SHOCKER: Two Ladies jailed after dog 'eats OAP alive' in frenzied attack
Retired hospital porter Clifford
Clarke, 79, was mauled in his
garden in Liverpool after he opened his back door while he was
cooking dinner.
The Presa Canario cross-breed dog
had earlier escaped from the garden of his next-door neighbour in the Norris
Green area of the city.
Last month, Hayley Sulley, 30, and
Della Woods, 29, pleaded
guilty to an offence under the Dangerous Dogs Act of allowing a dog
to enter a place where it was not allowed to be and where it injured a person.
Today, both women wept in the dock
at Liverpool Crown Court as Judge Mark Brown told them Mr Clarke's death was
"entirely avoidable".
Both defendants had left the dog,
Charlie, unattended in the garden on a hot day last May without water and shade
while they went to a barbecue.
Mr Clarke opened the back door of
his three-bedroom home as he cooked a lamb joint for tea but was faced by the
beast who tore into him.
Neighbours
came running when they heard Mr Clarke's cries and one tried to
tackle the dog with a golf club.
One neighbour said at the time:
"I hard barking, at first I thought it was dogs having a fight but then I
heard the sounds of a man screaming he was obviously in pain. It was
horrific."
When police arrived they waited for armed
colleagues who shot the dog dead. Mr Clarke was pronounced dead in hospital
shortly afterwards.
The former national serviceman had
celebrated his birthday the day before the attack.
The Presa Canario dog, which
originated in Spain's Canary Islands, is renowned as a large powerful breed but
is not banned in the UK.
Passing sentence Judge Brown said:
"I hope that the recent changes to the law will be of some small comfort
to Mr Clarke's family.
"Figures released recently show
that the number of dangerous dogs seized by the police have risen 50% in just
two years in some police forces around the country."
The court heard that the
"wild" and "out of control" Presa Canario sank its teeth
into Mr Clarke's arm and dragged him around his garden.
The dog effectively chewed his arm
off and also mauled his other arm. Mr Clarke died from multiple injuries and
blood loss.
Neighbours were unable to get into
the garden to help the pensioner, while one neighbour rang for a dog warden but
was told there was a four-hour wait.
The dog attacked police officers
when they arrived on the scene and they were forced to attempt to distract it
before an armed unit arrived.
A marksman had to shoot the dog
twice after it continued to approach following the first strike, the court was
told.
Mr Clarke's
family have since called for tougher dog control laws to be brought in,
including having muzzles on all dogs in public, and under-18s being barred from
walking dogs.
His brother Kenny said: "We are
not dog haters, we love dogs - I've been around them my whole life. It is a
case of owners taking more responsibility."



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