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Tag: stephen rattigan

  • PHOTOS: 31 dogs were rescued from a DC home after their owner got into a standoff with police. Now nearly half of them are up for adoption – WTOP News

    PHOTOS: 31 dogs were rescued from a DC home after their owner got into a standoff with police. Now nearly half of them are up for adoption – WTOP News

    Nearly half the 31 dogs rescued from a D.C. house after their owner allegedly shot police officers and holed up inside will be up for adoption this Saturday.

    From noon to 7 p.m. at the Humane Rescue Alliance adoption center in Northwest, those interested in adopting a pup can check out 14 of the dogs that were packed in cages when they were rescued from the house on 5032 Hanna Place in Southeast last month.

    Several of the other dogs have already found new homes, while others are still getting training and behavioral support to prepare them for new homes.

    Stephen Rattigan, 48, is accused of keeping the dogs in unsanitary conditions and abusing at least one of them. Police showed up to his house last month with an animal cruelty warrant when police said Rattigan started shooting through the door, striking three officers.

    After a 13-hour barricade, Rattigan was taken into custody and the HRA said 20 adult dogs and 11 puppies were rescued.

    The 14 pups up for adoption Saturday will be available on a first-come, first-served basis, according to the HRA, which also said it does not place animals on hold.

    See photos of some of the dogs available below:

    Thomas Robertson

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  • Owner of Southeast DC home where Valentine’s Day standoff occurred speaks out – WTOP News

    Owner of Southeast DC home where Valentine’s Day standoff occurred speaks out – WTOP News

    “The system is faulty.” Gail Perkins, the owner of a D.C. home where a standoff with police occurred, says she tried to evict Stephen Rattigan for months before he shot three officers on Valentine’s Day.

    Gail Perkins, the owner of a D.C. home where a Valentine’s Day standoff with police occurred, says she didn’t know about the situation on her property until she saw it on the news.
    (WTOP/Matt Kaufax)

    WTOP/Matt Kaufax

    Gail Perkins home
    Tire marks remain visible from a standoff between a man and D.C. police on Valentine’s Day.
    (WTOP/Matt Kaufax)

    WTOP/Matt Kaufax

    Gail Perkins,
    Gail Perkins home

    The owner of a Southeast D.C. home on Hanna Place, where three D.C. police officers were shot at and injured during an hourslong standoff on Valentine’s Day, said she tried to evict the man staying in her home for months.

    “I have been to hell and back,” Gail Perkins, owner of the property, said Friday afternoon.

    Perkins said she didn’t know about the standoff on her property until she saw it on the news.

    “This is the first time I’ve been back here since the incident,” she told media assembled outside her home, where the front lawn remains warped from the tire tracks from police vehicles that came onto her property.

    Perkins rented out the home she grew up in to Stephen Rattigan, 48, in December of 2022. She rented out the property to get experience as a landlord. However, Perkins said this could be the last time she ever rents out the house.

    “He [Rattigan] had an incident the month after he moved in,” Perkins said.

    Perkins said she progressively became increasingly concerned about Rattigan’s presence in her childhood home after neighbors reported an unsafe environment caused by loose dogs roaming freely around the property. Law enforcement said Rattigan had 31 dogs in total, which he would frequently curse out, yell at, and physically assault.

    Police were serving a warrant for animal cruelty on Wednesday when they said Rattigan shot through the front door at three officers, injuring them.

    “Those police — I commend them,” Perkins said. “I salute them. I pray for them.”

    But Perkins also said she had been trying to get Rattigan out of the home for at least six months before Wednesday.

    “I was in full pursuit of justice. And I went through the channels,” Perkins said.

    Gail and her son, Ebbon Allen, a former Advisory Neighborhood Commission (ANC) member for public safety in Ward 7, had been trying to evict Rattigan after they grew tired of the repeated incidents — and wary of the danger his animals posed.

    Perkins told WTOP that she tried to go through courts, legislature and public safety apparatuses. But she said at every turn, she kept running into red tape.

    “The system is faulty,” Perkins said, who also revealed she was considering running for an ANC commissioner position as a result of the Wednesday standoff.

    “We need to legislate new laws for tenants and landlords in Washington, D.C.,” she said, adding that if she had been able to evict Rattigan sooner, the situation may not have reached its boiling point.

    “I have a relationship with these people,” Perkins said of her neighbors on Hanna Place, who she stated also tried for months to have Rattigan evicted.

    “What you saw Wednesday was an act of God,” she said. “We will rebuild.”

