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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWoman is screaming inside her apt in celebration of Knick's win, LAPD kill her Doodle
https://abc7.com/post/family-dog-shot-killed-lapd-during-knicks-celebration-condo-canoga-park-police-say/19299441/Family dog shot and killed by LAPD during Knicks celebration at condo in Canoga Park
Raymon Alvarez, who lives across the street, said he heard the screaming while heading out for a walk.
"The screaming I heard was like, 'Ah! Oh my God! Oh my God!' Like just, pure screaming," Alvarez said.
When he returned home, he said he heard gunfire.
"I didn't think they were gunshots at first because this area is not really known for any sort of gun violence," Alvarez said.
The dog owner's son told Eyewitness News off-camera that his mother had simply been celebrating the Knicks' championship win and that Jameson was energetic but not violent.
"He's such a good dog!" the woman can be heard screaming in the video from the scene.
Now, a memorial is growing in the hallway where neighbors watched Jameson die.
The neighbor who called police told Eyewitness News off-camera that they they feel guilty for calling 911, but sincerely thought their neighbor was in trouble.
yardwork
(69,848 posts)My wife is former LE and says this all the time. People call 911 and then are surprised and appalled when LE comes in and does what they do. People and pets get shot. People get arrested. People get involuntarily committed.
When you call 911 you usually aren't getting a response from Dudley Do Right.
BlueWaveNeverEnd
(15,312 posts)SSJVegeta
(3,370 posts)...if you are unsure about who to call
LisaL
(47,927 posts)Last edited Mon Jun 15, 2026, 12:25 PM - Edit history (1)
calling non-emergency doesn't seem prudent.
SSJVegeta
(3,370 posts)Hassin Bin Sober
(27,553 posts)Any time an officer has to be dispatched it goes through 911 even if its non emergency. There is no separate radio in the cop cars for non emergency. Its just a matter of how they mark the priority.
LisaL
(47,927 posts)Neighbor did. He heard her screaming and believed something was wrong. It's hard to blame the neighbor because they were trying to be helpful.
yardwork
(69,848 posts)I wasn't there and have no idea what I would have done in that neighbor's shoes.
All I'm saying is that once somebody calls 911, they've handed control of the situation over to people with guns. Those people may or may not know how to deescalate. They may or may not make the situation better. Their goal is probably different from that of the person who called 911.
Sometimes you get a calm, professional, well-trained officer who overcomes their understandable fear of responding to a potentially lethal domestic incident. And sometimes you don't.
LisaL
(47,927 posts)what would you be saying?
yardwork
(69,848 posts)I've posted a number of responses in this thread and tried to be clear.
LisaL
(47,927 posts)Police, however, is another story. That dog is a doodle. I can't believe they were scared of the doodle.
yardwork
(69,848 posts)I've even stated that I don't know what I would have done.
Obviously the fault lies with LE. There's a myth in the U.S. that LE is there to help. Sometimes that's true and sometimes it's not.
LisaL
(47,927 posts)The bullets could have gone through the wall and kill some humans in the process.
niyad
(134,983 posts)because a guy was stumbling around behind one of our buildings, trespassing, extremely vulgar, waving a machete around. He was also hanging around the bus stop. I called the bus driver to warn her. The cops did show up, and did put the guy in one of the patrol cars. One of them interrogated the residents, demanding their ID's, treating them like suspects. We asked if the guy was going to be taken to a mental health facility, or jail. We were assured that he would be dealt with. We watched the cops drive him away. A few minutes later, the machete guy was sitting at the bus stop at the top of the hill. The bus driver told me that the cops do the same thing at the bus terminaal. Trouble maker in car, driven around the corner out of sight, and let out.
Protect and serve!
woodsprite
(12,598 posts)I was laying face down, in the rain, at midnight with a broken and dislocated shoulder and a 90 lb black German shepherd on a leash wondering what the heck happened. I maneuvered my way to my glasses snd got the phone from my pocket. My first call was to my hubby to come get the dog. I didnt want her there when the ambulance or cops showed up because I didnt trust how they (or she) would react. The second call was to 911. Hubby thought I was crazy for worrying about our dog. Then I had to teach the ambulance crew how to improvise a sling to immobilize my arm.
