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April 18, 2012

Texas Man Claims Police Killed His Dog Cisco When Responding to Wrong Address


A Texas man claims that his beloved dog Cisco was shot point blank by a police officer who responded to a call at the wrong address.

Michael Paxton, 40, said he and his Australian cattle dog Cisco were relaxing and playing Frisbee in his Austin backyard on Saturday afternoon when he decided to go get something from his truck in the driveway.

As he approached his truck, he said he saw something from the corner of his eye and looked up to see a police officer who immediately drew his weapon and told Paxton to put his hands up.

"He had a Taser. He had pepper spray. I don't understand why, in broad daylight, he pulled a gun on me. I wasn't running. I wasn't hiding," Paxton told ABCNews.com today. "I was just saying, 'I live here.' I was panicking. I was afraid for my life."

Paxton said he heard Cisco, who weighed about 50 pounds, barking and coming towards him from the backyard.

"I said, 'Don't shoot him. Don't shoot my dog. He won't bite you.' But he shot him, just like that. It all happened in under 30 seconds," Paxton said. "There was no attack on the officer other than barking and challenging him."

Austin Police Cpl. Anthony Hipolito told ABCNews. com that the officer did respond to the wrong address, but it was the address provided by the 911 call. The call came from the house next to Paxton's.

Hipolito said that dashcam footage shows the dog barking and attacking the officer.

"The officer was basically in retreat and asked the owner to grab the dog," Hipolito said. "He was unable to and the dog continued to attack and that's when the officer discharged his firearm."


An apology was issued at the scene, according to Hipolito, but Paxton said no one apologized to him.

"Officers have to do everything they can to protect themselves, up to and including the use of deadly force," Hipolito said. "It's something that we don't ever want to do. To shoot and kill an animal is very unfortunate and tragic. The officer is distraught and did not want to do it, but at the same time, he had to protect himself."

As a shocked and horrified Paxton stared down at his dog's lifeless body, he said he was confused when the officer started asking him if he had a girlfriend.

"I was saying, 'You just killed my dog. I can't believe you just killed my dog. What is going on?'" Paxton recalled.

Paxton said the officer said he was responding to a domestic issue report of a man choking a woman. Paxton does not have a girlfriend and believes the report came from his neighbor's house.

Paxton said the officer did not apologize and when his sergeant arrived, he was unsympathetic and told Paxton the officer was within his right to shoot the dog. He said he has not heard from the police since the incident.

"I was in shock for probably almost 24 hours," Paxton said, choking up. "I wasn't crying at that point, but when I picked my dog up out of the driveway, I lost it."

Paxton's friends started a Facebook page called "Justice for Cisco" that has nearly 14,000 supporters. Hundreds of people have left messages of support, outrage and anger.

"How heartbreaking and so uncalled for. Tears just fall for the fallen. So very sorry for your lost over a mistaken address," one supporter wrote.

Another wrote: "How dare any officer make a mistake & not apologize? If that were a citizen they would be made to apologize immediately. A life was taken & even though some might look at it only being a dog; it was somebody's pet that they loved dearly."

"The only thing that has brought me comfort is the response and outpouring of emotion for him," Paxton said. "I'm sure he heard the yelling. He's a dog. This is his territory. He's going to be territorial to some extent. To me, it's pretty typical dog behavior. He's not a viscious dog. He was a good boy. He was a real good boy."

7 comments:

  1. If an officer shot my dog, then he should be shot like the dog.

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  2. It's way past time that the American people put up with this scum and their vicious behavior.

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  3. The only good cop is a dead cop.

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  4. The not apologizing bit...they learned from the US government. When the USS Vincennes shot down an Iranian airliner in the 80's ..the US refused to apologize. In the hundreds of thousands of "collateral damage" incidents .... killed and maimed civilians of the Middle East get no apologies.

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  5. evilcheneycyborgzombievsvampireObamaGolemApril 18, 2012 at 3:23 PM

    This type of dog is pretty active and small.

    They're one of the more harmless dogs but they are pretty aggressive and barky and will nip a strangers heels sometimes.
    I have been bitten by about a dozen or more different dogs, a few times they drew blood. However this type of dog has nipped the back of my ankle and leg three separate times but never has drawn blood.
    They don't jump at peoples upper torso, they are bred to nip the heels of various farm animals.
    If they think you are in need of corralling or controlling that's what they do.

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  6. This is typical police behavior these days. They have this idea that their safety is the ONLY safety that matters. They could kill fifty people, by mistake, issue no apology and then fifteen minutes later a "police spokesperson" shows up and says it was all justified. An then an inquiry is launched that takes a full year and then again, same reply, it was all justified.

    And with this story, the man is saying the dog barked and did not attack the officer yet the police are saying dashcam video says otherwise. It will be a year before they show it to the public, unless a judge rules that everything police do is top secret and beyond public inquiry, and then they will still just say that a review shows it was totally justified even if the dog had barked from inside a locked house from a window, or ten miles away. The police are always, constantly, in fear for their lives. It is pathetic and the country we now live in.

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  7. Robots only do what they are told, INDIVIDUAL EVALUATION OF A GIVEN SITUATION TO APPLY THE APPROPRIATE LEVEL OF RESPONSE IS NOT ALLOWED, AND THAT COST THE POOR DOG HIS LIFE, THE OWNER UNBEARABLE TRAUMA, THE OFFICER UNTOLD EMOTIONS AND SELF REVIEW OF QUESTIONABLE BEHAVIOR THAT RESULTS FROM GESTAPO LIKE POLICY RELENTLESSLY DIRECTED AT HIMSELF, AND ALL POLICE OFFICERS, AND FINALLY, THE FINANCIALLY STRAPPED CITY OF AUSTIN THAT WILL HAND OVER ABOUT 200K TO RESOLVE THE MATTER.

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