SURREY 鈥 A homeless woman is heartbroken after she says the City of Surrey wrongly euthanized her dog.
鈥淗is blood is on their hands, and it鈥檚 never, ever, ever going to wash off,鈥 22-year-old Candice Lander said. 鈥淪omebody needs to pay for what they鈥檝e done to him.鈥
But the city says the dog was 鈥渧ery aggressive鈥 and bylaw officers had responded to a number of attacks.
It all started on July 16th. According to Freedom of Information request documents obtained by homeless advocate Erin Schulte, bylaw officers were called down to the Strip after Lander鈥檚 three-year-old pit bull terrier, Cesar, was involved in a 鈥渄og attack.鈥 The dog was seized.
Chaos ensued, which was highlighted by a video that made its way online recently. Many of the people in the video are shown yelling at police after they put Lander in handcuffs and took her away.
No charges were laid and Lander was later released.
See also: Surrey Mayor Linda Hepner says city reviewing dog bylaw after recent attacks
Lander said she called the Surrey Animal Resource Centre the next day to pick her dog up. After the centre told her the fees were $160, Lander said she got ready to go pick up her dog later that day. Lander then says she got a phone call a half hour later from the centre, saying that they couldn鈥檛 release Cesar, and that she would have to get the dog back by contacting the bylaw department.
On Aug. 1st, she went down to the shelter to visit Cesar for the first time since he had been seized 鈥 it was his third birthday. Lander said when she got to the shelter, she learned that Cesar had been euthanized.
She says she had not been notified about the dog鈥檚 death.
鈥淚 was on the ground for 40 minutes crying, asking, 鈥榃hy did you do this to my boy?鈥欌 Lander said, her emotions getting the best of her.
鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 save him and I couldn鈥檛 protect him. It鈥檚 a horrible feeling.鈥
Lander claims Cesar was not violent.
鈥淗e didn鈥檛 bite anybody,鈥 she said. 鈥淗e was scared s***less, he had his tail tucked between his legs when he was being taken away. He was so scared. he probably sat there scared for the last week and a half, wondering why his mom hadn鈥檛 come to pick him up.鈥
See also: Surrey sinks its teeth into comprehensive new dog bylaw
The City of Surrey says Cesar was previously designated a 鈥渄angerous dog.鈥
Bylaw Manager Jas Rehal told the Now-Leader that Lander was notified that the dog would be put down if he wasn鈥檛 muzzled and put in a six-sided enclosure.
鈥淎fter an incident in which [the dog] went to attack an individual, this dog had other incidents in which it tried to attack people,鈥 said Rehal.
He said the city provided a leash and muzzle, which Rehal claims was not used.
鈥淭here were a number of attacks and the dog was very aggressive鈥 The dog was very violent to people at the Strip.鈥
Documentation regarding a specific attack by Cesar has not been made public at this time. One email in the FOI鈥檚 obtained by Schulte shows that a bylaw officer witnessed and reported an 鈥渁ttempted bite.鈥
Schulte, who has spent the last four years working in the area with the Pop Up Soup Kitchen, says Cesar鈥檚 presence was never an issue on the strip.
鈥淚f Cesar was a dangerous dog, he wouldn鈥檛 have been here on the street. The homeless here wouldn鈥檛 have tolerated it,鈥 Schulte said.
鈥淚f he was this dangerous, horrible dog, people would have been cheering [for him to be taken away]. If you watch the video, they were screaming at the cops in anger.鈥
See also: Several dog fines climb
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