Skip to Content

Pitbull mauls little boy; neighbors say it’s not the dog’s fault

He reportedly went to his neighbors’ house to get his little brother and it almost cost him his life. Sheriff’s deputies say a pitbull mauled a young boy on his neck, arms and back.

ABC-7 is learning more about Saturday’s dog attack in Horizon City. Witnesses said animal services has picked up the dog Monday. Some of those who saw what happened aren’t happy the dog had to be punished. They say this little boy was unsupervised when he went into someone else’s yard, which was full of big dogs.

Neighbors say the pitbull was tied up in this home’s backyard.

“I’ve never had an issue with their dogs,” said neighbor Arlyn Duran. “it was an accident, a really bad accident. But again, it wasn’t the pitbull’s fault.”

Duran said she heard screaming on Saturday after the attack.

“The kid was outside and he was holding his face and he was bleeding,” Duran said. “I really didn’t know what was going on at that time until the neighbor from here was like why are they on my property in the first place.”

Neighbors said the little boy went through this gate and walked through the backyard this way to pet the dogs. The owner wasn’t home and the parents weren’t around. ABC-7 tried to reach out to the family for their perspective on what happened, but no one was home.

So ABC-7 turned to Betty Hoover, executive director at the El Paso Humane Society.

“You know, I worked with dogs for almost 12 years, and I have to say I think they get a bad rap,” Hoover said.

Betty, who said she’s been bit more by chihuahuas than pits, noted the shelter’s “spokesdog” Shelby is a pit mix, and with a reception room full of strangers, strange dogs and lots of cats, Shelby remains calm.

“Do not play with them rough, put things in their mouth and hit them in the head and stuff like that. That’s what I try to teach my kids to do,” said Eugene Harrison.

Harrison and his family, own a 100-plus-pound pitbull and were in the process of adopting another.

“They’re not really mean,” Harrison said.

The Harrison family said they’ve never had a bad experience with their pits, or were afraid of their dogs hurting anyone else.

“It’s tragic what happened to that little boy,” Hoover said, “but there’s basic rules of dog bit prevention also. The first one is never ever approach a strange dog without the human or without the owner being there. And also ask permission. Never approach a dog that is chained up because a dog that is chained is more likely to bite. Never go into a yard where there’s dogs without being supervised.”

Sheriff’s deputies said the boy was rushed to the hospital in critical condition. Neighbors said the boy is breathing with the help of a tube and is doing better.

As for the dog, ABC-7 was unable to reach animal services to confirm whether it was put down.

Article Topic Follows: News

Jump to comments ↓

Author Profile Photo

KVIA ABC-7

BE PART OF THE CONVERSATION

KVIA ABC 7 is committed to providing a forum for civil and constructive conversation.

Please keep your comments respectful and relevant. You can review our Community Guidelines by clicking here

If you would like to share a story idea, please submit it here.

Skip to content