
Toddler Mauled By Roaming Dogs In Front Yard – Council Calls It A Wake-up Call
A two-year-old child sustained life-threatening injuries in a horrific dog attack in March 2024.
The young boy was mauled by two dogs while playing in the front yard of his south Auckland home. The unprovoked and sustained attack left him with several serious wounds to his neck and head, and a fractured shoulder blade, requiring multiple surgeries and a prolonged hospital stay.
The dogs, two American Bulldogs roamed freely into the child's yard and attacked him without warning.
Despite heroic efforts by bystanders and the victim's mother, who physically lifted her child to safety, the dogs continued to attack. CCTV footage confirmed the brutality of the attack, which ended only when the dogs were forcibly removed and driven away by the owners' relatives.
On 30 July 2024, the Auckland Council commenced a criminal prosecution against the owner, laying two charges for owning dogs that attacked a person causing serious injury.
Last week in the Manukau District Court, Judge Moala sentenced the owner, Ms Janna Faumui who had pleaded guilty to the charges, to 150 hours of community work and ordered her to pay $2,000 in emotional harm reparation to the victim's family.
Judge Moala considered that where the victim of a dog attack has suffered near-fatal injuries, the starting point for sentence is likely to be one of imprisonment.
However, the Judge did not consider imprisonment was appropriate in this case given the defendant's lack of criminal history and there being no indication she was a danger to the community. The defendant was given credit for her early guilty pleas, her lack of conviction history and the remorse she had shown for the offending.
Chair of the Regulatory and Safety Committee, Councillor Josephine Bartley expressed heartfelt concern for the toddler.
'It is not okay for dogs to be roaming or uncontrolled. The trauma and injuries inflicted on this child were horrific and entirely preventable,' she said.
'Dog owners must understand their responsibilities. This is not optional. If they fail in those duties, we will not hesitate to prosecute.'
Auckland Council's General Manager of Licensing and Compliance, Robert Irvine, says this is another devastating example of the serious consequences of roaming dogs in our city.
'We commend the bravery of the bystanders who tried to intervene in the attack,' said Mr Irvine.
'No one should ever have to witness such violence, especially a parent.'
'We have increased the number of Animal Management Officers and their proactive patrolling in high-risk areas, and we are doing all we can to prevent incidences like this from happening, but we can't be everywhere all the time. We need dog owners to take responsibility for their dogs, keep them contained and not allow them to roam,' adds Irvine.
The council has confirmed both dogs were voluntarily surrendered and euthanised following the attack.
Auckland Council urges all dog owners to ensure their pets are secure, well-trained, and never allowed to roam.
'One moment of negligence can result in a lifetime of pain,' says Mr Irvine.
Further case highlights dangers of careless dog ownership
In a separate case in the Manukau District Court, Maxine Hona was sentenced to 100 hours of community work and ordered to pay $200 in emotional harm reparation after her dog, Otis, seriously attacked a visitor in her home in March 2024.
Despite Ms Hona's attempt to contain her dog before allowing the victim inside, it escaped and launched a persistent attack, injuring both the visitor and Ms Hona herself.
The court rejected arguments that this was an exceptional incident and made an order for the dog's destruction.
Judge Patel stressed that even one-off failures to control dogs can have devastating consequences.
This case reinforces Auckland Council's message: pet ownership comes with absolute responsibility. There is no margin for error when it comes to public safety.