LisaL
(47,927 posts)If they are afraid of a doodle, imagine how terrified they would be of a German Shepherd.
SSJVegeta
(3,370 posts)cab67
(3,882 posts)...the neighbor did the right thing. The number of people who'd be alive if a neighbor who didn't call 911 had chosen differently is pretty high.
This is 100 percent on the police.
LisaL
(47,927 posts)Last edited Mon Jun 15, 2026, 12:23 PM - Edit history (1)
people on this very board get really angry. Neighbor thought something was wrong because a woman was screaming.
Disaffected
(6,661 posts)Why do you keep saying that?
LisaL
(47,927 posts)Neighbor heard a woman screaming. I see now that I had a typo and I corrected it.
yardwork
(69,848 posts)All I'm saying is that once LE is called, they will come in and take over and the outcome might not be what the caller wants or expects.
Cops are human. They have human failings. Domestic disturbances scare them. Domestic disturbances are inherently emotional, chaotic, and unpredictable. Cops get killed responding to domestic disturbances.
Does that mean we shouldn't call 911 if we think someone's life is in danger? No, that's not what I'm saying. What I'm saying is that once you make that call you've turned over control. Should it be that way? No. Ideally, LE would include only highly skilled officers focused on deescalating and given the resources to do that, but things aren't very ideal around here lately.
cab67
(3,882 posts)I don't live in LA, so I've never interacted with LAPD. Based on the officers in my area that I know, they're honorable people who generally approach situations that might involve domestic violence with some deliberation.
I'm also fully aware that as a white guy who grew up in the suburbs, who currently lives in a college town, and who's worst experience with law enforcement was a cop in Minneapolis with a bad attitude about 30 years ago,* my appreciation of police is probably elevated compared with that of someone who grew up with a very different background.
-----
*One of my tail lights had gone out. I didn't know it. I'd just moved to Chicago for a post-doc project, and I was driving up to St Paul to do some research. The officer took one look at my driver's license and started complaining about just how terrible I must be coming from a city where no one respects the law. I'd said nothing to him except 'I'm sorry, I didn't realize the tail light was out, and I'll attend to it as soon as I can.' I may have been more naive then than now, but even then, I knew better than to say anything that smelled of "back-talk" to a police officer. Maybe he was having a bad day.
usonian
(26,935 posts)You've got three guesses.

orangecrush
(31,681 posts)niyad
(134,983 posts)a kennedy
(36,674 posts)LisaL
(47,927 posts)It's like saying, well the police should get her another child.
I can't believe police were scared of the doodle.
Martin68
(28,201 posts)ABC123Easy
(435 posts)Poor little guy. He looks like such a good boy.
This is one reason I absolutely HATE the police. They're incapable of using judgement and go into situations guns blazing not caring if they shoot the person who needs help or not. Or even if they're at the correct fucking address.
Fuck these assholes.
orangecrush
(31,681 posts)RockRaven
(19,939 posts)Choose carefully. You aren't just asking for help.
LisaL
(47,927 posts)That poor dog.
Hassin Bin Sober
(27,553 posts)He once told me every precinct has a couple cops who get off shooting dogs.
He also said every precinct has only a couple cops who like to write DUIs - most dont because they are a lot of work and you end up spending half your shift in the station.
. I dont know why I mentioned that.
LisaL
(47,927 posts)NT
-misanthroptimist
(1,924 posts)...that the cops who respond are cowards. They are fearful of everything. We've seen them shoot sleeping people, disabled people, people who are cooperating peacefully, dogs -even little chihuahuas.
The alternative explanation is that they aren't cowards, just bloodthirsty thugs who can't wait to shoot someone.
(Yes, I know that there are brave and honest cops. I wish they'd run the cowards and thugs out of policing.)
Ilsa
(64,695 posts)I lost my dog of 13 years only ten days ago. I'm out having lunch on the way to picking up Jagger's memorial dog prints.
Trigger-happy cops. No wonder I prefer watching UK crime dramas to US.
niyad
(134,983 posts)that you are having to deal with a lot all at once.
flvegan
(66,611 posts)Too Many Cops Are Bad. (changed from ACAB, because I don't think they all are)