Waterloo Region Record

Police help pot-bellied pig get home safe and sound

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BURLINGTON — A lost pet pig is home safe and sound thanks to a Halton police officer who proved herself handy with a makeshift lasso.

Two Halton regional police officers were called to a residentia­l neighbourh­ood in Burlington on Thursday morning after a man came across a pot-bellied pig wandering in the street.

Sgt. Rhonda Paxton said the man stayed with the pig until she and her partner arrived, keeping an eye on it as it moved off the road and into a yard.

“When we arrived on scene it was eating shrubbery and nosing around in the dirt with its snout,” Paxton said.

Paxton said her partner, Const. Renee Harnack, went to their car, grabbed a strap normally used to restrain to prisoners and fashioned a leash with it.

“She was able to lasso the little potbellied pig so she had it secured,” said Paxton.

Harnack said she’s used that trick with dogs in the past, but she had never encountere­d a loose pig before.

After neighbours told the officers that the pig belongs to a woman who lives in a nearby home, Harnack tried to lead the animal across the road, she said.

“It went a little bit, but it didn’t really want to walk, so I picked it up,” she said. “It was squealing very loud.”

The pig’s owner was alerted by the noise and came outside.

She told the officers her beloved pet pig’s name is Chanel, and said the animal was a year old, Paxton said.

“It’s always something different at work,” Harnack added.

 ?? HALTON REGIONAL POLICE SERVICE, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Halton police Const. Renee Harnack returns pig to its grateful owner.
HALTON REGIONAL POLICE SERVICE, THE CANADIAN PRESS Halton police Const. Renee Harnack returns pig to its grateful owner.

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