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Dog Bites Man

Miami Police canine units attack first, ask questions later.

Just after 9:30 p.m., an 80-pound Belgian Malinois snarls as it traverses the bushes outside a one-story house on NW 51st Street in Liberty City. Its bared teeth glisten under the streetlights.

Cotekia Stringer hopes it misses her scent. A few minutes earlier, the heavyset 23-year-old with a bright panther tattoo on her leg had broken into a house down the block. She stole a few hundred bucks of jewelry and a checkbook.

But the cops — and the dog — show up before she can run very far.

Suddenly, a ball of muscle, brown fur, and razor-sharp incisors pounces on her. She grabs the collar and tries to roll away, but it's too late. The dog rips a quarter-size chunk of flesh from her hand. She screams and punches the animal. It slashes her arms and bites her face.

Finally, an officer arrives and calls off the beast.

The police take Stringer to the hospital and charge her with five felonies — including attempting to kill a police dog. She eventually gets four years in the Lowell Correctional Institution in Ocala for her crimes.

That was 2006. Today, Stringer's case — and the graphic photos of her torn flesh — have Miami's police review board asking whether cops need to rethink how they use their canines. Moreover, mutts have mangled suspects at a much faster rate than in recent years — nine in the first six months of 2009. And two handlers — one from the city police force and one from the county — will soon be tried for brutally mistreating and killing their canines.

"I'm really worried about how Miami Police are using their dogs," says Janet McAliley, a member of the Civilian Investigative Panel (CIP), which monitors complaints against cops. "There's no justification for those kinds of injuries on an unarmed woman like Cotekia Stringer."

Police first deputized dogs in Victorian England, when the Metropolitan London Police — the world's first metro force — used bloodhounds to track Jack the Ripper. Most American cops didn't have canine units until after World War II, when they took a page from the Nazis, who were well known for using intimidating military dogs.

During the 1960s, some departments reined in their dogs after snarling police German shepherds tore into civil rights marchers in Birmingham and Selma. Rules were passed that required training the animals to bark before biting. Still, cities across the nation — in California, Minnesota, and Washington, D.C. — have in recent years paid huge settlements for unjustified attacks. In D.C., a female officer was sentenced to ten years in prison in 2001 for allowing her dog to mangle two unarmed suspects.

In 2003, the U.S. Department of Justice was called in to review Miami's force, which had been accused of racism and brutality. Among the recommendations: The city should overhaul its canine units. The previous year, two sergeants and 19 canine officers had allowed their dogs to bite 68 suspects; this cost taxpayers thousands in settlements. In a letter to the city, the DOJ recommended retraining the animals to bark first.

Cops ignored the suggestion. The policy didn't change. In 2006, the DOJ wrote a follow-up missive stating "there is significant evidence that dogs can and do bite spontaneously" and noting "several incidents... in which the officer appeared to lack control over whether the dog would bite."

The city has made progress, though. In 2007, only 13 people were bitten. But numbers are on the rise again. This past January through June, nine people have been bitten. (Canines with the Miami-Dade County Police Department — which has a significantly larger force and covers a larger area — have injured only six suspects so far this year.) Among the city's cases:

Darbin Diaz, age 21, was hiding behind a metal shed in Little Havana in January when a police dog bit his back and both thighs. He was suspected of burglary at a nearby house, but in the end was charged with only a misdemeanor for resisting arrest. The case is still open.

• Twenty-three-year-old Jose Morales was wanted for stealing a car and fleeing a cop when the same dog that bit Diaz tracked him down in February; it punctured both shoulders and the back of his head. He was never charged with a crime, according to county records.

• After a police canine bit him on the left leg, John Rosa, age 22, was arrested April 14 on suspicion of a robbery. He was never charged.

• A police dog tore into 20-year-old Sean Futch's arm March 26 as he cowered behind a back-yard barbecue on NW 115th Street. He had no prior criminal record. He was charged with burglary and fighting the dog, both felonies. A trial is set for September.

"You've got to protect yourself," says Futch's cousin, whose name is — interestingly — Michael Vick. "You even touch a dog, you get charged with assault on an officer. But that's one vicious officer, man."

Officially, Miami cops have leeway to decide when to let their dogs bite. Rules forbid officers from unleashing their canines on drunken suspects or those wanted for minor crimes. Confessions can't be coerced with the dogs' help.

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  • Dyanicantu04 06/20/2011 4:59:00 AM

    The dogs are just doing their job. They were trained to do it.

  • Jchichon 06/16/2011 3:10:00 AM

    fucked up

  • Candy 07/28/2009 6:23:00 PM

    It's sad to think that you're suggesting that we should let people like this get away with criminal actions. Perhaps my jaded perception of justice comes from having previous crimes committed to my family members. Maybe when something like a home invasion happens closer to your home, you would be able to understand what it feels like to want justice to come to the person committing the crime. I sleep a little better knowing that an officer has the ability to ues a dog to nab a person that has done others harm just like I fully support tasers and any other equipment they can use. Maybe you'd also like to support letting drunk drivers loose on the streets until they kill someone with their vehicles. Criminals reap what they sow and that is exactly what is happening thanks to those police officers on the streets.

