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Tag: denver dogs

  • A local dog was rescued after he was shot and on the run for five months

    A local dog was rescued after he was shot and on the run for five months

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    A dog that evaded authorities for at least five months was finally captured and taken to the city’s animal shelter on Aug. 24, 2024. Here he is in custody.

    Courtesy: Denver Animal Protection

    A stray dog that’s evaded officials for at least five months, who’s been described as a “ninja,” and who was allegedly shot in the face, has finally been rescued.

    Late last week, Denver Animal Protection issued a notice that a white dog, probably an Australian Shepherd, had been seen in Athmar Park. They’d been after it since April, lead officer Jenna Humphreys told us, and they got word last Thursday that it had been injured.

    “We got a call through 911 dispatch that one of the neighbors over here in the Athmar Park neighborhood had heard what sounded like a gunshot and a dog whimpering,” she said on Saturday. “Now, it’s our concern of, how long can he survive with this injury? Can he still eat? Is he still able to get the nutrients he needs off the streets? It’s crucial more than ever, because an injured dog is way more likely to bite somebody, hurt somebody or die on its own, and we certainly don’t want that to happen.”

    The dog actually was in custody earlier this year, but escaped, she said. Reported sightings came in from all over south Denver, from Yale Avenue to Harvard Gulch.

    “This dog is very smart. He’s fast,” she added. “We do know that he’s able to jump really high fences.”

    Denver Animal Protection’s message to residents this weekend was not to chase the dog, but maybe try to trap him in a garage if he ended up in someone’s yard. Neighbors were rapt with the story when it hit local Facebook groups. We were knocking doors nearby for another story on Saturday, and met people who’d heard all about it.

    Karlee Arguello (left to right), Sarah Luv-Garcia and Denver Animal Protection officer Jenna Humphreys pose with a dog that’s been rescued after months on the run. Aug. 24, 2024.
    Courtesy: Sarah Luv-Garcia

    Enter a couple of “good Samaritans.”

    Sarah Luv-Garcia is a longtime pet advocate in the city. She usually works with feral cats, catching them for veterinary care, then re-releasing them — there’s a whole community of people who do this in Denver.

    When officials sent out word about the dog last week, she started getting messages from strangers who knew about her expertise. She called a friend, Karlee Arguello, and got to work.

    They started by canvassing the neighborhood.

    “We ended up connecting with a neighbor right at the corner of Nevada and Raritan. The dog frequented her front yard and backyard,” Luv-Garcia said. “She could never really grab them.”

    So she and Arguello set up a base of operations near the house, and got permission to build a “yard-sized trap” behind the woman’s house. They used 20 panels of grating to make an enclosure in the yard, based on designs created especially for capturing skittish dogs.

    “It was quite a massive trap,” she said. “It was just like he was walking into the backyard.”

    The “Missy Trap” that Sarah Luv-Garcia built to capture an elusive dog (left), and Luv-Garcia and Karlee Arguello with the dog after the trap worked. Aug. 24, 2024.
    Courtesy: Sarah Luv-Garcia

    Then, they baited their contraption with rotisserie chicken, squeeze cheese and wet cat food, and set up cameras in the yard that they monitored from a vehicle parked nearby.

    “We created a smorgasbord for him,” Luv-Garcia said.

    They needed something elaborate, she said, since they knew the dog could “scale a six- and an eight-foot fence like a ninja cat.” For a while, they were calling him MacGyver.

    The poor boy couldn’t eat, but he could smell.

    They saw him a few times that evening, and hoped he’d be drawn in by their succulent offerings. Around 8:30 p.m. on Saturday, the clever canine finally appeared.

    They sprung the trap, then took their time to approach the dog. As they did, they could see that his mouth had been pierced by something.

    “He did appear to have what looked like a gunshot wound,” Luv-Garcia said. “I am not an expert by any means, but it was a perfectly round hole.”

    This image provided by Denver Animal Protection shows a wound on the face of a dog that they’d been chasing for months, possibly the result of a gunshot.
    Courtesy: Denver Animal Protection

    Meeting the dog, and seeing the injury up close, hit her hard.

