Wednesday, February 4, 2026
ADVT 
National

After New Hampshire Dog's Death, Long Odds Confront Effort To Ban Use Of Guns To Put Pets Down

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Nov, 2015 01:11 PM
    CONCORD, N.H. — The death of a brown-and-white, mixed breed named Bruno on the northern fringe of New Hampshire's White Mountains has sparked an angry response from animal rights activists who want to ban owners from using a gun to "put down" old, sick or dangerous dogs.
     
    "It was done in such a cruel manner. The dog was shot multiple times and left to die," said Katie Treamer, one of the founders of Justice For Bruno, a group lobbying to make it a felony to shoot a pet to death in New Hampshire. "In this day and age, it's just not a responsible way to euthanize a pet."
     
    A humanely placed bullet is a generations-old method of dispatching pets in rural parts of the country where a veterinarian's syringe can be expensive and hours away. And even those angry at how Bruno died say outlawing the practice isn't likely because it is so deeply ingrained in the nation's agrarian traditions, where farmers and ranchers have long put down domestic animals with a gunshot.
     
    New Hampshire is among 27 states plus the District of Columbia that have no laws governing "emergency euthanasia," according to the American Veterinary Medical Association. Justice For Bruno has contacted state officials and its change.org petition has more than 36,000 signatures in support of a new law.
     
    State Rep. John Tholl, who lives in New Hampshire's north country and chairs the House public safety committee, said a ban on shooting a pet as a form of euthanasia faces long odds, especially in rural states.
     
    "It's been common practice for people up here to put down their animals — not just dogs — because they're hurt in such a way that they can't be saved or they're so old that they need to be relieved of suffering," Tholl said. "And the cost to do that through a vet is quite expensive."
     
    The dog whose death prompted calls for new legislation, however, was not injured.
     
    Bruno was found shot four times in September in the former timber city of Berlin. Bruno's owner, Ryan Landry, said in a Facebook posting he was forced to put down the year-and-a-half old dog because it had bitten his children. Landry declined to be interviewed by The Associated Press.
     
    Treamer said Landry had other options, including returning Bruno — no questions asked — to the shelter where he was adopted. If the dog truly was dangerous, then medical euthanasia administered by a trained professional would have been the preferred way to end Bruno's life, she said.
     
    State laws restricting emergency euthanasia vary.
     
    Maine's law is explicit: "An animal may be shot if it is restrained in a humane way, it is performed by a highly skilled and trained person using a weapon that will produce instantaneous death by a single shot." Several states allow law enforcement, veterinarians or animal welfare workers to shoot a pet if the animal is injured, sick or dangerous. In New York, "no person shall euthanize any dog or cat by gunshot except as an emergency procedure for a dangerous dog or a severely injured dog."
     
    Tholl also says shooting is humane when done right.
     
    "Let's face it, there are people who are qualified to put down an animal with one shot," he said.
     
    Growing up on a western Massachusetts farm, John Gralenski, now 80, sometimes had to put down sick or injured pets. He never liked it but he adamantly opposes outlawing the practice.
     
    "I think they should have that right," said Gralenski, who lives in rural Shelburne, on the New Hampshire-Maine line. "When I was a kid, we always had dogs and if it was my dog and the dog got sick, there wasn't any money for a vet."
     
    Once he had to put a dog out of its misery after it got hit by a car and broke its hip.
     
    "I was just a kid and it was my responsibility," he said.
     
    A decade ago, Gralenski adopted Zelda, a now-13-year-old beagle rescued in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. He knows he'll eventually face a decision about how to put her down.
     
    "Zelda and I are buddies," he said. "It's probably been 15 years since we had one (that needed to be put down). It does not get easier in your old age. I guess it depends on how I feel financially at the time."
     
    Joanne Bourbeau, northeastern regional director for the Humane Society of the United States, acknowledged that enforcement might be difficult but just having a law on the books could serve as a deterrent.
     
    "We would have a way to follow up," she said. "With the veterinary forensics we have now, it's very easy to prove that a crime was committed."
     
    Christopher Almy, district attorney in Maine's Penobscot and Piscataquis counties, said his office has prosecuted plenty of animal cruelty cases over his three decades of service but he couldn't recall bringing a case against someone for putting their pet down. One recent case focused on a woman who shot and killed her entire herd of 10 goats, though the cruelty charge stemmed from the condition of a couple of the goats, not the way they were killed.
     
    For her part, Treamer says times have changed and there are far better ways to end a pet's life. She couldn't imagine such a death for Dozer, her 5-year-old, pit bull-boxer mix.
     
    "Just because that's the way it's always been done, that's not the way it should still be done," she said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    How Stephen Harper's Old Schoolmate Bill McKibben Helped Kill The Keystone XL Pipeline

    How Stephen Harper's Old Schoolmate Bill McKibben Helped Kill The Keystone XL Pipeline
    "I understand Canadian politics just enough to know that petrocrat Stephen Harper is out of a job," McKibben tweeted as the federal election results rolled in. 

    How Stephen Harper's Old Schoolmate Bill McKibben Helped Kill The Keystone XL Pipeline

    RSS Destroying Liberal, Secular India: Rahul Gandhi

    Referring to the RSS, he said, for the first time in the history of our country, a fascist organisation that is openly opposed to the ideology and values of the Indian Constitution has acquired decisive power over the Union of India. 

    RSS Destroying Liberal, Secular India: Rahul Gandhi

    Quebec Adoptees Turning To Social Media To Find Information About Their Origins

    Quebec Adoptees Turning To Social Media To Find Information About Their Origins
    Julie Levenhagen was known only as "baby Agathe" when she was adopted from a Montreal hospital at nine days old.

    Quebec Adoptees Turning To Social Media To Find Information About Their Origins

    Health Minister Jane Philpott Plans To Engage With Provinces, Territories As Soon As Next Week

    Health Minister Jane Philpott Plans To Engage With Provinces, Territories As Soon As Next Week
    Canada's new health minister Jane Philpott says she plans to engage with provincial and territorial counterparts as soon as next week as the Liberals set the wheels in motion to establish a new health accord.

    Health Minister Jane Philpott Plans To Engage With Provinces, Territories As Soon As Next Week

    Two Winning Tickets Sold For Friday's $60-million Lotto Max Jackpot

    Two Winning Tickets Sold For Friday's $60-million Lotto Max Jackpot
    One was sold in Edmonton, and the other in Conception Bay South, Newfoundland and Labrador.

    Two Winning Tickets Sold For Friday's $60-million Lotto Max Jackpot

    2 Men, 1 Woman Dead After U-Haul Van Collides With Another Vehicle Near Merritt, B.C.

    2 Men, 1 Woman Dead After U-Haul Van Collides With Another Vehicle Near Merritt, B.C.
    RCMP say the occupants of the van — two men and a woman — died at the scene of the collision (on Highway 5A/97C) six kilometres east of Merritt

    2 Men, 1 Woman Dead After U-Haul Van Collides With Another Vehicle Near Merritt, B.C.