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Best Friends Hurricane Relief

Update: St. Bernard school shootings

February 24, 2006 : 12:00 AM
Owners want answers on why their pets were shot to death

Many victims of Hurricane Katrina who were forced to leave pets behind in St. Bernard Parish were devastated to learn that the animals they loved and entrusted to law enforcement officers were brutally shot to death. They want answers – and justice. And they may be getting both.

Some evacuees left their pets in the care of police at one of three schools in the parish. When the residents returned for the animals two to four weeks later, they found that most of them were dead – their bodies scattered in classrooms, tethered or shot in groups.

“I trusted the deputies,” said evacuee Jodie Jones. “It is such a shock and such a heartbreak that anybody could just shoot them.”

Jones and others want those responsible to be held accountable.

Investigators with the Louisiana Attorney General’s office in Baton Rouge are trying to do just that. They are in the midst of two lengthy probes – one looking into street shootings and the other into school killings.

The findings of the investigators are leading to St. Bernard Parish Sheriff’s Office deputies, many of whom were entrusted with the care of more than 60 dogs, some cats and a few birds at three different schools.

Incriminating Evidence
Photographer David Leeson, Jr., who was on assignment for the Dallas Morning News immediately following Hurricane Katrina, has produced the most damning evidence to date of police wrongdoing. The paper, under subpoena, has turned over to the attorney general’s office Leeson’s raw video footage of dogs being gunned down on the streets around September 7.

While driving the streets between St. Bernard Highway and Judge Perez Drive near Chalmette, Leeson stopped to help a dog but was dismayed to see what happened when two people in a Jeep and two officers in the back of a pickup drove up.

“They shot the dog I was stopping to help right in front of me,” Leeson said.

The Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer then recorded other events. “On the raw tape you can hear the shootings [of] eight to nine dogs,” he said. Also disturbing in the video is the admission by then-Sergeant Mike Minton of the sheriff’s office that he had, in fact, shot dogs to death.

When Minton noticed Leeson’s camera, “[Minton] just kind of jumped in front of me and said, ‘What’s going on?,’ Leeson said. “I told him who I was. I said, ‘Tell me about the dog shootings.’ He started talking.”

When Leeson asked Minton how many dogs he’d shot, Minton replied, “Enough.”

And, Leeson said, on the unedited tape, Minton implicated a senior officer. The sergeant, who was suspended by his department after an edited version was posted on the newspaper’s website, has since resigned his post.

The video appears to contain enough evidence for the attorney general's office to continue its case.

“For the dogs in the street, we have evidence,” said Assistant Attorney General Mimi Hunley. “We have the film.”

Evidence from the Schools
For the probe into the school shootings – at Sebastian Roy Elementary School, Beauregard Middle School, and St. Bernard High School – investigators, according to sources close to the case, are said to be relying on ammunition and spent bullets found at the scenes, and, equally important, on eyewitness accounts.

Kris Wartelle, spokeswoman for the attorney general, noted, “We can’t comment on how many [officers may be involved], except to say we do have a list of deputies we are questioning in connection with this investigation.” The St. Bernard Sheriff’s Office, Wartelle said, is the only law enforcement agency under investigation. That rules out earlier speculation that National Guard officers may have been involved.

Sheriff Jack Stephens, for his part, declined to be interviewed but said through Captain Mike Sanders: “We are prohibited from giving any information to the press. That investigation is ongoing.”

Earlier, however, on September 29, after the bodies of animals were discovered at Sebastian Roy Elementary School on Bayou Road, Stephens told CNN: “I'm certainly not prepared to say without reservation that it wasn't one of our officers that did it. But what I do know is that it's a despicable act. And someone who did this just has some imperfection in their psyche. And if that someone is a law enforcement officer, they can't be in this business. They're in the wrong business.”

About 60 people evacuated with their pets to Beauregard Middle School, including Kit Bauer. She was rescued on August 29 from her attic when neighbors in a boat heard one of her dogs barking. They took her to Beauregard, where she and the dogs spent three days.

