Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Police dog that bit raver cannot be identified

- ALEX SEABROOK alex.seabrook@reachplc.com

APOLICE dog which bit a woman while breaking up a rave near Bristol cannot be named, a tribunal has ruled.

The decision ends a two-year battle to reveal the dog’s name, its records and whether its handler commanded the dog to bite the woman’s leg.

Jessica Mae Andrew was left needing surgery after attending a Halloween rave in Yate in 2020, when police broke up the lockdown-breaking event with force.

A police dog mauled her leg while she danced and she said at the time that it had left “a gaping hole in my calf bigger than my fist”.

Since the attack, Avon and Somerset Police has faced questionin­g over why the incident was allowed to happen, disproport­ionate force and what training and qualificat­ions the dog’s handler had received.

But the new ruling leaves many questions unanswered.

The First Tier Tribunal (Informatio­n Rights) has now dismissed an appeal asking for the police to release the data as a Freedom of Informatio­n (FoI) request, as naming the dog could also reveal the name of its handler, who is exempt under FoI law.

Edward Williams initially made the FoI request to Avon and Somerset Police in November 2020, a few weeks after the incident happened.

He asked the police force to reveal the names of the dog and its handler; the dog’s police records; and the handler’s training record and qualificat­ions.

He also asked the police whether the handler commanded the dog to attack Ms Andrew, and why the dog attacked her.

But the police force refused to reveal the informatio­n, due to exemptions about personal informatio­n and ongoing investigat­ions.

Exhausting every avenue, Mr Williams asked the police for an internal review into its handling of the FoI request.

When this was not forthcomin­g, he appealed to the Informatio­n Commission­er, who acts as a national regulator for data requests. When this data was still not published, he appealed to the First Tier Tribunal (Informatio­n Rights).

Anthony Snelson, judge of the First Tier Tribunal, said: “There is no room for any doubt that these are all requests for personal data of the dog handler.”

Hundreds of people attended the Halloween rave at a warehouse in Beeches Industrial Estate, and at least a dozen were convicted. Police said they faced “significan­t hostility” when breaking up the rave.

Ms Andrew was given first aid and taken to hospital.

An Avon and Somerset Police spokespers­on previously said: “The investigat­ion into the complaint concluded there was no indication the dog handler behaved in a manner requiring disciplina­ry action or individual training.

“Any injury sustained during police contact is regrettabl­e. An apology was made to the complainan­t for the injury she sustained.”

After the incident, Ms Andrew told the Independen­t: “I was dancing when I was attacked with no warning at all.

“The dog came out of nowhere, grabbed me by the thigh and pulled me to the floor. The dog was totally out of control, it was traumatisi­ng.”

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