UK: Blind woman left "vulnerable" after guide dog is retired following
vicious attack by Fench Mastiffs in Cambridge, court hears
Written byELEANOR
DICKINSON February 15, 2014
http://www.cambridge-news.co.uk/Cambridge/Blind-woman-lift-vulnerable-after-
guide-dog-is-retired-following-an-attack-in-Cambridge-20140215060056.htm
A
woman is facing losing her job after her guide dog was injured in a savage
attack.
Visually impaired Jadwiga Elbourn was walking along a Cambridge
street when two loose French Mastiffs viciously clawed her guide dog Neda on
November 13 last year, a court heard.
Her "traumatised" guide dog has since
been retired - and the owner fears she may not be able to get to work without
her.
Ms Elbourn is now seeking an order for the dogs' owner, Jeffrey Brigham,
to keep his pets muzzled and on leads in public.
Delia Matthews,
prosecuting, said: "Ms Elbourn was walking with her dog Neda, who was working,
near the owner's home on Wulfstan Way.
"She heard barking and could sense
dogs around her dog. They then started to attack Neda."
The attack left Neda
in a state of shock and with deep scratches on her foreleg and
stomach.
One wound was so deep it needed an intramuscular
stitching.
The guide dog has since been retired from service as a result of
the injuries.
Reading from Ms Elbourn's witness statement, Ms Matthews said
the attack has left her feeling "anxious" and "vulnerable" , adding that she may
not be able to get another dog soon.
She said that she needed a dog to get to
work and feared losing her job without one.
Representing himself in court,
Brigham, 47, admitted the female dog Coco had gone for Neda, but not the male
Buster.
He said: "This has never happened before. Normally they are both the
sweetest dogs, but I had my little girl with me, so it probably made Cocoa
defensive.
"Buster wasn't doing anything at all, he was just excited and
acting like it was a game."
Referring to the witness statement, he added: "It
wasn't as terrible as it
has been made out. It was not a serious
attack.
"I love dogs and I would never want to see one get hurt, especially
not a guide dog. But, Buster never did anything."
The court also heard that
Brigham offered to drive Ms Elbourn and Neda to a veterinary surgery and pay for
the dog's treatment.
Due to the differing accounts of the attack, magistrates
ordered a second hearing to take place on March 28, at which they will decide
whether to impose controlling methods on both or one of the
dogs.