After reportedly cooking his animal Chihuahua in an oven during a family debate, an Alabama gentleman was charged with aggravated animal cruelty. Atmore, a village near the Florida border, was allegedly home to a 44-year-old man who had put the small dog inside a warm oven and had a seat to prevent it from escaping. The Williamson allegedly intervened in the disturbing behavior after a sibling and the dog threatened to harm the puppy if it didn’t stop barking. Neighborhoods called the police after the puppy’s cries frightened them. However, upon arrival, they discovered the dog’s charred remains lying out in the road, according to the New York Post. Lieutenant Darrell McMann, who arrived on the scene, claimed that what he saw had left him greatly shaken. He said,” I have a Chihuahua myself.” I was just at a loss for words when I arrived it, which is exactly what I was. I simply had to get myself together and just stood there and looked at the puppy for a short while. He will not be permitted to keep pets if he is released. He is accused of aggravated pet violence, a Class C felony under Alabama law. Fears have been raised about the charge’s seriousness, though. A Class C felony does not result in a lengthy prison sentence, as per recent law, depending on the offender’s past and courtroom decisions. Lieutenant McMann said,” I think in cases like this, they should be strengthened.” ” Because I don’t believe that being a class C felony fits what he did,” he said. That pretty much sums up what he did: horrifying and cruel.
Trending
- The Collapse of the Old Guard: How Obama, Pelosi, and the Press Finally Lost Control
- Seattle Attack Offers More Proof That Antifa Thugs Are Just Democrat Anti-Christian Shock Troops
- So This Latest Move Will Save the Democrats for Sure
- The Media Want Us to Panic About COVID Again
- US military urges African allies to increase ‘burden sharing’Â
- Trump’s immigration crackdown unnerves Cuban exiles long shielded from deportation
- Strike shutters Zimbabwe’s main university
- US halts new student visa interviews amid plans for social media screening