Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Second Person This Month Mistakenly Bitten By Police Dog In Regina

The Canadian Press, 12 Jul, 2017 12:58 PM

    REGINA — Police in Regina say they are reviewing another incident where a police dog mistakenly bit someone.

     

    Linus Kaysaywaysemat says he was outside smoking a cigarette last Thursday when he was bitten by a Regina Police Service dog.

     

    He says the dog chewed on his arm for a few minutes before police were able to get the animal off him.

     

    Earlier last week, another police dog that was leashed during a training exercise turned a corner and bit a 56-year-old man on the leg.

     

    Superintendent Darcy Koch says police are collecting information on both cases and will forward it to the Use of Force board.

     

    He says it's a concern whenever a citizen is wrongly bitten by a police dog.

     

    "It's a mistake that was made and we're going to make sure that we're going to make any corrections that might need to come from that," Koch said.

     

    Koch said the dog on Thursday was tracking a suspect in an active investigation and that police are looking into why it bit someone who wasn't a suspect.

     

    One possibility, he said, was the man shared the same scent as the suspect. Another is that the dog was surprised by the sudden appearance of the man.

     

    Kaysaywaysemat said the dog was on him so quickly, he didn't have time to react.

     

    "I just had time to look over to my loved one and tell her that there was a dog, and by the time that we looked back, it was biting on my arm," he said.

     

    "One of my boys said he'd seen the dog bite my arm, and when the dog let go of my arm, he said the dog's teeth were bloody."

     

    He said his daughter had a nightmare after the incident and he had to comfort them because they believed the dog would be coming back.

     

    Koch says the dogs are trained to a provincial standard and are subject to on-going training as well.

     

    Both of the dogs are still on active duty.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Overall Abbotsford Crime Rate Dips But Thefts From Auto Leap, Say Police

    The Abbotsford Police Department says in a news release that 859 thefts from vehicles have been reported his year, an eight per cent hike over the same period last year.

    Overall Abbotsford Crime Rate Dips But Thefts From Auto Leap, Say Police

    Kerala Painter's Work Draws Huge Response In Victorian Parliament

    Kerala Painter's Work Draws Huge Response In Victorian Parliament
    The painting by Sedunath Prabhakar, settled in Melbourne, showcased portraits of 50 prominent Australians drawn from a wide and varying cultural, social and political spectrum. 

    Kerala Painter's Work Draws Huge Response In Victorian Parliament

    US Judge Issues Arrest Warrant For 'Hot' Yoga Guru Bikram Choudhury

    A Los Angeles judge has issued an arrest warrant for Bikram Choudhury, the Indian American "hot" yoga guru, after he failed to pay more than $7 million in 2016 to his former lawyer who was the victim in a sexual harassment case against him.

    US Judge Issues Arrest Warrant For 'Hot' Yoga Guru Bikram Choudhury

    Two Men Dead Following Separate Incidents In Montreal

    Two Men Dead Following Separate Incidents In Montreal
    Montreal police are investigating the city's ninth and 10th homicides of the year in different neighbourhoods.

    Two Men Dead Following Separate Incidents In Montreal

    Mayors Across Canada Urge Federal Government To Lead On Overdose Deaths Crisis

    VANCOUVER — Mayors across Canada are calling for federal leadership on the "national emergency" of overdoses by ensuring provinces provide timely access to addiction treatment and by launching public education campaigns.

    Mayors Across Canada Urge Federal Government To Lead On Overdose Deaths Crisis

    Man Who Killed Children Struggles With Anger Management: Psychiatrist

    COQUITLAM, B.C. — A man found not criminally responsible for killing his three children because of a mental disorder is making slow progress but still faces serious anger issues, a psychiatrist says.

    Man Who Killed Children Struggles With Anger Management: Psychiatrist