‘The only thing I’m going to do is shoot it’: Michigan lawsuit claims cops coldly executed dog




A heartbroken woman is suing the city of St. Clair Shores and police after officers shot her dog dead in November. The encounter was filmed by the cops' dashboard camera.

BY PHILIP CAULFIELD

A heartbroken Michigan woman is suing her city and police after officers shot her dog dead while it was loose in her neighborhood in November.
Brittany Preston claimed the killing of her beloved 18-month-old puppy, Lexie, amounted to an execution after one of the cops was caught on his dashboard camera saying he'd "shoot the f----g thing," FOX Detroit reported.
"The only thing I'm going do is shoot it. I do not like dogs," one of the cops said during the Nov. 22 encounter.
Lexie, a 44-pound mix breed, got out of the St. Clair Shores home Preston shares with her grandfather at about 7:15 a.m. and was barking loudly, prompting a neighbor to call the cops.
Officers David Jacquemain and Jeremy Moskwa arrived at the scene and spent several minutes trying to find the dog's owner while the animal barked nearby, according to dash cam footage on YouTube.
In the video, one of the cops says, "Hey hey" and then three shots are fired. The dog begins whining in pain.
"You saw that f--- thing come at me, right?" one of the officers says.
"Absolutely," the other one says.
A few minutes later, an officer says they need to "put it out of its misery" and a fourth shot is fired. The dog whimpers again.
An animal control officer arrived later and used a snare pole to corral the wounded pooch into a truck.
Preston's lawsuit said the dog sat in the truck for 90 minutes and then died on the way to the hospital.
Police said the officers opened fire because the dog charged them. An internal investigation earlier this year found no wrongdoing.
Christopher Olson, Preston's attorney, said the cops planned to kill the animal the whole time.
"The first thing that they said out of their mouths was they don't like dogs; they don't do dogs; they're going to shoot the dog anyway. And that's exactly what they did," Olson told FOX Detroit.
"Then they shot the dog again, instead of trying to take care of the dog, getting some care of the dog to prevent it from dying … they made sure that the dog died," he added.
Preston's federal suit names as defendants Jacquemain, Moskwa, animal control officer Tom Massey and the city of St. Clair Shores. It seeks unspecified damages.
In a statement to FOX Detroit, St. Clair Shores officials said they were saddened by the dog's death, but called Preston's suit bogus.

"The complaint that was filed is filled with innuendo, speculation and half-truths, and I have no doubt when it's held up to the light of day, the truth will bear itself out in court," the statement said.