2 Regina bystanders bitten by police dogs in 1 week - Action News
Home WebMail Thursday, November 14, 2024, 03:02 AM | Calgary | 6.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Saskatchewan

2 Regina bystanders bitten by police dogs in 1 week

A Regina man is recovering after he was bitten by a police dog and pulled off his front porch. He was the second bystander bitten by a police dog last week.

One victim says police should alert public when training

A Regina police spokesperson said in an email that the canine units make an average of 350-400 arrests per year, and only 10 per cent of those are arrests involve a dog bite. (Dan Zakreski/CBC)

A Regina police dog bit a 56-year-old man as he rested on his porch last Tuesday, the second bystander to be the victim of canine team bites that week.

"He grabbed me by the leg, dragged me off the step," said MartyMarin.

"It happened so fast, it was like, 'Wow, what the heck is going on here?'I had no idea."

Regina police saidit was a training and tracking exercise, and that the canine was on a three-metre leash when it veered off the path created by another unit officer.

The police service isconducting a use-of-force review to determine what led to the bite.

Marty Marin was treated in hospital after he was bitten by a police dog on July 4. (Submitted)

Marinwas taken to hospital by ambulance for treatment. Now, he'srecovering at home with the help of antibiotics, pain killers and crutches.

"It's sore. I can't put no weight on it," he said of his swollen leg.

Alert the public, says Marin

Marinsaid he understands the police service needs to do training scenarios in public, but suggested they warn people in advance to avoid other bystanders getting bit.

"Stuff happens and you know it's a learning process for everybody, andunfortunately it happened to be me," he said.

However, he thinks it could have been worse.

"If that would have been a small child out there playing on the front lawn or on the step or something, and that dog comes around, what would have happened?"

Marin has been around dogs since he was a little kid, but now he can't help but feel apprehensive.

"I don't like to see a big dog walking down the street, whether it's on a leash or not. It scares me," he said.

2 police dog bites in 1 week

Marin wasn't the only person bitten by a police dog last week in Regina.

On July 6, a man was bitten by a police dog who was in pursuit of a suspect. The man was not related to the investigation.

He declined an interview, but family members toldCBChe was sitting on his steps having a smoke when a police dog bit his arm.

The incident is also being reviewed by the police's use-of-force committee.

So far this year, 14 use-of-force incidents involving canines have resulted in injuries.

Regina Police Service canine use-of-force five-year comparison
2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Average
Canine with no injury 0 9 2 0 12 4.6
Canine with injury 16 23 24 37 30 26

A Regina police spokesperson saidin an email that the canine units make an average of 350-400 arrests per year, and only 10 per cent of those arrests involve a dog bite.

Police Act preventscivilians from suing after bite

Court records show that inAugust 2013, Sheila Tataquasonwas sitting in the backyard of her Avenue H home with a friend, Joshua Desnomie, when she was attacked by a Saskatoon police dog.

Tataquason tried to sue Saskatoon's Board of Police Commissioners and the dog handler.

Nicholas Blenkinsop represented her after she was bitten and arrested, even though she didn't do anything illegal. He's a lawyer with Community Legal Assistance Services For Saskatoon Inner City.

"She should never been a suspect because she wasn't involved in any robbery that took place," Blenkinsop said.

Tataquason's lawsuit was dismissed because of Section 10 the Saskatchewan Police Act that protects police from liability in the line of duty should someone get injured, as long as the officers are acting in good faith.

Blenkinsop has askedfor a leave for appeal and saidone of the central issues is victims like Tataquaso have no legal recourse to get damages, even though they were never found guilty.

Blenkinsop saidin other provinces victims can seek compensation either through the city or the police force directly.

In Saskatchewan, there is no widely used system were victims can readily seek such compensation.

"The courts in Saskatchewan have interpreted it in a way that offers the police a considerable amount of protection," he said.

He said the lawsuit is about more than money it brings into questionhow police dogs are handled and deployed.

"A weapon is being used and I guess the real question is what care does a police officer who is using a weapon of this kind need to exercise throughout the course of the use of the weapon."

with files from Charles Hamilton