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    Police dog attack sparks Vancouver lawsuit

    A construction worker is suing the Vancouver Police Department for excessive use of force after his leg was ripped open by a police dog during his arrest.

    Christopher Evans, 33, needed 100 staples to close the wounds on his leg following the attack on June 12, 2011 in the city's Downtown Eastside, according to a statement issued by his lawyer, Doug King of the Pivot Legal Society.

    King made no excuses for Evans's behaviour the night he was arrested, saying his client had been visiting his sister and was trying to get home when he became frustrated with buses passing him by.

    Evans admits he smashed the front of a bus with his skateboard and shattered the glass door of another bus.

    He claims shortly afterwards he was skateboarding in a Downtown Eastside alleyway when he was surprised by a police dog that latched on to his leg.

    "It scared the hell out of me, it was going psycho," he said.

    Evans says he dropped to the ground but the dog kept attacking him, biting him several times before police pulled off the dog.

    "He was just circling me and kept biting me and kept biting me," he recalled.

    Photos taken shortly afterwards appear to show two large open wounds on his thigh and other cuts.

    "It looked like a grenade went off in my pocket," Evans told CBC News on Thursday morning.

    "I know it was a stupid decision, and I shouldn't have hit the bus, but the repercussions were way overboard. They shouldn't have responded like that," he said in a statement issued on Thursday morning.

    Evans was initially charged with mischief, but Crown prosecutors stayed the charges after seeing the extent of his injuries, according to King.

    The Vancouver Police Department has not yet been reached for comment.

    According to Pivot, dog bites comprise half the injuries reported by municipal police in British Columbia during arrests.

    Figures from the Office for Police Complaints show there have been more than 160 cases involving police dog bites and municipal police forces in B.C. in the past two years; six have resulted in official complaints.

    "We have to think of the cost of all of this, not only to the person being bitten by the dog but the enormous health-care costs spent treating unnecessary injuries," King said.

    He believes police need to retrain their dogs to stop using the bite-and-hold technique in favour of the bark-and-hold method adopted in several American cities.

    King also would like police forces in B.C. to rethink the way they deploy canine units.

    "When the first responder becomes an individual with his police dog, in a lot of cases it seems almost inevitable a bite will take place," King said.

    "I think what we need to do is start looking at the police dog squad as more of a specialty unit, and not as a first responder arresting type unit, because it's very difficult for them to do it without injury," he said.

    Pivot said it will serve the lawsuit on the City of Vancouver on Friday morning.

    What do you feel about this article?

     

    3 comments

    • A Yahoo! User  •  1 month 16 days ago
      First of all: It is VERY HARD to be a good peace officer.
      When I took training from a VPD Tactical team leader, (1990s) and worked in the Health Care System, we used the "Force Options Protocol".
      It lists multiple tactics that police use, in the order of the least to the most severe, but is only a partial model, as it does not give corresponding degrees of subject resistance.

      1) Physical presence
      2) Verbalization
      3) "Soft" physical force (seizing, restraint, joint locks, etc.)
      4) Less than lethal force (neutralizing agents)
      5) "Hard" physical force (punches, kicks, throws/takedowns, etc.)
      6) Hand-held impact weapons
      7) Lethal force.

      In the Australian security industry, the accepted 'force continuum' taught is:
      Presence of the security officer
      Verbal commands
      Touching or Seizing the offender
      Weaponless Defensive Tactics
      Impact Defensive Weapons (i.e. Batons, etc...)
      Potentially Lethal Force

      In my observations since, there is a tendency to reduce the communications part.

      Flirting or bullying or straight intimidation occurs, (yes, even adjusting the story and collaborating) rather than reciprocal recognition of a citizen's personal values, and self worth, then mediating between the incident and that victim's community's health.

      For it is the social and community values that produce a safe society, not Severity Celerity And Certainty. When the police act like a Hockey Team, and display similar verbal intelligence, it demonstrates how their chain of command has lost their own ability to speak in the language of the common intelligent person. If the game now is to produce Psychological Trauma in the loosing team and we citizens are that team, then neighborhoods will become the ghettos where bullying Police officers can win.

      It would be a nice change to find that "winning" is for the whole community not for individual police teams.
    • Law abiding  •  Calgary, Alberta  •  1 month 17 days ago
      That dog deserves a steak to wash out the taste of stupid out of his mouth.
    • Giles the 3rd  •  1 month 18 days ago
      It's why Canadians need their guns.
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