Detroit Police Shot a Woman's Dog and Allegedly Dumped It in Garbage Can
Tiffany Lindsay wants answers and an apology after her neighbors discovered her dead dog, shot the night before by Detroit police, in their garbage can.

A Detroit woman is demanding answers and an apology after police shot her dog and allegedly dumped it in a neighbor's garbage can—the latest in a string of dog shootings by Detroit police that have outraged owners and led to many costly lawsuit settlements.
According to WDIV Local 4, which first reported the story, Detroit police were searching for a carjacking suspect Sunday night when an officer entered the backyard of Tiffany Lindsay. The officer peeked into a doghouse and, unsurprisingly, found Lindsay's dog Jack. The dog reportedly lunged at the officer, and it was shot and killed.
Dog shootings like this are sadly common across the United States. Just browse the "puppycide" tag on Reason's website. Some are justified and some are the result of poor training or maliciousness, but what happened next isn't in any police training manual.
The next morning, Lindsay's neighbors informed her that her pet had been dumped in their trash can.
Lindsay told the news station that officers never told her why her dog had been shot or why it was thrown away. "They didn't knock on my door and say nothing," she said.
A 2016 Reason investigation found Detroit police had a nasty habit of shooting dogs during drug raids, which had led to a series of costly lawsuits. Public records obtained by Reason showed that one officer on the department's narcotics unit had shot more than 80 dogs over the course of his career.
In 2015, the city approved a $100,000 settlement to a man after police shot his dog while it was securely chained to a fence.
In 2018, Detroit paid $225,000 to settle a lawsuit brought by Kenneth Savage and Ashley Franklin, who claimed Detroit police officers shot their three dogs while the animals were enclosed behind an 8-foot-tall fence—all so the officers could confiscate several potted marijuana plants in their backyard.
In 2019, Detroit agreed to pay $60,000 to Nikita Smith, whose three dogs were shot by a Detroit narcotics unit during a marijuana raid in 2016. That same year, Detroit police shot a family dog in front of a 9-year-old boy, and a woman filed a civil rights lawsuit alleging Detroit police yanked open her door and then shot her two dogs when they ran outside.
In 2020, the city doled out another $75,000 to settle a lawsuit over a dog shooting that the Detroit Police Department (DPD) determined was unjustified and violated department policy. Body camera footage contradicted the officer's claims that two dogs were lunging at him and barking when he shot them during a drug raid.
As for Lindsay, video shows that DPD officers returned on Monday and loaded the animal's body into a police car, but she still doesn't have answers or an apology.
"Certainly, anytime we have to put a dog down, it's not a good day for the department or for the citizen who owns it, but I just don't have enough information to give you an intelligent response," Detroit Police Chief James White told Local 4.
Many of the stories Reason reported involved allegations of Detroit police being callous, even mocking, toward people whose dogs they have shot.
"You were trying to hide it," Lindsay told the news station. "You were trying to hide it."
When asked what she had to say about that, Lindsay shrugged. "That's Detroit."
The Detroit Police Department did not immediately return a request for comment.
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And then the police were arrested for trespassing in her backyard without a warrant, right?
And when the police lie about these things in official reports they're prosecuted for perjury and falsifying a police report, right?
Sure they were. Right after they were charged with criminal endangerment of the neighbors for negligently and maliciously discharging a firearm.
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"And then the police were arrested for trespassing in her backyard without a warrant, right?"
Please clarify -- what is a "warrant?"
Under current law, you have no right to privacy in your backyard. Supreme Court precedents have narrowed that to the inside of your house (and sometimes the curtilage). You might have a right to the inside of your car the SCOTUS has poked many, many holes in that.
But even if the warrant requirement were extended to all your property, it still wouldn't apply here. The "hot pursuit" exception lets police follow a dangerous suspect (and carjacking would definitely count as dangerous) into otherwise-protected areas to carry out the arrest. They couldn't use the things they see in other prosecutions but the warrant requirement doesn't stop the immediate pursuit.
If someone killed my pets they deserve to die for it.
Instead of taxpayer dollars, how about we require officers to post their own malpractice insurance like doctors. I'm sick of paying for my own abuse.
It would be nice, but first you have to get rid of the police unions.
Union contracts with police departments generally require that the department indemnify the officers against any and all tort claims.
Really, under equal rights and reciprocity, the officers should've flailed the dog to death, torn its skin off, left the carcass in the yard, and the skin on the doorstep.
Or stick the dogs he'd in a cage of flies to be eaten alive
Who who who! Hold on a second. Where the hell in the cops union contract does it state that they have to clean up after shooting a dog? They need to file a grievence with the union!
These cops were just being generous custodians of the neighborhood, free of charge. Really, the residents should be thanking them for cleaning up the dead dog.
Just setting a good example.
It's Detroit, it's not like they can afford to pay for good cops. They probably can't afford more than $100k per officer and what kind of cops do you expect to get with those miserable kind of wages?
Where are the ‘good’ cops at?
The officers responsible for this should be stripped naked and locked in a kennel with a pack of dogs rescued from a dog fighting ring.
I’ve travel through Detroit at least once a week for the last 47 years. The cops are like the civilians, violent and without compasión for anything but bling.
Some days it seems I am reading the 21st Century revision of the fall of the Roman Empire. This is just one small, sad vignette of a much larger decline.
And not even the cost of doing such things is making a dent in the practice, because as already noted the police union makes certain there are no consequences to the bad actors, such as the cop with 80 dog notches. Seems to a sport with some of these guys.
When asked what she had to say about that, Lindsay shrugged. "That's Detroit."
Perhaps if Detroit had more equitable hiring practices at the city level.