block of Richmond Drive, where the dog's owners told police they have an electric invisible fence, but it was broken. The owners could not be reached for comment.
Police are investigating whether to charge the owners, Wheaton police Cmdr. Terry Mee said Monday.
Tootsie is still recuperating.
"She's not talking. Not barking," said Frank Cacciato's wife, Kathy. "But give her some time, and she'll be begging again."
It was the second incident involving pit bulls over the weekend.
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Chicago Tribune
Related posts:
DuPage County Attacks
The small Maltese poodle saw the three pit bulls coming and tried to hide behind a bush in Wheaton. But before she knew it, one pit bull had her on one end, and the second had her other end.
"They were pulling on her just like a rag doll," said Tootsie's neighbor Keith Kolar.
Kolar and Tootsie's owner, Frank Cacciato, wouldn't let Tootsie go down without a fight.
The two men, who had been working in their front yards in the 2300 block of Albright Lane on Friday evening when they saw the pit bulls attack, ran after them, trying everything they could to pull Tootsie away.
Cacciato ended up with a broken finger and sprained hand; Kolar, with bites in his hand, forearm and leg. Tootsie was left with bite marks across her neck, and 30 doggie stitches to boot.
One of the pit bulls met his end with Cacciato's bat. A second was taken away by Wheaton Animal Control. The third returned home to the 2300 block of Richmond Drive, where the dog's owners told police they have an electric invisible fence, but it was broken. The owners could not be reached for comment.
Police are investigating whether to charge the owners, Wheaton police Cmdr. Terry Mee said Monday.
Tootsie is still recuperating.
"She's not talking. Not barking," said Frank Cacciato's wife, Kathy. "But give her some time, and she'll be begging again."
It was the second incident involving pit bulls over the weekend.
Read more:
Chicago Tribune
Related posts:
DuPage County Attacks
Jun 04, 2006 Aurora Pit Bulls Maul Two Women
Aurora - Screaming, punching and kicking, two Aurora women fought off two pit bulls early Saturday, but not before suffering wounds that sent both women to a local hospital.
"They tried to eat us for dinner," a tearful Joan Ware, 44, recalled Saturday afternoon, soon after leaving Rush-Copley Medical Center with 25 stitches on her legs. Ware and friend Katrina Harden, 33, who received five stitches on her left arm, were walking home from a neighbor's house about 3:30 a.m. Saturday when the two roaming dogs attacked.
"We didn't see them until they came between the cars," said Harden, who lives across the street from Ware on the 900 block of 2nd Avenue, where the attack occurred. "We were their target."
After arriving on the scene, Aurora police shot one of the dogs, a 2- or 3-year-old male, and the dog was euthanized later, police spokesman Dan Ferrelli said. The other dog ran away and had not been found by evening. Nor had police determined if the dogs, which were without collars or tags, belonged to anyone.
The incident occurred less than a week after police in Indiana's Lake County seized 15 adult pit bulls and one puppy in a Calumet Township home, where authorities said electric prods, a treadmill, medications and other alleged fighting equipment were discovered. And on Wednesday, Gov. Blagojevich signed three bills that increase penalties for people who allow dangerous animals to run loose or use them to commit crimes.
The Aurora City Council in 2000 put some restrictions on vicious animals, but efforts to restrict ownership of large-breed dogs in the city have failed, said Ald. Stephanie Kifowit.
"I consider pit bulls to be a large-breed dog. They are big, they are all muscle," she said. "We need to dig deep and start looking at our ordinance."
Kifowit said the source of the problem could be more common pit-bull breeding in Aurora.
"You see signs everywhere, `pit bull puppies for sale,'" Kifowit said.
"We need to start looking at more owner responsibility. We must crack down."
Another Aurora alderman, John "Whitey" Peters, agreed that a new ordinance or revision of a current one might be needed.
As for Ware, she said that if the two dogs have owners, she has a message for them: "They should be ashamed of themselves."
Read more:
Chicago Tribune
http://bit.ly/1G1kQks
Read more:
Kane County Pit Bull Attacks
"They tried to eat us for dinner," a tearful Joan Ware, 44, recalled Saturday afternoon, soon after leaving Rush-Copley Medical Center with 25 stitches on her legs. Ware and friend Katrina Harden, 33, who received five stitches on her left arm, were walking home from a neighbor's house about 3:30 a.m. Saturday when the two roaming dogs attacked.
"We didn't see them until they came between the cars," said Harden, who lives across the street from Ware on the 900 block of 2nd Avenue, where the attack occurred. "We were their target."
After arriving on the scene, Aurora police shot one of the dogs, a 2- or 3-year-old male, and the dog was euthanized later, police spokesman Dan Ferrelli said. The other dog ran away and had not been found by evening. Nor had police determined if the dogs, which were without collars or tags, belonged to anyone.
The incident occurred less than a week after police in Indiana's Lake County seized 15 adult pit bulls and one puppy in a Calumet Township home, where authorities said electric prods, a treadmill, medications and other alleged fighting equipment were discovered. And on Wednesday, Gov. Blagojevich signed three bills that increase penalties for people who allow dangerous animals to run loose or use them to commit crimes.
The Aurora City Council in 2000 put some restrictions on vicious animals, but efforts to restrict ownership of large-breed dogs in the city have failed, said Ald. Stephanie Kifowit.
"I consider pit bulls to be a large-breed dog. They are big, they are all muscle," she said. "We need to dig deep and start looking at our ordinance."
Kifowit said the source of the problem could be more common pit-bull breeding in Aurora.
"You see signs everywhere, `pit bull puppies for sale,'" Kifowit said.
"We need to start looking at more owner responsibility. We must crack down."
Another Aurora alderman, John "Whitey" Peters, agreed that a new ordinance or revision of a current one might be needed.
As for Ware, she said that if the two dogs have owners, she has a message for them: "They should be ashamed of themselves."
Read more:
Chicago Tribune
http://bit.ly/1G1kQks
Read more:
Kane County Pit Bull Attacks
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