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Scoop
11 hours ago
- Scoop
Council Calls For Tougher Dog Laws As Attacks And Euthanasia Rates Climb, Rescuers Overwhelmed
Auckland Council is pushing for stronger powers under the Dog Control Act 1996 to address the growing number of roaming and uncontrolled dogs. Despite this, frontline rescuers and local leaders say the crisis requires immediate on-the-ground action. Jo Coulam, a volunteer at the Saving Hope Foundation, says rescue groups are overwhelmed and feel abandoned. Coulam criticises the council's desexing pilot for not targeting the right communities and highlights that rescue groups are carrying too much of the burden. Saving Hope has rehomed 637 dogs and puppies in the past month, with 46 requests received in a single day. 'We spoke in May about the Kāinga Ora houses and now, as we predicted, we have newborn puppies dumped on train tracks and in rubbish bins,' she says. 'Rescues like ours are left to do the hard work while trying to educate owners, but we can't do it alone. 'By 1pm that day we'd already had 32 more, including a mum and a litter of newborn pups. It's out of control.' South Auckland families at risk, MP warns Manurewa MP Arena Williams says the situation has worsened over the past two years, affecting families and elderly residents, particularly in South Auckland. 'This is why I've been calling on the Mayor and Councillor Josephine Bartley to pull together a taskforce. Central and local government need to work together for Aucklanders,' she says. 'Roaming dogs have got out of control in the last two years in Manurewa. Our kids and elderly people are at risk. Dog attacks are up, and we're now seeing roaming packs of unowned dogs. 'Manurewa needs new solutions to deal with this rapidly escalating issue. National has spent a lot of time telling councils what to cut. This is an opportunity for ministers to do something constructive and actually help Auckland with something that will genuinely benefit people in Manurewa and other communities affected.' Council defends response, calls for law reform Elly Waitoa, Animal Management Manager for Auckland Council, says public safety is their top priority, and that dog owners must take responsibility for their pets. Waitoa says that while desexing dogs is not the council's responsibility, they are stepping in because of the scale of the problem. She says the council is seeking stronger enforcement powers through legislative reform, which could include establishing conditions such as requiring fencing upgrades before a dog is released, mandating desexing in certain cases, and introducing mandatory reporting of serious dog attacks to enable timely intervention. 'We've got children being attacked, people being attacked, animals being attacked… children can't go to school because they're being terrorised by aggressive dogs… they can't walk to their local shop because of dogs,' she says. 'We don't have unlimited resources… it is the dog owner's responsibility to desex their dog… but we are doing everything that we can at this stage with the funding that we have. 'We're calling for more tools, like mandatory fencing standards and hospital reporting of dog attacks. It's about giving councils real options when education alone doesn't work.' Dog attack and roaming stats paint a grim picture In the past year, the Council received 16739 reports of roaming dogs, 1341 reports of dog attacks on people, and 1523 reports of attacks on other animals. Only 42 per cent of dogs were reclaimed by their owners, and more than 6000 were euthanised- over half of all dogs impounded. ACC claim data suggests the actual number of dog attacks is likely higher. Most serious attacks involving children happen in the family home and go unreported to Council, says General Manager Robert Irvine. 'Introducing mandatory hospital reporting would allow us to intervene and put measures in place to prevent attacks from happening again,' he says. Proposed changes to the Dog Control Act To help reduce attacks and improve enforcement, Auckland Council is asking the Government for powers to: -Mandate desexing policies -Require desexing before releasing dogs from shelters -Shorten the shelter holding period from seven to five days -Detain dogs post-attack if deemed dangerous -Increase fines for obstructing officers or breaching orders -Set localised infringement schedules -Require hospitals to report serious dog attacks 'These changes make good common sense and would greatly improve our ability to protect Aucklanders from dog-related harm,' says Irvine. 'They would not affect the majority of dog owners, who we know are responsible.' Councillors say more regional support is needed Chair of the Regulatory and Safety Committee, Councillor Josephine Bartley, says most dog owners are responsible, but stricter rules are now necessary. 'There is a group that just doesn't seem to care. Their actions are putting our communities at risk, particularly our tamariki, so having stricter rules around things like fencing and desexing has become necessary.' Manurewa - Papakura Councillor Daniel Newman says local board budgets are insufficient to respond to the scale of the problem. 'I don't want to have to be looking around at local boards trying to fund desexing vouchers and what have you,' he says. 'This has to be a regional response to a region-wide problem.' SPCA backs action but says national investment needed[SUBHEADING] SPCA National Community Outreach Manager Rebecca Dobson says the Council-SPCA pilot only began in June and is too early to judge. 'Since 2022, SPCA has desexed 1294 dogs in Auckland. That's part of a national programme that's seen 55000 animals desexed and more than 200000 unwanted litters prevented.' She says meaningful progress requires a significantly larger investment, estimated at more than $75 million. 'Rescue groups, SPCA, councils, vets and communities are all grappling with the fallout of people not desexing their pets. None of us can fix this alone. Desexing needs to become a priority for all pet owners.' Dobson also notes that enforcement is the Council's role, not the SPCA's. 'The public should contact their local council when it comes to roaming dogs, dog attacks or public safety issues. SPCA works under the Animal Welfare Act, focused on cruelty prevention.' Council commits to further action The Council has committed $5.9 million to increase patrols and community education and says further funding proposals are being prepared for next year's annual plan. The message to dog owners is clear: keep your dogs secure, desexed and under control.


