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OPINION
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Leibowitz: There are no bad dogs, just bad owners
BY DAVID LEIBOWITZ Glendale Star Columnist
Her name was Maria Eliza Sebastian Ruiz, 77 years old. She was married for 60 years, a mother of fi ve and a grandmother. She died early July 6 on her front porch in Phoenix, mauled by a pack of four hulking Staffordshire terrier mixes.
Pit bulls, to use the common parlance.
The dogs’ owner, Alejandro Hernandez, 33, is in jail charged with negligent homicide. It’s a Class 4 felony that carries a minimum one year behind bars and three years, nine months max. Personally, I hope Hernandez serves every last day, because the police report details negligence in the extreme.
“(Hernandez) stated the dogs belong to him and are known to escape from his backyard,” the investigator wrote. “Def. admitted to multiple occasions where his dogs escaped from his backyard and would wander around the neighborhood. “Def. admitted to prior incidents of the dogs biting other people at least two times. Def. knew the gate from which the dogs escaped from was faulty and needed to be repaired or reinforced in order to prevent the dogs from escaping. Def. stated he did not make any changes to the gate because he did not have time.”
He’ll have plenty of time now.
Hernandez’s pit bulls immediately were put down by Maricopa County Animal Control. Their euthanizing was a no-brainer.
But the story of Maria Eliza’s killing raises a larger question: Should Arizona cities and towns allow people to own pit bulls at all?
In 2016, the state Legislature passed Senate Bill 1248, which forbids breed-specifi c legislation like the pitbull bans passed by more than 900 cities nationwide.
This could easily be reconsidered, in light of Maria Eliza’s death and the fact that in 2019 pit bulls accounted for 33 killings — 69% of the 48 dog bite fatalities reported nationwide.
No other dog bites or kills so frequently. No other dog fi lls Maricopa County’s animal shelters to overfl owing. No other dog makes headlines so often.
In February, a loose pit bull attacked three Gilbert residents, including a 16-year-old girl and a 70-year-old man.
On Christmas Day 2020, a pit bull turned on its 39-year-old owner in Phoenix, tearing up her face and hands and leaving her in critical condition.
Last summer in Casa Grande, Lorenzo Hidalgo, 42, went to check on his grandmother but was met instead by three loose pit bulls. The dogs reportedly lunged at his neck. Hidalgo was airlifted to a Valley hospital, where he was fi lled with stitches and staples.
I could go on, but you get the idea: There’s a long roll call of the maimed and the dead. Yet, on the other side of the argument stands canine experts like the ASPCA, who argue for nurture ahead of nature.
“All dogs, including pit bulls, are individuals,” reads the offi cial ASPCA position. “Treating them as such, providing them with the care, training and supervision they require, and judging them by their actions and not by their DNA or their physical appearance is the best way to ensure that dogs and people can continue to share safe and happy lives together.”
Late into their 60s, my parents adopted a pit bull from the pound: Jake, a brindle behemoth who followed my mother everywhere. She was the dog’s big love in life, up there with dropped food and lying on “his couch.”
Jake outlived my mom and my dad, and now resides with my brother. He’s a sweet boy, raised in a house full of love, treated with respect and care.
It’s been 10 years, and I’ve never heard Jake so much as growl. I view him as proof that Alejandro Hernandez deserves prison time. Because there are no inherently bad dogs, only bad owners.
David Leibowitz has called the Valley home since 1995. Contact david@leibowitzsolo.com.
Passionate experience trumps political ambition
BY J.D. HAYWORTH Glendale Star Columnist
Gideon J. Tucker was writing about his home state of New York when he penned this famous observation: “No man’s life, liberty or property are safe while the Legislature is in session!”
What applies in Albany also fi ts the situation in Phoenix, and probably every other state capitol.
In fact, the homogenization of our politics has state legislators sounding very similar to their Capitol Hill counterparts. Or maybe it’s just an old-fashioned dose of “Potomac Fever.”
That’s certainly the case with Rep. Daniel Hernandez (D-Tucson). Having represented LD 2 since winning election in 2016, Hernandez announced in May that he would run for the U.S. House from Arizona’s second congressional district in 2022.
Perhaps that’s why Hernandez appeared to parrot Nancy Pelosi during debate on the state House fl oor June 25.
“We keep hearing about the threat of Communism,” Hernandez harrumphed. “You know what’s a bigger threat? White nationalism!”
With that, the representative from Tucson broke into full-throated fury, confl ating any and all conservatives with white nationalists’ intent on “teaching our kids that it’s OK to overthrow a democratically elected government.”
Some of his fellow Democrats were so enthused that they pounded their desks, apparently unaware or unconcerned that desk-pounding was often the public reaction of Soviet Communist Party boss Nikita Khrushchev during his premiership in the late 1950s and early ’60s.
Back in the here and now, Hernandez was no doubt dreaming of his future as a member of Congress. But his daydream was about to be interrupted by a state House colleague who did not bring talking points to the fl oor.
Instead, Rep. Quang Nguyen (R-Prescott Valley) carried with him the memories of brutal communist oppression that cost the lives of loved ones in his native Vietnam.
In politics and life, genuine passion surpasses contrived outrage, as Hernandez was about to learn. Meantime, the fi rst-term member from LD 1 fi rst sought to temper his righteous indignation with humor.
“I’m not a big talker. … I stood back there and listened to everybody and I just got irritated, so I came over here and pressed the white button. Is it OK if I say ‘white button’?”
His quip-as-a-question brought
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HAYWORTH FROM PAGE 10 much-needed laughter to the House chamber, but Rep. Nguyen soon turned serious.
“White nationalism didn’t drown 250,000 Vietnamese in the South China Sea. The communists did. White nationalism didn’t execute 86,000 South Vietnamese at the fall of Saigon. The communists did. White nationalists didn’t put me here (in the United States). Communism did.
“So don’t take it lightly. … I lost most of my cousins and family members due to communism. If we don’t stand up to teaching communism to our children, we’ll lose this country.”
Then Nguyen turned directly to Hernandez.
“So, sir, don’t mock me.”
It isn’t only Daniel Hernandez. Leftists nationwide have long mocked “godless communism,” insisting that those who are concerned are intent on
KIRK’S OPINION – King Features
reviving a “Red Scare.”
Quang Nguyen knows better.
Will we learn from his experience?
If not, Gideon J. Tucker’s pronouncement from the past will have to be amended.
“No man’s life, liberty, or property are safe while the communists are in control!”
J.D. Hayworth represented Arizona in the U.S. House from 1995-2007. He authored and sponsored the Enforcement First Act, legislation that would have mandated enforcement of Federal Immigration Law in the 109th Congress.
