Since it doesn't work for guns, why not try it on dogs?
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[url]http://www.sunspot.net/news/local/bal-md.pitbull15mar15.story?coll=bal%2Dlocal%2Dheadlines[/url]
[b]Pit bull control ideas debated
Four proposals include ban, licensing, using microchip implant[/b]
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By Neal Thompson
Sun Staff
Originally published March 15, 2001
More than 100 people crammed into a City Hall hearing room last night to debate four different proposals to regulate - and possibly ban - pit bulls in Baltimore.
Most of those attending the lengthy and sometimes raucous hearing of the City Council's Housing, Health and Environment Committee were animal advocates opposed to any legislation that specifically targets pit bulls.
The most poignant testimony came from Kelly Eyring, whose 7-year-old daughter, Kasey, was mauled by a pit bull Jan. 12 while playing with her two sisters outside their grandmother's Southwest Baltimore house.
The dog escaped through a hole in the owner's backyard fence and latched onto Kasey's face, dragging her back and forth across the street as family and neighbors frantically kicked the dog and beat it with sticks and rocks.
"This dog did not let go," Eyring said last night. "I watched my daughter's face get ripped off. ... This dog wanted to kill her."
Neither police nor the dog's owner, Norman Jenkins, were able to free the 7-year-old. The dog finally loosened its bite when Kasey's father repeatedly stabbed it. The girl underwent five hours of surgery to her face that night.
The attack prompted Councilwoman Agnes Welch, a West Baltimore Democrat, to introduce two bills. One would prohibit ownership of pit bulls or other dogs "trained to attack." Violators would face a fine of up to $1,000 and 12 months in jail.
The second, less-restrictive proposal would require a license to own a pit bull and require owners to have liability insurance of at least $25,000.
A third bill, introduced at the request of the city's health commissioner, Dr. Peter L. Beilenson, calls for strict licensing of pit bulls and would require owners to have microchips implanted in their dogs' skin containing information on whether a dog had been spayed or neutered.