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John and Jeanette Teves are offering a $10,000 reward for information
leading to the apprehension of the person or persons who stabbed
their Pug, Lucy, to death and seriously wounded their Boston Terrier
Roxy.
Keep up to date here: http://www.pet-abuse.com/cases/5357/CA/US/
They are asking Pug and Boston lovers to make two courteous calls
on behalf of their beloved Lucy and Roxy.
Please call:
John Buegher
Sonoma Police Department
(707) 996-3602
Politely and respectfully ask him to insure that the Sonoma
Police Department does all that it possibly can to find the person
or persons who committed this vicious act. Remind him that people
who harm animals inevitably turn to harming humans, endangering
the entire community where this brutality occurred.
Please call with the same plea to:
Bill Lynch
Index Tribune -- local newspaper
(707) 938-2111.
Mike and Jeanette thank you all for your caring and support. Should
you wish to send them your condolences at usmcmom00@aol.com
NEWS
ARTICLE
Full article is at: http://www.sonomanews.com/articles/2005/08/05/news/top_stories/news02.txt
Dog killer sought by police
By Joshua Coman, Index-Tribune Staff Writer
08.05.05 - What started out as an average day for a Sonoma woman
turned into a nightmare when she returned from a shopping trip to
find that someone had snuck into her yard and brutally stabbed and
killed one of her dogs and left another for dead.
Jeanette Teves returned to her home at 589 Este Madera Drive at
2 p.m. Monday to find that someone had stabbed her 1-year-old pug,
Lucy, to death, while her 2-year old Boston terrier, Roxy, was suffering
from a similar injury to her chest.
The slaying occurred during a small window of time between 1:15
and 2 p.m., Teves said. She left her home at 1:15 p.m. to pick up
a birthday gift and card for her husband and had put her dogs inside
the house before she left.
The back door to the home was unlocked and the alarm system off,
Teves said, because she was expecting workers to show up and didn't
know when they would arrive. There is no dog door in the home, so
the suspect is believed to have let the dogs out into the yard,
where they were stabbed.
The shopping trip was supposed to be short, but lasted a little
longer than expected only because she was searching for a birthday
card for her husband with a picture of a Boston terrier and a pug
on them - dogs the same breed as hers.
According to Sonoma police Sgt. Bret Sackett, a veterinarian has
determined that someone used a knife with a one-inch-wide blade
that was at least seven inches long.
The crime doesn't appear to have been a burglary, Sackett said,
as nothing was taken from the home.
The crime does not appear to be random either, Teves said, because
the following day a pile of dog food laced with rat poison was found
hidden in bushes in the back yard. It doesn't appear to have been
thrown over the fence and was at least 15 feet from the yard's gate.
The slaying has stunned neighbors of the otherwise peaceful east
Sonoma neighborhood.
"It makes me feel really insecure," said Carol Bonnoitt.
"You think that you live in a neighborhood where there are
civilized people."
Bonnoitt said that she hadn't noticed anything out of the ordinary
in the neighborhood and wasn't aware that the slaying occurred until
a neighbor, George Farnsworth, told her.
Farnsworth said he didn't know what happened to the Teves dogs
at first but thought that maybe one had died.
"I saw her in the front yard holding her dog and screaming,"
Farnsworth said. "I thought maybe the little thing had gotten
into the pool."
It wasn't until Teves' daughter visited later in the evening that
he found out about the attack.
Now, Farnsworth said, he and his wife are locking their doors -
something they've never before felt they needed to do.
"It's upsetting to me," said Farnsworth. "It certainly
has everyone concerned."
While the hours prior to the attack seemed uneventful, there was
one thing out of the ordinary - a pair of phone calls to Teves originating
from pay phones.
Shortly before she left to go into town, Teves said that a man
with a youngish voice called and asked to speak to a woman. The
caller ID on the phone identified the number as a pay phone.
Teves said she couldn't remember the name of the woman the man
asked for, but thinks it was Gwen.
While she was shopping, someone again called from a pay phone,
but left no message on her answering machine.
Teves and her husband later tracked the location of the phones
down and found that the first call was from the Shell Station on
Broadway.
The second call, Teves said, was made from the Union 76 gas station
at the corner of Broadway and West MacArthur Street, just a few
blocks to the south of the Shell station.
Police are in the process of obtaining the security tapes from
one of the gas stations, Sackett said.
Teves said she still feels violated and is learning how to deal
with her mood swings. She feels both anger and grief.
"Up until last night I wanted to move," Teves said. "Right
now, I think I'll stay here a while."
Although the investigation is continuing at the local level, the
case has also been forwarded to the Sonoma County Sheriff's Department
Property Crimes Division for review and possible investigation.
"We are persuing a couple of angles right now," Sackett
said. "But our big plea to the general community is to please
come forward with any information you may have."
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