Luke Skywalker
Super Moderator
{vb:raw ozzmodz_postquote}:
Get the news
Log In or Subscribe to skip
34 [h=6]Share This Story![/h]Let friends in your social network know what you are reading about
[h=4]Man saves dog in hot car, but gets arrested anyway[/h]ATHENS, Ga. — A Georgia man who saved a dog from a hot car wasn't rewarded for his action. Instead, the move landed him behind bars.
{# #}
[h=4]Sent![/h]A link has been sent to your friend's email address.
[h=4]Posted![/h]A link has been posted to your Facebook feed.
[h=6]Join the Nation's Conversation[/h]To find out more about Facebook commenting please read the Conversation Guidelines and FAQs
[h=2]UP NEXT[/h][h=2]03[/h]
A Georgia man was arrested after he smashed a car window to rescue a dog from a hot car. VPC
Michael Hammons used the leg of his wife's wheelchair to free a dog from a hot car in Athens, Ga. Hammons was arrested and charged with criminal trespassing for breaking the car's window.(Photo: WXIA-TV, Atlanta)
ATHENS, Ga. — A Georgia man who saved a dog from a hot car wasn't rewarded for his action. Instead, the move landed him behind bars.
"I heard someone say there was a dog in distress in a hot car," said Michael Hammons, a Desert Storm veteran.
Diane Byard said she and a group of shoppers noticed the dog in the Mustang and were waiting on police before Hammons came.
"He says we can't let this dog die, and he starts smashing the windows."
Hammons used his wife's wheelchair leg to smash the window, freeing the dog.
USA TODAY
Ariz. child safety czar stages dramatic hot-car lesson
"I've got PTSD, and I've seen enough death and destruction," Hammons said. "And I didn't want anything else to happen if I could prevent it."
Witnesses say when the owner of the car came out of the store, she was furious, and demanded deputies take action.
"We would not have made those charges on our own," said Oconee County Chief Deputy Lee Weems. "The deputies on scene say the owner of the car and of the dog was very insistent that he be charged with criminal trespassing."
The dog's owner told police she had only been gone five minutes.
"It wasn't just five minutes like the lady stated, it was a lot longer," Byard said. "I personally felt the heat in the car; I saw the dog panting. This dog was in distress."
The dog's owner could not be reached for comment Monday.
"If it is 80 degrees outside, within 30 minutes, it will be 114 degrees inside a vehicle, even with the windows cracked," Byard said.
The owner was cited for leaving the dog in the hot car. But without surveillance video, deputies say it is hard to tell how long the dog was actually left in the car.
Georgia state law does allow an individual to break a window to save a child in a hot or cold car, but not a pet. That is something that animal advocates say they are working to change.
0) { %> 0) { %>
0) { %>
Powered By WizardRSS.com | Full Text RSS Feed