The arrogance of power
Minnesota police chief decapitates boy's pet chicken;
complaint filed
ATWATER,
Minn. -- An Atwater woman has filed a formal complaint against the Atwater
police chief for trespassing on her property and killing her young son's pet
chicken -- leaving the hen's decapitated head just feet from the backyard
chicken coop.
Ashley
Turnbull said she knows she violated the city's ordinance that prohibits fowl
and acknowledges she was told Aug. 7 by police to remove the three chickens and
two ducks.
But she
said Police Chief Trevor Berger went too far when he came onto her property
about a week later, when nobody was home, and clubbed, killed and decapitated a
small, red hen with a shovel.
"The
chicken was like a puppy dog to my son," said Turnbull. "You wouldn't
do that to a puppy."
Berger
said he was simply enforcing the city ordinance that has been on the books
since 1960 and was responding to a "frustrated' neighbor's repeated
complaints, including a report on Aug. 16 that one of Turnbull's chickens was
running loose in the residential area near the elementary school.
"I'm
sorry it had to happen that way," said Berger, adding that he didn't
intend to leave the severed chicken head in the yard to send a message to the
homeowners.
ATWATER,
Minn. -- An Atwater woman has filed a formal complaint against the Atwater
police chief for trespassing on her property and killing her young son's pet
chicken -- leaving the hen's decapitated head just feet from the backyard
chicken coop.
Ashley
Turnbull said she knows she violated the city's ordinance that prohibits fowl
and acknowledges she was told Aug. 7 by police to remove the three chickens and
two ducks.
But she
said Police Chief Trevor Berger went too far when he came onto her property
about a week later, when nobody was home, and clubbed, killed and decapitated a
small, red hen with a shovel.
"The
chicken was like a puppy dog to my son," said Turnbull. "You wouldn't
do that to a puppy."
Berger
said he was simply enforcing the city ordinance that has been on the books
since 1960 and was responding to a "frustrated' neighbor's repeated complaints,
including a report on Aug. 16 that one of Turnbull's chickens was running loose
in the residential area near the elementary school.
"I'm
sorry it had to happen that way," said Berger, adding that he didn't
intend to leave the severed chicken head in the yard to send a message to the
homeowners.