Bauer left a note written in chalk on a wall outside a classroom with her phone number. It read, “In this room are 6 adult dogs and 4 puppies. Please save them. Kit.” The puppies were three-week-old dachshunds and were still nursing. She left water and opened three boxes of Fruit Loops cereal for the dogs. One dog, Indy, was located two weeks after the storm at a shelter and has since been returned to Bauer.

Jodie Jones also left a note at a school. She and her husband, Clay, evacuated the Saturday after the levees broke. A half-mile down Bayou Road, the Joneses left their three cats and a dog in the hands of deputies at a makeshift evacuee center at St. Bernard High School. To their horror, two of their cats were found dead four weeks later inside the carriers they had delivered them in. They haven’t found their third cat. All were 10 and 12 years old.

“I asked the deputies to promise me they’d get my animals to safety,” Jones said. “They assured us nothing was going to happen to them.

“The deputies told us, ‘If you want to get out alive, you have to go now. We’re saving people, not animals.’ I knew two of the officers. We thought we were doing a good thing by taking our animals to the school.”

Their dog, Suzie, somehow escaped being shot and was located in a foster home. “Suzie made it to California,” Jones said. But “she died three days before we were scheduled to get her. I think she died of grief.”

Carol Hamm stayed at the high school for two days, waiting for her husband and son, who used their boat to rescue people stranded on rooftops and in attics of flooded homes. While at the high school, Hamm said, “One moment [the deputies] told us we could take our pets, and the next moment they said we couldn’t. My husband was still at the house with our dogs.”

Her husband ended up paddling a boat and dropping off their four dogs at Beauregard Middle School, because sheriff’s deputies told him they would take the dogs to an animal shelter for safekeeping. Then he and their son went to the high school and were evacuated out a day later with Hamm.

On September 30, Carol Hamm returned to the school to look for the family’s pets. “It’s the worst memory I’ll ever have,” she said. “The bodies were being removed. It was horrible. I was crying over strangers’ dogs. Only three of our dogs were in the room. We saw a golden retriever, two Yorkshire terriers, all breeds, and a lot of pits and rotties. Some were shot running, one up the stairs. Bullet, our husky mix, was shot in the head.”

Many animals were also taken to St. Bernard High School. “People were there with dogs, cats and birds, too. You name it, people brought them," Hamm said. “There was an old woman who wanted to take her Yorkie. The dog was so tiny she could fit it in her purse. They made her leave it.”

While still at the high school, Hamm overheard a deputy say to another officer, “As soon as these people leave, I’m shooting these dogs.” Hamm and others confronted the officer. “A medic was also there,” Hamm said, “and he told me he wouldn’t let anything happen to them.”

At both the middle and high schools, evacuees were eventually ordered to get in the back of garbage trucks. The water had receded and by then was about a foot-and-a-half deep. They were driven in the trucks to barges that took them across the river to buses. Some were bused to Oklahoma and Texas, others to Baton Rouge.

Christopher Acosta also left his dog Mercedes at Beauregard Middle School, along with 10 dogs belonging to his mother, uncle, cousin and best friend. His uncle’s German shepherd somehow escaped and made it back to his house.

Acosta returned to the school two weeks later to look for the remaining dogs. What he found were bodies. “It made me mad,” Acosta said. “The more bodies I saw, the angrier I got.” He opened every classroom, searching. By his count, about 40 deceased pets were in the building. They included his mother’s Pomeranian. Mercedes, his pit bull, missed being shot because her leash got stuck in a file cabinet, trapping her behind it.

A resident walked by the school sometime after the shootings and heard a faint whimper. He flagged down the driver of an SUV that had “animal rescue” scrawled on the window. Kelle Davis of Animal Rescue New Orleans went inside and found the whimpering dog, who turned out to be Mercedes. Mercedes was later taken to Best Friends' rescue center in Tylertown and reunited with Acosta three months after the evacuation.

Picking up the Pieces
While the investigations into the shootings continue, those who lost their pets in the carnage are trying to get on with their lives.