NZ Herald
2 days ago
- NZ Herald
Auckland Council seeks stronger powers to tackle roaming dog crisis
Coulam criticises the council's desexing pilot for not targeting the right communities and highlights that rescue groups are carrying too much of the burden. Saving Hope has rehomed 637 dogs and puppies in the past month, with 46 requests received in a single day. 'We spoke in May about the Kāinga Ora houses and now, as we predicted, we have newborn puppies dumped on train tracks and in rubbish bins,' she says. 'Rescues like ours are left to do the hard work while trying to educate owners, but we can't do it alone. By 1pm that day we'd already had 32 more, including a mum and a litter of newborn pups. It's out of control.' South Auckland families at risk, MP warns Manurewa MP Arena Williams says the situation has worsened over the past two years, affecting families and elderly residents, particularly in South Auckland. 'This is why I've been calling on the Mayor and councillor Josephine Bartley to pull together a taskforce. Central and local government need to work together for Aucklanders,' she says. Children cross the street on their way to school but safety concerns are rising as roaming dog incidents increase. Photo / Auckland Council 'Roaming dogs have got out of control in the last two years in Manurewa. Our kids and elderly people are at risk. Dog attacks are up, and we're now seeing roaming packs of unowned dogs. 'Manurewa needs new solutions to deal with this rapidly escalating issue. National has spent a lot of time telling councils what to cut. This is an opportunity for ministers to do something constructive and actually help Auckland with something that will genuinely benefit people in Manurewa and other communities affected.' Council defends response, calls for law reform Auckland Council animal management manager Elly Waitoa says public safety is its top priority and that dog owners must take responsibility for their pets. Waitoa says while desexing dogs is not the council's responsibility it is stepping in because of the scale of the problem. She says the council is seeking stronger enforcement powers through legislative reform, which could include establishing conditions such as requiring fencing upgrades before a dog is released, mandating desexing in certain cases, and introducing mandatory reporting of serious dog attacks to enable timely intervention. 'We've got children being attacked, people being attacked, animals being attacked… children can't go to school because they're being terrorised by aggressive dogs… they can't walk to their local shop because of dogs,' she says. 'We don't have unlimited resources… it is the dog owner's responsibility to desex their dog… but we are doing everything that we can at this stage with the funding that we have. 'We're calling for more tools, like mandatory fencing standards and hospital reporting of dog attacks. It's about giving councils real options when education alone doesn't work.' Dog attack and roaming stats paint a grim picture In the past year, the council received 16,739 reports of roaming dogs, 1341 reports of dog attacks on people and 1523 reports of attacks on other animals. Only 42% of dogs were reclaimed by their owners and more than 6000 were euthanised – over half of all dogs impounded. Frontline officers are stretched thin as Auckland Council faces record numbers of roaming dog reports. Photo / Auckland Council ACC claim data suggests the actual number of dog attacks is likely higher. Most serious attacks involving children happen in the family home and go unreported to council, says general manager Robert Irvine. 'Introducing mandatory hospital reporting would allow us to intervene and put measures in place to prevent attacks from happening again,' he says. Proposed changes to the Dog Control Act To help reduce attacks and improve enforcement, Auckland Council is asking the Government for powers to: Mandate desexing policies Require desexing before releasing dogs from shelters Shorten the shelter holding period from seven to five days Detain dogs post-attack if deemed dangerous Increase fines for obstructing officers or breaching orders Set localised infringement schedules Require hospitals to report serious dog attacks. 'These changes make good common sense and would greatly improve our ability to protect Aucklanders from dog-related harm,' says Irvine. 