PETITION CLOSED

  • The time period for signing this petition has ended.
After 4 Years in Custody, Save Stu's Life and Return Him to His Home
  1. Signatures
    834 out of 1,000
    Petitioning
    1. Office of the City Attorney (+ 2 others)
      Petitioning
      close
      • Office of the City Attorney (Todd Leung)
      • President, Board of Animal Services Commissioners (Tariq Khero)
      • Councilmember and Public Safety Committee Chair (Jack Weiss)
  2. Created By
    Stephanie Ernst
    St. Louis, MO
Why This Is Important

The following information, including the letter itself, comes verbatim from Kinship Circle. Please support their work.

Note: There is no e-mail address for arguably the most important person to contact in this situation, so in addition to sending this petition, please also consider contacting the city attorney via phone or fax:

City Attorney Elect Carmen Trutanich
180 East Ocean Blvd.; Long Beach, CA 90802
ph: 562-216-4444; fax: 562-216-4445

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Playing Political Games with a Dog's Life

A detailed article (link above) gives an accurate picture of Stu and Jeff de
la Rosa's ordeal. Kinship Circle re-phrases it for simplicity and length:

Stu lived uneventfully with Jeff and two other dogs for five years, before Jeff had to leave him with a sitter in Aug. 2005, due to a family emergency. He entrusted his dogs to an assistant who knew them. While away Stu atypically clashed with another of Jeff's dogs and wound up with a torn ear.

The pet sitter tried to slip a harness over Stu's wounded ear, to bring him to the vet. Injured animals often act uncharacteristically defensive. Such was the case with Stu: The scared dog bit the assistant twice on her arm.

The assistant did not file a report with police or L.A. Animal Services (LAAS). She told Jeff she "didn't want to get Stu in trouble."

Yet three weeks later, Jeff was slapped with a lawsuit. Ten days after that, Stu was seized (without warning) from Jeff's locked outdoor kennel. Jeff rushed to Animal Services, but staff denied Stu's release, citing a bite report received one full month after its occurrence. Thus began Stu's incarceration, a battle of bureaucratic power plays so embarrassingly absurd, Stu's story is notorious worldwide. . . .

Fast forward four years and Stu is still trapped in a bureaucratic thicket. He's aged inside City facilities as Jeff fights a relentless legal battle. Esteemed dog behaviorists -- such as Dr. Richard Polsky, a co-creator of City criteria for gauging dangerous dogs, and Bobby Dorofshar of New Leash on Life, another City advisor and one-time member of its Spay/Neuter Advisory Committee -- have testified that Stu poses no threat of aggression to humans. Their common conclusion stems from assessment of Stu's pre- and post-incident behavior, along with comprehension of how the victim's actions may have triggered the bites. Dorofshar even sheltered Stu at his own facility for many months, during which time he came to know the dog. . . .

Animal Services Commission, created to monitor LAAS, even advocated for Stu's life. Commissioner Archie Quincey, a 30-year L.A. County Animal Control veteran, motioned the City Attorney to call off his resistance to Jeff's appeal. Quincey proposed the case go back to Superior Court to drop Stu's sentence because evidence shows a denial of due process. But Commissioner Quincey's motion has vanished from the Commission's agenda and a 6/8/09 meeting before Stu's Appeals Court case was cancelled as well.

No one seems to know who's in charge -- Animal Services Commission or Animal Services Department -- of meeting agendas. It is clear, however, that Stu's case is shuffled so that Commissioner Quincey's motion goes unheard.

Quincey intends to bring up Stu's case at the June 22 meeting whether it's scheduled or not. "I think it's gone too far," he told reporter Kate Woodviolet for LA Pet Rescue Examiner. "I have a lot of Animal Control experience. I saw the pictures [of the human victim's injuries], there were a couple of small puncture wounds -- and the dog was injured when it happened. On that one bite Stu gets the ultimate penalty? That's like getting the electric chair for a misdemeanor!"

At this point, there is but one fair and merciful outcome left: Stu needs to go home. Yesterday.

Recent Signatures

Please Send Stu Home

Dear City of Los Angeles Officials

I trust all letter recipients are familiar with Stu, a rescued dog who lived
an uneventful five years with Jeff de la Rosa, before de la Rosa entrusted
his dogs to an assistant while away for a family emergency.
 
Under that pet sitter's care, in August 2005, Stu atypically clashed with
another household dog and wound up with a torn ear. It is accepted knowledge
that injured animals may react defensively. As the pet sitter slipped a
harness over Stu's hurt ear, the scared dog bit her twice on the arm.
 
"A couple of puncture wounds," Commissioner Archie Quincey, a 30-year
veteran of L.A. Country Animal Control, would later state. Still, a full
month after the incident, the assistant served de la Rosa with a lawsuit, and
Stu was seized from a locked, backyard kennel. Thus began Stu's
incarceration under L.A. Animal Services (LAAS) and a bureaucratic battle so
absurd that Stu's story has gained worldwide notoriety.
 
What is the point of keeping this now elderly dog on death row? Dr. Richard
Polsky, a co-creator of City criteria for gauging dangerous dogs, and Bobby
Dorofshar of New Leash on Life, also a City advisor and one-time member of
its Spay/Neuter Advisory Committee, have testified that Stu poses no
threat of aggression to humans. Their conclusion stems from assessment of
Stu's pre- and post-incident behavior, plus comprehension of how the
victim's actions may have triggered the bites. Dorofshar sheltered Stu at
his own facility for many months, during which time he came to know the dog.
 
The City Attorney should call off his resistance to de la Rosa's appeal and
close the books on this case. Please stop shuffling Stu through a
bureaucratic thicket and let the dog live his final years with de la Rosa.
 
After four years of wrongful internment in LAAS facilities, just one fair
and merciful outcome remains: Stu needs to go home. Yesterday.

[Your name]