A small female beagle was lost at 4:15 p.m. She is possibly injured. She was attacked by an unleashed dog at 47th and Osage and took off down Osage. She is wearing a leash. If you’ve seen this dog please contact Maureen at: prewitt[at]aol.com
Note: This is not Mitsi, the beagle who’s been lost for three weeks now.
November 10th, 2011 at 6:09 am
Was she chipped? Is she still missing?
November 10th, 2011 at 6:59 am
How can we actively address the problem of unleashed dogs? I want to be proactive — and positive — so that situations like this aren’t repeated. Can we can call the police when we see unleashed dogs? UCD?
November 10th, 2011 at 9:39 am
Good news! Beagle found with leash attached to fencepost @ 48th& cedar. Thanks kind soul who put her there! And thanks to Duffy’s for keeping her company and going door to door to look for her owner! Attack dog (pit bull rescue) was apparently ON leash but broke her metal choke collar to chase down my dog from behind. I’m just grateful my dog escaped and was found!
November 10th, 2011 at 11:16 am
I’m so happy for the happy ending!! I hope the wound aren’t too bad
November 11th, 2011 at 8:23 pm
Please note what the owner of the small, unaggressive beagle who was attacked stated: “Attack dog (pit bull rescue) was apparently ON leash but broke her metal choke collar to chase down my dog from behind.” Like I said, leashes aren’t the issue: aggressive dogs, on or off leash, are cause for fear. People who own aggressive dogs should keep them away from children and other dogs. Leashes do not restrain a powerful dog that has aggressive tendencies. As this attests, an aggressive strong dog can bust through metal choke collars, burst away from owners, etc. Aggressive dogs can be well-behaved 99% of the time, until something sets them off. And then they become very dangerous dogs. Beagles, border collies, chihuahuas, terriers are not cause for fear. If leashed, it’s to keep them from running away, not from “attacking.” That’s absurd.