Thursday, March 24, 2016
By NICO SCAVELLA
Tribune Staff Reporter
nscavella@tribunemedia.net
A DISTRAUGHT store manager yesterday bemoaned the senseless killing of nine caged dogs kept at her family’s premises, who she said were all set on fire and “burnt to a crisp” by two unknown men for “no apparent reason”.
Kenmara Lightbourn, manager for Pocket Pleaser grocery store, tearfully described how, on Sunday morning, two unknown men allegedly “took it upon themselves” to throw “gas and fire” on the caged dogs - a male and female pit bull and their seven puppies - kept on the West Street south premises.
She said the puppies were only one month old and that when she finally mustered the strength to move the cage with the charred dogs inside, their corpses “fell to ashes”.
Representatives from the Bahamas Humane Society (BHS) as well as officials from the research group, The Family, also chastised the culprits, suggesting that they may have the propensity to commit such acts against humans.
According to Ms Lightbourn, at around 4am on Sunday, two unknown males approached the rear of the store’s heavily barbed-wired wall and via unknown means, managed to set fire to the dogs and their cage, burning them alive.
Ms Lightbourn said when she arrived at the store, the firefighters were leaving. She said she did not notice any police on the scene, leading her to believe that they “don’t find it important to come report on dogs”.
When The Tribune went to the scene yesterday, the wall where the cage was located was heavily burnt from top to bottom.
“It’s sad to know that people would go to the extreme to burn dogs,” Ms Lightbourn said tearfully. “You know dogs are people’s best friend. So they took their anger out on dogs and seven puppies. Why burn dogs? And they were burnt to a crisp. And to know life was there, and to come back and see something like that, it hurts. Life is something precious. You don’t waste life like that.”
Percy Grant, shelter manager at the BHS, said he was “really horrified” when he was contacted.
“I’ve been working at the Humane Society for almost 30 years and in a week I deal with a lot of graphic instances,” he said. “This is probably the worst. But my fear was that you’ve got some lunatic, somebody who needs some psychiatric help, because who knows, they could do this to some human being.”
Mr Grant also referred to a situation the Humane Society experienced in the 1990s when it was notified that young men were collecting puppies and throwing them in a bonfire.
“Now we heard of that case about a week, two weeks later, but I fear to wonder are these the same young men who did this in the early 90s and are they now grown up? Maybe not. But we’ve had a lot of horrific instances.”
Marie Allen Carroll, daughter of Bahamian psychiatrist Dr David Allen, said there is a direct correlation between the abuse and/or senseless slaughtering of animals and violence against human beings.
“This is dangerous because it means there are some very life-threatening people on the streets that have a lack of empathy, maybe addiction, mental health issues,” she said. “And so it’s really important that the Bahamas starts realising that just because it’s an animal and not a human, we still need to take it very, very seriously.”
Comments
jus2cents says...
My condolences to the dogs owners and their family.
Sub human behaviour like this is a very dangerous threat to all of us!
This crime should be investigated, the people who do this kind of thing need to be removed from society until they can behave in a civil way.
I hope they catch and prosecute the scum before they kill more animals and or humans.
Posted 24 March 2016, 11:08 a.m. Suggest removal
ThomasLewis says...
No man...(with tears in my eyes)!!
I can't believe we have to have come to such absurd and inhumane behavior to this extent.
My heart grieves for the atrocious act upon these animals' life.. I trust that persons are caught and dealt with to the full extent of the law so that they can serve as an example for those trampling animals' rights.
Posted 24 March 2016, 12:53 p.m. Suggest removal
ThisIsOurs says...
These are some seriously dangerous boys/men. People who torture animals are mentally broken in some way.
Posted 24 March 2016, 1:11 p.m. Suggest removal
jt says...
If these dogs were so precious, why were they restricted to cages? Even if they hadn't been killed it would have been a sad life.
Posted 24 March 2016, 8:04 p.m. Suggest removal
Emac says...
As an animal lover, I say the culprits should be shot for this act. How despicable!
Posted 27 March 2016, 8:28 a.m. Suggest removal
paul_vincent_zecchino says...
My family's condolences to the grieving Lightbourn family.
When the culprit(s) are caught, lock them up. Forever.
The LINK, as it's called, between animal cruelty and murderers is well established: every serial killer began their career by torturing and killing domestic pets. Every single one.
Someone who will do this to defenseless domestic animals will surely do it to another human.
If they haven't already murdered.
Posted 27 March 2016, 8:41 a.m. Suggest removal
DDK says...
What kind of animals do we have in the Bahamas that calls themselves human? I am so very sorry for this madness!
Posted 28 March 2016, 4:28 p.m. Suggest removal
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