Solutions for victims, lawyers, canine professionals and dog owners

Return to your topic: Dog bite victims need an attorney for "dog court"

Conclusion

Because "dog court" procedures frequently do not protect the dog bite victim, she should not communicate with animal control authorities until her lawyer reviews the city and county ordinances, obtains the department's committment as to which laws and procedures they will be following, and is satisfied that the issues addressed above will be resolved fairly. City, county and state lawmakers need to revise existing dangerous dog laws and dog court procedures so that the dog owner's right of due process does not eclipse the victim's right of privacy, her right to seek compensation under the rules of fairness of our civil justice system, and the public's right to streets that are safe from killer dogs.

dogbitelaw-litigation-forms

What people write to Attorney Phillips...

I got your DVD and updated my contracts accordingly. So much information - I had to watch several times to make sure I get it all. But the actual work of updating my contracts then was very, very easy. You are right, trainers really don't know. All the seminars, conferences, books and videos geared towards trainers do not mention that. Scary to think how much I didn't know before your DVD.

Shelley G.

Facebook Dog Bite LawTwitter Dog Bite Law