Mann bellt Polizei-Hund an: Prozess
Ein Amerikaner, der einen Polizeihund anbellte, musste sich wegen Behinderung der Polizeiarbeit vor Gericht verantworten. Der 25-jährige Mann bekannte sich am Dienstag im kalifornischen Palo Alto als «nicht schuldig».
Anfang März war der Kellner nachts einer Gruppe Polizisten und deren Hunden begegnet. Nach Angaben seines Anwalts bellte eines der Tiere den Passanten an. Der Mann soll mit einem «freundlichen Bellen» geantwortet haben.
Nach US-Medienberichten erklärte ein Polizeisprecher in Palo Alto, dass die Belästigung von Polizeihunden gesetzlich verboten sei. Der Anwalt wiederum pocht auf das Recht auf freie Meinungsäusserung ... [Quelle: BaZ-Papierkorb]
Apropos Hunde-Geschichten. Hier aus dem Newsletter von Onlinejournalism.com:
Jarrod Martin, 26, rushed into a burning building to save his pit bull terrier. But what some would call heroic got him charged with reckless endangerment and disorderly conduct -- and now the world is tuning in.
The Tennessean reports the story of this Nashville man and his dog, Bishop, got almost 100,,000 hits during the week after its Wednesday publication, inspired more than 1,000 messages to the newspaper site's online forum, and has been picked up by media outlets from Inside Edition to the London tabloid The Sun to CNN and Fox News. Martin told Matt Lauer on NBC's "Today" that the possibility he might do time for pet saving is ''just ridiculous.... I'd have never thought that it would come down to that.''
Middle Tennessee State University journalism professor and dog owner Ed Kimbrell concluded that this just might signal the return to frivolous news after Iraq: ''There's no such thing in this world as a dog story that people are not interested in."
Hier die Geschichte zum Nachlesen [Quelle: Tennessean]
The Tennessean: http://tennessean.com/
"Tennessee Dog Rescue Leads to Arrest":
http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?id=9251§ionId=46
Inside Edition: http://www.insideedition.com/
The Sun: http://www.thesun.co.uk/
NBC's "Today": http://www.msnbc.com/news/today_front.asp
Anfang März war der Kellner nachts einer Gruppe Polizisten und deren Hunden begegnet. Nach Angaben seines Anwalts bellte eines der Tiere den Passanten an. Der Mann soll mit einem «freundlichen Bellen» geantwortet haben.
Nach US-Medienberichten erklärte ein Polizeisprecher in Palo Alto, dass die Belästigung von Polizeihunden gesetzlich verboten sei. Der Anwalt wiederum pocht auf das Recht auf freie Meinungsäusserung ... [Quelle: BaZ-Papierkorb]
Apropos Hunde-Geschichten. Hier aus dem Newsletter von Onlinejournalism.com:
Jarrod Martin, 26, rushed into a burning building to save his pit bull terrier. But what some would call heroic got him charged with reckless endangerment and disorderly conduct -- and now the world is tuning in.
The Tennessean reports the story of this Nashville man and his dog, Bishop, got almost 100,,000 hits during the week after its Wednesday publication, inspired more than 1,000 messages to the newspaper site's online forum, and has been picked up by media outlets from Inside Edition to the London tabloid The Sun to CNN and Fox News. Martin told Matt Lauer on NBC's "Today" that the possibility he might do time for pet saving is ''just ridiculous.... I'd have never thought that it would come down to that.''
Middle Tennessee State University journalism professor and dog owner Ed Kimbrell concluded that this just might signal the return to frivolous news after Iraq: ''There's no such thing in this world as a dog story that people are not interested in."
Hier die Geschichte zum Nachlesen [Quelle: Tennessean]
The Tennessean: http://tennessean.com/
"Tennessee Dog Rescue Leads to Arrest":
http://cms.firehouse.com/content/article/article.jsp?id=9251§ionId=46
Inside Edition: http://www.insideedition.com/
The Sun: http://www.thesun.co.uk/
NBC's "Today": http://www.msnbc.com/news/today_front.asp
Cyberwriter - 23. Apr, 11:58 - CyberWriters DayFlashes
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