'They would not affect the majority of dog owners, who we know are responsible.' Councillors say more regional support is needed Chairwoman of the Regulatory and Safety Committee, councillor Josephine Bartley, says most dog owners are responsible but stricter rules are now necessary. 'There is a group that just doesn't seem to care. Their actions are putting our communities at risk, particularly our tamariki, so having stricter rules around things like fencing and desexing has become necessary.' Manurewa-Papakura councillor Daniel Newman says local board budgets are insufficient to respond to the scale of the problem. 'I don't want to have to be looking around at local boards trying to fund desexing vouchers and what have you,' he says. 'This has to be a regional response to a region-wide problem.' SPCA backs action but says national investment is needed. SPCA national community outreach manager Rebecca Dobson says the council-SPCA pilot only began in June and it is too early to judge its success. 'Since 2022, SPCA has desexed 1294 dogs in Auckland. That's part of a national programme that's seen 55,000 animals desexed and more than 200,000 unwanted litters prevented.' She says meaningful progress requires a significantly larger investment, estimated at more than $75 million. 'Rescue groups, SPCA, councils, vets and communities are all grappling with the fallout of people not desexing their pets. None of us can fix this alone. Desexing needs to become a priority for all pet owners.' Dobson also says enforcement is the council's role, not the SPCA's. 'The public should contact their local council when it comes to roaming dogs, dog attacks or public safety issues. SPCA works under the Animal Welfare Act, focused on cruelty prevention.' Council commits to further action The council has committed $5.9m to increase patrols and community education and says further funding proposals are being prepared for next year's annual plan. The message to dog owners is clear: keep your dogs secure, desexed and under control.

RNZ News
4 days ago
- RNZ News
Investigation underway after two fur seals found decapitated at Auckland's Muriwai beach
The seals were found on Muriwai beach. (File photo) Photo: RNZ / Tom Taylor An investigation by the Department of Conservation (DOC) is underway after two fur seals were found decapitated at a West Auckland beach last month. DOC was alerted by a member of the public that a fur seal had been found dead at the beginning of June but decided it did not need a burial. But, on 5 June, DOC was called by Auckland Council to reports of a fur seal found at Muriwai without its head. Images showed it was the same fur seal reported to DOC staff a few days prior. DOC investigator Eva Obushenkova said while rangers were at the scene they found another seal without its head. "It appeared the seals' heads were removed using a sharp blade," she said. RNZ reported on a case of six fur seal pups found decapitated and their bodies dumped in a bay on Banks Peninsula in 2018. "In terms of actions we are taking: the seals were buried," Obushenkova said. "The DOC investigation was on-going and we are asking for anyone who might have information about this incident to contact DOC." It was not acceptable for people to tamper with protected wildlife, and it was illegal to remove a protected species' head, Obushenkova said. DOC said it was also investigating a recreational boat skipper seen steering his boat through a pod of bottlenose dolphins after reportedly being launched at Waiake Beach on Auckland's North Shore in May. "[One witness] reported seeing the boat head straight toward the dolphins, which were clearly visible, and get very close to them," Obushenkova said. Boats were prohibited to travel through a pod of dolphins under the marine mammals protection regulations. "Our witness has also stated the boatie later changed direction and began following the pod, steering his vessel among the dolphins and eventually stopping the engine to take photographs." The boat involved in the incident was a Haynes Hunter named Plaisir, Obushenkova said. "We'd like to talk to the owner or skipper of Plaisir, and encourage them to come forward." Anyone with information on the boat could contact DOC with the CLE Works case number 9189, while those with information on the decapitated fur seals should cite CLE Works case 9390. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.