Carol Hamm and her family, who now live in Temple, Texas, are about to be reunited with Daisy, the sole survivor of the four dogs they left at the school. Daisy was rescued and taken to Tylertown, then placed in a foster home. The family is looking forward to getting Daisy home.

Christopher and Crystal Acosta are waiting for electricity to be hooked up to a FEMA trailer so they can live in it on their St. Bernard Parish property while they repair their house. “I love this dog with all my heart,” Acosta told reporters the day he and Mercedes were reunited, “and I'm just grateful to get her back.”

Jodie Jones returned to her home on Valentine’s Day after she and her husband received keys to their FEMA trailer. Going home brought back many memories. Jones said, “You know how when you pull up in the driveway you’re used to them barking, and when you go inside they’re happy to see you? It was like we expected to see them, but they weren’t there. It’s been difficult. My pets were my children. I can’t get over the abuse.”

Kit Bauer now lives out of state and has no plans to return to St. Bernard Parish. “There’s nothing to go back to,” she said. As for the investigation, Bauer said, “I don’t want to dwell on what the deputies may or may not have done. They took care of us while we were at the school and found us food. I just pray my dogs didn’t suffer.”

Article by Cathy Scott. Photo by Clay Myers.


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Comments
  
October 29, 2006 at 11:30 PM
posted by: fuzzymuffin
It disgusted me a year ago and it still disgusts me now to think about what was done to those poor animals and their owners. Best Friends, please continue to keep this story alive. We must all continue to push for justice.
  
October 23, 2006 at 12:38 AM
posted by: RAIN
What was the outcome of the shootings? I haven't heard.
ivpfilm@hotmail.com
R.A.I.N.
Rescuing Animals In Need
www.nopitbullban.com
Randy Wheat
  
July 1, 2006 at 4:31 PM
posted by: Oskifan
It is awful the violence done to animals in the wake of the hurricanes. Some of these events are featured in the film, Dark Water Rising. Mostly it is a story of hope and heroes as rescuers worked to free stranded pets. It is also a reminder that people need to take their animals with them, and governments need to facilitate such evacuations. We all need to plan for disasters in our local communities. This film serves as a vehicle to get that message out.

Greetings from Mike Shiley!
I am pleased to announce a private DVD release and pre-theatrical sale of DARK WATER RISING: The Truth about Hurricane Katrina Animal Rescues. This is the only documentary film made about animal rescues of Hurricane Katrina.

About DARK WATER RISING:
Over 50,000 dogs and cats were left behind in New Orleans in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. The pets (mostly dogs) that survived the flood were locked in houses and chained to fences without food and water for up to six weeks.

A small group of brave rescuers from around the world risked their lives to sledgehammer down doors, brave toxic floodwaters and dodge corrupt cops in a race against time to rescue up to 10,000 trapped and starving animals.

Some rescuers worked with the official rescue organization, the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS), while others joined a more aggressive rescue outfit, code named Winn Dixie.

This film also tells uplifting stories of hope and survival as pets are reunited with their owners while other lucky pets find loving new homes. These hard earned lessons will help our nation understand the need for animal evacuation plans in natural disasters.

Join me for a behind-the-scenes look at the grim reality of the life and death struggles on the toxic streets of New Orleans.

Best,

Mike Shiley
Producer/Director
DARK WATER RISING
http://darkwaterrising.com/
  
March 31, 2006 at 10:17 AM
posted by: mare1992
Any more news on bringing these people who did this to these poor animals to justice? Although I don't think there would be enough justice done to these people who did this. I can't say what I would like to do to them!!
  
