Lindsy Bray, the owner of the Australian Shepherd named Dexter, agreed Thursday to pay a USD 145 fine for dog-at-large and dog licensing violations. A judge had imposed the original death sentence for the dog.
In return for Bray's payment, officials in the small city of Santaquin dropped the dog-attack charge filed after Dexter escaped a fenced yard in October 2016 and nipped a girl.
The Humane Society joined Bray in criticising the penalty imposed on Dexter, saying it was the 5-year-old dog's first offense and that the rule is so broad that a dog jogging with its owner could be considered vicious if it was following the owner.
The Santaquin City Council rejected a proposal for the rules to be revised but critics hope the council will reconsider next year, Humane Society of Utah president Craig Cook said yesterday.
Dexter is currently recovering from the effects of the apparent ingestion of rat poison last month. The Humane Society offered a USD 5,000 reward for information about how he was poisoned.
An investigation has turned up no evidence that Dexter was intentionally poisoned, said Santaquin Police Corporal Mike Wall.