XL Bully D-day looms: Expert warns of ‘disaster’ as questions remain over the future of thousands of dogs in the next two weeks – while videos show police struggling to handle the pets in public and owners failing to control them
A dog expert has warned of an approaching ‘disaster’ as the final day to rehome thousands of XL Bully dogs looms in just the next two weeks.
The breed will be banned under the Dangerous Dogs Act at the end of this month, following as many as 12 people being killed by a suspected XL Bully in the last three years.
Owners can apply to have their pets exempt from the crackdown – which means they would have to pay £92.40 for a certificate and the dog would need to be microchipped and neutered, among other rules.
The second option would be to have their dogs put down, with the government offering £200 in compensation to these owners.
Many owners are desperately trying to get their dogs rehomed in Scotland or Northern Ireland before the ban comes in when it will be illegal to do so.
The suspected XL Bully attacks the man (pictured left lying on the floor), who according to bystanders came to help the woman struggling to control her dogs
When the owner (pictured) finally gets a hold of the second dog, the terrified man runs away just before the train stops at the platform
There have been numerous reports of XL Bully attacks in the last year, including a 10-year-old boy being mauled in Blackburn as well as a campaigner for the breed describing the horrific injuries an XL Bully inflicted on him.
READ HERE: What IS an XL Bully? Government releases official definition amid warnings dog will be ‘impossible to track’ once ban comes into place because it is not a recognised breed
Two XL Bully dogs recently launched an attack on a rail platform, another dog attacked a security guard while in another video an XL Bully charged at police officers.
Dog behaviourist and obedience trainer Stan Rawlinson told MailOnline the introduction of the ban will be an ‘absolute shambles’ as the Government do not have an appropriate system in place to deal with the fallout.
He said: ‘They’re gonna have an enormous problem. The unfortunate situation is nothing is fully in place to be able to do what they’re supposed to do.
‘It’s an absolute shambles… no one is going to be able to police this ban because the only people that can actually do it at this moment in time are the police.’
Mr Rawlinson, who has retired from one to one behavioural work to campaign against bad practices, added that there is a major shortage of experts needed to identify these dogs.
‘DNA testing doesn’t work because the applites of dogs are too diverse to be able to use DNA as a check in this moment of time,’ he said.
Footage shows members of the public reacting angrily as the dog – pictured – was led away
The dog bit a member of staff at Highcross Shopping Centre in Leicester
‘The Bully XL is not a specific breed of dog. It is easier to do a labrador or a springer but even then it is not accurate.
‘I believe in the whole of London. There’s only 3 experts on this. In the country we have very few people in place that can professionally investigate one of these dogs.
He added that the police are dealing with enough at the moment without having to police the XL Bully ban.
He said: ‘The police are hamstrung to come out if you get bloody raped or burgled, or whatever you know, so I can’t see them doing it. So there’s gonna be difficulty.
Mr Rawlinson said there will be ‘difficulties’ in the dogs being destroyed as a lot of vets have said they will not put down a dog with a ‘reasonable’ temperament.
This is the terrifying moment a dog – thought to be an XL bully ‘ mauls a 10-year-old boy in a street, as locals try and fight the animal off
The boy frantically tries to run away as the dog leaps at him before tugging on his coat. The adult then tries to free the boy from the dog while two bystanders rush to help
He said: ‘The dogs are supposed to be destroyed but the vets are refusing to do that. A large tranche of vets say we will not destroy a healthy dog with a reasonable temperament these dogs have got to be temperament tested.’
To get an exemption licence for an XL Bully, the dog must be temperament tested by an expert and Mr Rawlinson said there are very few experts in the UK.
Ben Cźyżyk, 38, was set upon after the dog’s owner ordered that it attack him on Friday night
Mr Cźyżyk showed pictures of his wounds after the dog attack on Friday in Wolverhampton
He said: ‘There’s about 12 people able to temperament test these dogs, safely. I was one of them. I have retired, of course.
‘If you want to get a licence, you have to get it temperament tested.
‘How is that going to happen by the end of December?’
Before the introduction of the ban, Mr Rawlinson was a strong Tory supporter.
However, his view has changed since the ‘ill-thought out’ ban was conceived.
When the door eventually opened, an American XL Bully dog raced out towards them at speed, charging at the first police officer while barking loudly
This is the terrifying moment that an American XL Bully dog charged at police officers after being unleashed by its owner, whom they were trying to arrest in south Yorkshire
He said: ‘If you had cut me, I would have bled conservative. I wouldn’t now though.
‘I don’t know what has happened but they are not doing real politics. They are doing gesture politics.
‘They haven’t thought this through. They haven’t got a system in place to be able to police it and they haven’t got a strong direction to tell these people what they have to do.
The dog sprints after another man, who is seen on the film wearing a while t-shirt and shorts
He is chased onto a petrol station forecourt where he was attacked before the animal is hit and stops the attack
‘Most of these people don’t even know what height an XL bully is supposed to be. A male is supposed to be at least 20 inches at the withers, which is the top of the shoulders, the female 19 inches.
‘If they are anything below, it doesn’t matter what they look like, they’re not an XL Bully. Simple, end off. But people don’t seem to understand that – it’s so important. There’s a lot of people out there running around like headless chickens.’
‘It is panic politics, it is knee-jerk politics.