  • Daedalus Rubicon 07/21/2009 1:29:00 PM

    The fact that this "unarmed" woman was breaking and entering a home and stealing is the issue here. The use of police dogs is preferable to putting human lives at risk in arresting a criminal who may have been armed and dangerous.

  • joe 07/21/2009 8:32:00 AM

    Chuck Strouse: The DOJ makes recommendations that have little or no credibility and, according to your own source (Pat Beltz) their recommendation "sounds good, but isnt realistic." And that is exactly the case. The DOJ made a recommendation without completing the background research that they should have. The policy that they requested be changed, so that the K-9s bark first, actually INCREASES the number of improper bites. Your writer was wrong. As for the Miami-Dade K-9 unit having more dogs, yet less bites. I dont know if you have noticed, but the majority of the county is perfectly nice and relatively sedate compared to the city. Tim Elfrink is writing a disingenuous, unresearched sensationalist drivel. It might move papers, but it damages the papers credibility.

  • What a shame 07/20/2009 9:25:00 PM

    Po Po Cotekia. She should be in jail for her name. Here's a novel idea: Don't rob or steal or else get your disgusting black A S S bitten. It's amazing how this liberal piece of garbage rag attempts to make the criminals victims. GO DOGS GO! GO DOGS GO!

  • chuck strouse, editor 07/19/2009 8:50:00 PM

    Police bashing, please! The United States Justice Department recommended Miami change its policy in regard to dogs. The city refused. The Citizen Investigative Panel expressed concern about this policy and even provided the photos that accompany this article. From McDuffie to the Super Bowl riots to Mercado to FTAA, the city force has decades of history of paying huge settlements, blaming the messenger and thumbing its noses at civilians who question them. Gents, don't look so hard for someone else to blame. You provide a great service and you're better than that.

  • Jesse 07/17/2009 8:11:00 PM

    Once again more police bashing from the Miami New Times. These people would not have have been bitten if they were not tresspassing on to other people's property to commit crimes. I agree with the other poster if an armed K9 Officer instructs you to stop you stop. Disobeying those instructions come with consequences. If you're man enough to commit a crime then be man enough to bare the consequences. Thanks New Times for another police bashing article.

  • JOE 07/17/2009 8:48:00 AM

    This is pure, shameless, sensationalist journalism at its worst. This writer has repeatedly shown a propensity to bash Law Enforcement at every available opportunity. The author of this fiction painted The City of Miami Police Depts K-9's as "Snarling beasts" who's teeth "glisten under the streetlights". Guaranteed he has never once taken the effort to engage in any actual journalistic investigation. Had he done so he would have discovered that though these animals are capable of commiting violence (just like humans, only not as horribly), they are also capable of extreme care. They play with our children, wait patiently for our wives to sneak them some treats, and guard us while we sleep. But when we arent sleeping, while we are working, they are guarding you, while you sleep. We are not out there looking for nice people. We are trying to locate all manner of felons. Some are guilty of property crimes, some are guilty of shooting people in the face. Sometimes the police dog is the only thing keeping law enforcement officers out of the morgue. To the writer, show some gratitude for our efforts. To everyone else, next time you see a K-9 handler, go shake his or her hand, and say thank you, we need the support.

  • Bruce 07/17/2009 1:32:00 AM

    Amazing, you feel sorry for these people. Maybe if they were not stealing and robbing, this wouldn't happen. I don't know about you but why is it that people who don't commit crimes, don't get bitten. These people are criminals. They are lucky more doesn't happen to them. Anyways, they always get let out in court for some "loop hole." Keep on protecting our streets k-9. I wonder if the author of this story was robbed,or worse, if he would feel the same way.

  • Monica 07/16/2009 11:02:00 PM

    Unbelieveable, who wrote this article? Have you no idea of the risks these officers take every day to defend YOUR homes and families? Perhaphs if the criminal wasn't committing crimes they would not have gotten hurt. They are the ones at fault here, no one else. STOP STEALING, WHEN AN OFFICER TELLS YOU TO STOP, STOP! It doesn't take a genius to figure out that you should obey an officer with a gun and a K9. What makes me furious is that the criminal is being painted to be a victim here when the officer and the K9 were only doing their jobs. That criminal better be grateful that she got away from that situation with nothing more than a chunk of flesh missing. Break into my house and you'll wind up with more than a bite from my 160 lb. dog because the law gives me the right to shoot anyone who breaks into my home and believe me, I won't think twice. Absolutely shamefull article!

  • Maddy 07/15/2009 8:02:00 PM

    If these people were not stealing & doing crimes they weren't suppose to be doing, they wouldn't be chased by police dogs. These are people invading our properties I don't feel sorry for them. Every action has a consequence!!!!!

 

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