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Dog Attack Victim's Neighbors 'All Heroes'

One neighbor pulled a young girl to safety as two rottweilers attacked, and two others used a baseball bat to get the dogs off the girl's grandmother.

 

It was an average Wednesday afternoon -- until around 6 p.m., when the dogs got loose.

The dogs were Kim Miller's two rottweilers -- both about two years old and weighing between 70 and 85 pounds each. They somehow unlatched a gate as she was putting out garbage, according to police, and raced around the corner from her home at 35 Edwards St. and attacked a 6-year-old child playing in the yard at 440 Shelton Ave.

The little girl's grandmother, Cynthia Reed, 47, look down from her second-floor apartment and saw the attack taking place, according to police. She rushed down to help the child and in the process became the victim herself.

Monique Jones lives in the apartment below Reed. She looked out her window and saw the dogs on the child.

"I ran out and yelled for her to come to me and thank God she did," Jones said. She scooped up the girl and pulled her into her apartment, slamming the door behind her.

The dog were atop the girl but hadn't injured her, Jones said. But once they saw Reed, it was a different story.

"They grabbed her by the neck and they grabbed her by the throat and they pushed her down the stairs," Jones said. Reed literally came tumbling down, she said, and the dogs dragged her into the street.

"It was awful," said Latrice Sanchez, 14, a Hamden Middle School student who lives across the street and witnessed the attack.

"They jumped on the back of her neck and knocked her down," she said, "and dragged her into the street like an alligator would."

That's when her father Curtis Wilkins spied what was going on.

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"My first thought was to go grab a bat," he said. He and another man, Kenneth Lewis, beat the dogs until they finally released Reed.

"They had her by the back of the neck," Wilkins said. "I knew I had to do something - I was in the right place at the right time and I knew I had to step up and do something."

And what he and Lewis did in all probability was save Reed's life, according to Hamden Police spokesman Capt. Ronald Smith.

"They did a fantastic job," he said, "and they're all heroes as far as I'm concerned."

Reed spent two days in the hospital and returned home Friday afternoon. She wasn't up to speaking to the media, Jones said, but wanted to thank everyone for the concern shown to her Wednesday.

"She wants to say thank you for everyone coming to help her and for her neighbors saving her life," Jones said. She underwent surgery while she was hospitalized, Jones said, and is now receiving at-home nursing services.

The dogs have been a problem for the past few weeks, Jones said. They had been loose and in the yard several times and had taken items such as soccer balls from it, she said.

"I tried to do the neighborly thing and go over there and talk to them but they wouldn't answer the door," she said. Miller, the dog's owner, came over to get them during the attack, and the dogs obeyed her command to come, Jones said.

"She told the dogs 'go home,' and they went with her," Jones said. "She never came back to see how [Reed] was."

Attempts to contact Miller Friday were unsuccessful. She was issued two infractions for allowing a dog to roam and four counts of animal nuisance, Smith said. 

It will be up to Hamden Animal Control, the Town Attorney, the Police Department and the courts if the animals are euthanized, Smith said.

Both dogs are in police custody, one at the North Haven Animal Shelter, where Hamden leases space for its impounded dogs, and the other at the New Haven Central Hospital, where it is being treated for head injuries from the bat beating.



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Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
cheryl May 24, 2013 at 10:37 am
Holder, BHO, IRS officials, don't knows anything about the 3 scandals- does that make AmericansRead More more or less safe?
cheryl May 23, 2013 at 04:29 pm
He (BHO) is certainly not inept. He is an agitator, creating chaos, for the smartest in the room heRead More surely doesn't know much, but does he? That is their tactic. Make him unaccountable for the future. We know about Behghazi- we know about the dinner Chris Steven had 1 hr before the attack with the Turkish diplomat we know about ship transporting weapons from Libya to Turkey into Syria to arm the rebels who are. (the enemy)..... AlQaeda, lets not forget FAST AND FURIOUS arming (the enemy) drug cartels, We know about operation castaways- arming Honduras. True. look them up. Boehner knows too, that's why he won't investigate Benghazi and this is our NATIONAL SECURITY. Its almost like they cant wait or want another 9/11. He certainly isn't incompetent- during the campaign in 2008, he said,"we're just 5 days away from fundamental transformation of the United States of America, and that is exactly what he's doing. He is making congress irrelevant, he is trashing the rule of law and our constitution, he is eliminating one by one the bill of rights, he is forming a national police force under DHS. He certainly not incompetent. He has rearranged the middle east, he has alienated our long allies England & Israel, and now is in bed with the Muslim brotherhood. His first phone call as P was to the P of Turkey. He knows exactly what he's doing. He certainly isn't incompetent - he has brought back racism, division, trashes our military, changed the engagement rules in combat, wasted more tax dollar, printed more money than anyone can imagine, giving power to the regulators w/ more regulations, relaxed immigration laws, welfare laws, letting criminals out of jail, all for what you ask? They need a crisis. As Emanule stated- never let a good crisis go to waste. Occupy Wall ST didn't do it, it must be big. This is the Cloward and Piven strategy to collapse the system, our American System- to implement something unknown, never tried, and no one will tell us.
cheryl May 23, 2013 at 04:36 pm
Get out of the Common Core mandated curriculum that's how you save our children. He's a report fromRead More Dept of Ed- DOE released a report as part of its common core standards that included technology to monitor students in the name of developing best teaching practices that could promote "GRIT,TENACITY, AND PERSERVERANCE." Behavior task performance measures are the broad set of methods used to capture behavior consistent with perseverance or lack thereof, and in many cases associated emotional experiences, physical movements or facial expressions, physiological responses, and thoughts-- that students do in response to a particular challenge, the report said. Wanting to understand a student's response in a time of stress, the dept. report went on to state its desire to analyze various metrics, including facial expression, brain waves patterns, heart rate, posture and eye tracking using facial recognition cameras, posture analysis seats, pressure mouse, and wireless skin conductance sensor ( worn around the wrist). Sensors provide constant, parallel streams of data and are used with data mining techniques and self report measures to examine frustration, motivation/flow, confidence, boredom and fatigue, the report said.
Ann Criscuolo Pari May 22, 2013 at 10:37 am
while receiving Staples Rewards does help defray the cost of supplies for the teachers, they areRead More STILL putting cash out of their own pockets! This should not be. But Kudos to the teachers who put their students above their own financial situation. The Town and parents should be footing the costs, not the teachers.