    “I cried. It’s very emotional, when you do something to help an animal that’s just been let down by another human,” she told us, choking up. “I saw how sweet he was. He was such a gentle dog that absolutely didn’t deserve that, and now he’s really safe.”

    Once they’d secured him, Luv-Garcia and Arguello called Denver Animal Protection, who took the dog to the city’s shelter.

    We’ve asked the city if they’ll investigate the alleged shooting; we’ll update this story when we hear more.

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  • Does this bus-riding dog belong to you?

    Does this bus-riding dog belong to you?

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    Lily the dog rides an RTD bus.

    Courtesy: Genee Mireles

    Genee Mireles had just boarded an RTD bus in southwest Denver last week when she was greeted by an unusual sight: A dog exploring the cabin.

    “I was just taking my kids to school that morning — we take the bus regularly — and the kids were greeted by the dog,” she remembered. “She just came and licked my son.”

    At first, she thought the rottweiler mix might belong to a man sitting by the window.

    “(But) I realized he wasn’t holding onto her,” Mireles told us. “She was wandering the bus.”

    So she asked the guy: where did this puppy come from?

    She’d followed him on, he told her, at Florida Avenue and Federal Boulevard stop. He had no idea where she came from.

    Mireles spent the rest of her ride worrying about her busmate. Should she derail her whole day to make sure she found her way home?

    “I’m thinking, ‘I’ve got to get to work, I can’t take her, I can’t keep her,’” she said. “I was telling the kids, ‘Hey, you may be late for school, I’m sorry!’”

    Lily the dog rides an RTD bus.
    Courtesy: Genee Mireles

    It turns out her name is Lily. She’s now in an Adams County shelter.

    Mireles said the bus driver called their supervisor, and someone from RTD eventually met them all at the 38th Avenue stop.

    RTD then called another bus to take its passengers further, Mireles said, allowing Lily to stay onboard the original bus as they figured out what to do.

    “We took the bus all the way up there. Then once we got off, the poor thing, she tried to follow us off. Nobody else wanted to hold onto her,” she said. “She was nice and fat, so you knew she was well-fed. She was nice and friendly, she knew how to shake. She’s somebody’s dog.”

    RTD staffers decided to bring Lily to Adams County’s Riverdale Animal Shelter, where she’s currently listed alongside more than 60 other lost dogs, 20 lost cats, a lost turtle named River and a chicken drifter named Paul.

    Stephanie Wilde, Riverdale’s executive director, told us last week that Lily is microchipped, but that the phone number logged in the chip’s data was out of service.

    While Riverdale usually allows lost pets to stay with them for a week before they become shelter property and relisted for adoption, they extended that allowance for Lily so they could try mailing a letter to the address listed in the microchip metadata to find her owners.

    This week, Riverdale community liaison Tabatha Gormley said their efforts hadn’t gotten far.

    “We’ve been trying to trace ownership through that chip, and we haven’t had much luck,” she told us. “She would officially become shelter property on Monday.”

    Lily the dog is listed in the Riverdale Animal Shelter’s lost pets page, alongside Tolliver and Bella.
    Source: Riverdale Animal Shelter

    Shelters have dealt with a lot of stories like this recently, though they don’t usually involve a bus.

    Gormley told us Riverdale has seen a lot of abandoned animals in the last few years. Denver’s animal shelter recently reported a spike in those cases, too, and even hired a social worker to try to avoid taking on too many unowned pets.

    “Like shelters across the nation are seeing, we’re seeing an increase,” she said. “We do correlate that with the housing and financial crisis.”

    That’s not to say that Lily was abandoned. If her owners do attempt to claim her after Monday, Gormley said, they may still be able to get her before she finds a new home.

    While Riverdale is seeing more intakes than usual, adoptions still happen quickly. Most dogs are adopted seven days after they’re listed on the shelter website.

    And though Mireles’ part in this story is over, she said she’s still thinking about the pup she met riding the bus alone.

    “I just hope she finds her family,” she said.

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