March 22, 2006 at 7:23 AM
posted by: kelle
I am one of the people that rescued Mercedes from Beauregard School . I want to add that ANderson Cooper DID indeed report on the shootings the day after they were discovered and he also covered the happy ending of Mercedes the day before Thanksgiving when I took her back from Houston to be reunited with her owners. I for one, will never forget the horrific scene inside the school even though the bodies had been removed there was left very much evidence of the brutal slaughter that had occured. A sence oif evil was in that building and it was heartbreaking to see the writing on the walls of the people that had to leave their animals behind begging for them to be taken care of. It is a vision I will never forget. We all need to write the sherrifs department in St Bernard Parish and make sure they bring the people that did this to justice. These animals didnt need to die, and some, as evidenced by the bloody footprints throughout the building , died a long and painful death. Per the investigation they were basically used as target practice. When so many people had lost everything in that area , it is unfathomable that they thought they had done the best to save and make sure their animals were safe and then had to return home to find out the sad truth, Raise your voices for these animals and keep this alive until all questions are answered and the guilty are charged. Lets not forget these animals that were our pets. Kelle
  
March 7, 2006 at 12:10 PM
posted by: mare1992
Just sent my e-mail letter off to Sheriff Stephens. Hope he listens to all of us. One way or the other we WILL find who did this to these poor defenseless animals and HE/THEY will be prosecuted to the fullest!! I'm sure of it!!

Mary Ann From New Jersey
  
March 6, 2006 at 8:58 AM
posted by: dayala
Rascal

go to the link and scroll down to where there is a
link provided to contact Sheriff Stephens.

http://www.pasadosafehaven.org/KATRINA/DOGSHOOTING/REWARD.htm
  
March 3, 2006 at 9:37 PM
posted by: cathyscott
To Rascal,
You might try voicing your concerns with the Louisiana Attorney General's Officer, the governor, and the St. Bernard Parish sheriff. The contact numbers are readily available if you do an Internet search.
  
March 3, 2006 at 9:21 PM
posted by: Rascal
Please advise what steps can be take to make sure this hideous crime does not go unnoticed and the appropriate legal action enforced? Who do I write, email or phone to let authorities know this has to be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law and not dismissed.
Concerned Canadian
  
March 2, 2006 at 8:27 PM
posted by: bjperez
this massacre is beyond comprehension. It still make me shudder with anger.
PLEASE! call, write, bug, ALL your elected officials for legislation that will allow people to TAKE their pets in an evacuation situation. DONT let up!
No one wants to leave their 'kids' behind - we need to MAKE them listen! all the rules flew out the window for the government in this unpresedented situation - why couldnt they allow people pets to tag along? they dont realize is the resources could have been used differently if we didnt have to back track and save people pets that were forcibly left behind - it just doesnt make sense.
Thank you BF for this update, I will continue to support your efforts.
  
March 1, 2006 at 5:16 PM
posted by: copper
As a resident of St. Bernard, I am ashamed to hear stories like this and upset by the actions of some of our law enforcement officers, especially during this time. As if it were some kind of "Hunting Season". My heart goes out to my fellow neighbors who don't only have to overcome the loss of the entire community, but the tragic loss of their beloved pets. Thank you Best Friends for being the heros that we needed!
  
March 1, 2006 at 3:42 PM
posted by: karenh
This breaks my heart and makes me so angry. BF, as you know, CNN's Anderson Cooper has been doing in-depth follow-up to Katrina, and recently talked about the animals and what you have done for them. But the story about the animals being shot is horrific and needs to also be brought out. Perhaps if you contact him, CNN will do a follow-up so that the officials responsible are held accountable. And to let the public know that this kind of thing is unacceptable when the next disaster forces people to leave their pets behind.
karenh
  
March 1, 2006 at 11:16 AM
posted by: adlib
This is an issue of social status as much as anything else. These folks obviously couldn't evacuate on their own, weren't provided an opportunity to use public transportatioin (that ALLOWED pets), to evacuate, so this is what they were left with. What fantastic local support!? Irreprehensible! This is why we must ALL contact our state representatives and PUSH the new law being proposed to make allowances for pets during evacuations.

I have been evacuated twice in my life. Both times my dogs were with me, and both times I had my own transportation. I took them with me...I lied at a hotel and my dogs stayed with me "illegally" in the hotel. In these situations, I say ignore all authority and do what it takes to keep you and yours alive!!! Lie to hotel people, do whatever you need to to keep your animals with you. NOBODY will take as good a care of your pet as you will and I would just die if I had to le