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Matt Kaufax

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  • Man accused of shooting 3 officers had 31 dogs in his DC home. Neighbors say he punched and neglected them – WTOP News

    Man accused of shooting 3 officers had 31 dogs in his DC home. Neighbors say he punched and neglected them – WTOP News

    Court documents reveal Julius James is accused of mistreating dozens of dogs in his home before shooting D.C. police officers who showed up with a warrant.

    Before allegedly shooting three D.C. police officers, kicking off an hourslong barricade in his home Wednesday, a Southeast resident was facing animal cruelty charges tied to accusations he repeatedly punched one of his dogs and kept dozens of others in unsanitary conditions, according to court records.

    Officers were serving the 48-year-old a warrant Wednesday morning when police said he started shooting through the door, striking three officers. Court documents identified the man as Stephen Rattigan, though police said he uses the alias Julius James.

    In a first appearance in D.C. Superior Court on Thursday, Rattigan was ordered held without bond Thursday on charges of assault on a police officer, animal cruelty and assault with intent to kill while armed.

    Court documents state James had been given notice last spring to get rid of his dogs or vacate his home at 5032 Hanna Place SE. Neighbors had complained to authorities that James had as many as 20 dogs, and that they were mistreated and frequently kept off leash, according to court records.

    The Humane Rescue Alliance told WTOP 20 adult dogs and 11 puppies were found in James’ home.

    Authorities wrote that when meeting with James in January to address the complaints, they smelled a strong odor of dog feces and urine at the front door. Neighbors also shared video with authorities that shows James punching one of his dogs in the face six times after it approached a child and an adult in the neighborhood “in an excited and friendly manner,” court documents state.

    What unfolded during 13-hour standoff

    As a result of those complaints, police obtained a warrant on animal cruelty charges and attempted to serve it to Rattigan on Wednesday morning. According to court documents, Rattigan continued to refuse to open the door 30 minutes after police arrived. After issuing a warning to Rattigan, police used a breaching tool to try and open the front door.

    That’s when police said they were met by “several aggressive dogs” and heard gunshots from inside the home, court records state. Three officers were shot, touching off a 13-hour barricade.

    During the barricade, police said sporadic gunfire came from inside the home, with at least three rounds striking the front door of an armored police truck. Court records state Rattigan called a D.C. police officer during the barricade and told him there were people at his home earlier in the day, and out of fear, he shot multiple times through the front door.

    Rattigan told the officer he would not surrender his dogs and that “they will have to kill me.” At that point, the officer handed off the call to Emergency Response Team negotiators.

    Rattigan told negotiators he was under the impression the police were going to harm him and his dogs. Rattigan also said that he knew if the police came inside, his dogs would attack them, resulting in officers killing his dogs, according to court records.

    Court records indicate that Rattigan told negotiators the shots were meant to be “warning shots,” and that Rattigan was initially unaware he had wounded police officers.

    Later in the day, court documents state Rattigan admitted firing the rounds “because it was taking too long for him to get his cigarettes.” Rattigan also told police that while he doesn’t take any mental health medication, he is “not right” in the head and needs help.

    Eventually, Rattigan agreed to surrender and come outside.

    Court documents state that as police were securing the area, they found a disassembled handgun on a bed on the second-floor bedroom. Police attempted to interview Rattigan after his arrest, during which Rattigan denied shooting at the police and denied knowledge of the firearm.

    Held without bond

    In D.C. Superior Court on Thursday, Rattigan’s lawyer disputed the assault with intent to kill charge, citing Rattigan’s comments that they were meant to be warning shots and that he shot through the door. His lawyer also noted Rattigan is 48 years old with no violent criminal history and does not pose a flight risk.

    Ultimately, Judge Renee Raymond sided with prosecutors, who argued there was a “reasonable inference” that Rattigan knew officers were in his line of fire, since they announced their presence at the door before Rattigan fired multiple times from close range.

    Raymond also noted that Rattigan is accused of firing other times from inside his home during the barricade.

    “There was quite a danger to the public,” she said before ordering Rattigan held before his next court appearance Feb. 29.

    Wounded officers released from hospital

    One officer was struck by gunfire twice, but the rounds were stopped by a bulletproof vest, said Gregg Pemberton, chairman of the Washington, D.C., police union. Two more officers were struck in their lower legs. The fourth officer suffered hand injuries at the scene, he said.

    All three hospitalized officers were released Thursday to cheers from their fellow officers.

    D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser visited the injured officers.

    “It goes to show you how important it is to support our police, to make sure we’re hiring the best of the best police, to make sure that as a community, that if we see something wrong, that we call MPD because MPD is going to show up for us every single time,” Bowser said during an event for Valentine’s Day.

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Thomas Robertson

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