The man can be seen wrestling with the powerful animal as he tries to bring it under control
The dog is believed to be an XL Bully-type. The mongrel crossbreeds are set to be banned by the end of the year under UK Government plans
Mr Rawlinson said the Government should have brought in a ‘specialised licence’ for the XL Bully breed.
He said: ‘That licence would be for potentially dangerous dogs. They then put the description of that out, and they should have given them a year to get a licence, because there’s a few things that have to do.
‘I don’t know why they think they can just destroy these dogs. They have done nothing wrong.
‘Under the law at this moment in time, a dog should be temperament tested before it is destroyed anyway.
Injuries and deaths after attacks by XL Bully type dogs
Jonathan Halstead, 35
Jonathan Halstead, 35 – January 29, 2020
Jonathan died after a severe neck injury and bites after being attacked in his home in Oldham, Greater Manchester by his pet Staffordshire Bull Terrier, Bronson.
It is believed the dog attacked him when its owner suffered an epileptic fit.
Jack Lis, 10
Jack Lis, 10 – November 8, 2021
Schoolboy Jack Lis, 10, suffered catastrophic injuries in the mauling by an American XL Bully dog called Beast while visiting a friend’s home in Penyrheol in Caerphilly, Wales on November 8, 2021.
Neighbours and Welsh Ambulance Service paramedics desperately tried to save him but he died at the scene. Armed police destroyed the dog on site.
Adam Watts, 55
Adam Watts, 55 – December 22, 2021
Adam Watts, 55, was attacked at the Juniper Kennels and Cattery in Kirkton of Auchterhouse, near Dundee, and was pronounced dead at the scene on December 22, 2021.
MARCH 21, 2022: Undated family handout photo issued by Merseyside Police of Bella-Rae Birch
Bella-Rae Birch, 17 months – March 21, 2022
Toddler Bella-Rae Birch was attacked by her family’s pet American Bully XL dog when she was just 17 months old.
The vicious dog snatched the child out of her mother’s arms while they were at their home in Blackbrook, St Helens, Merseyside, on March 21 last year.
Keven Jones, 62
Keven Jones, 62 – May 28, 2022
Keven Jones died after he was attacked by an American Bully XL dog in Wrexham, Wales on May 28 last year.
Ambulance workers attempted to save him but they were unable to stop his left leg from bleeding.
Mr Jones was then pronounced dead at his son’s house following the attack.
Joanne Robinson, 43
Joanne Robinson, 43 – July 15, 2022
Mother-of-two Joanne Robinson, 43, was killed by her American Bully XL dog, Rocco, after it ‘turned mad in the extreme heat’ in July last year.
She died at the scene of the attack at home in Rotherham, South Yorkshire while her partner, Jamie Stead, was left with injuries to his hands, stomach and face as he tried to pull the animal off her.
Joanne’s mother Dot, of Wath-upon-Dearne, South Yorkshire, revealed at the time that Rocco had previously fought with their other dog Lola – and she had warned her daughter to ‘get rid of one of them’.
Ian ‘Wiggy’ Symes, 34
Ian Symes, 34 – August 2022
Ian ‘Wiggy’ Symes, 34, who is understood to have been walking a Bully XL dog himself at a recreation ground in Fareham, Hampshire, died at the scene following a horrific dog attack in August 2022.
His devastated family said he was out dog walking and ‘doing something he loved’ when he died at the field in Fareham, Hampshire.
Ann Dunn, 65
Ann Dunn, 65 – October 3, 2022
Ann Dunn, 65, was found collapsed with ‘catastrophic injuries’ at her Liverpool home she shared with seven dogs on October 3 last year.
She was mauled to death by dogs including an American Bully XL – and had been sent to hospital a year before her death because she had been bitten by a dog.
Shirley Patrick, 83
Shirley Patrick, 83 – December 3, 2022
Widowed grandmother Shirley Patrick, 83, died after being viciously mauled by an XL Bully in her own home.
The retired nurse died in hospital 17 days after suffering ‘life-threatening injuries’ during the ‘hellish’ and ‘violent’ dog attack in Caerphilly, South Wales on December 3 last year.
Jonathan Hogg, 37
Jonathan Hogg, 37 – May 18, 2023
Jonathan Hogg, 37, was mauled to death by an American XL Bully dog after it turned on him while he was looking after it for a friend.
He entered the dogs’ pen when it went for him, leaving bite wounds on his arm, leg and head, an inquest heard.
He was rushed to hospital but died of his injuries after the mauling in Leigh, Greater Manchester, on May 18 this year.
Ian Price, 52
Ian Price, 52 – September 14, 2023
On Thursday, September 14, ‘pillar of the community’ Ian Price, 52, was attacked and killed by two ‘devil’ XL Bully dogs after they jumped out of his neighbour’s window in Stonnall, Staffordshire.
Mr Price, from Stonnall, Staffordshire, was attacked and killed by the two dogs which jumped out of a neighbour’s window yards from a primary school. He reportedly died defending his elderly mother from the animals.
The dogs bit him and ripped the clothes from his body leaving him dying in a pool of blood in his boxer shorts in the horror attack just feet from his home.
Ian Langley, 54
Ian Langley, 54 – October 3, 2023
Ian Langley, 54, was set upon on the estate in Sunderland on October 3 this year by an enormous XL Bully dog which grabbed him by the neck as he bent down to pick up his Patterdale terrier pup.
The attack left Mr Langley needing CPR for around 15 minutes as emergency services fought to staunch heavy bleeding from his wounds. However he tragically succumbed to his injuries. His dog survived.
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