The Wichita Eagle

Kansas may get harsher penalties for killing police K-9

- BY EDUARDO CASTILLO edcastillo@wichitaeag­le.com

Kansas could soon have harsher penalties for anyone who kills a police animal after lawmakers voted Tuesday on a bill that was introduced after a wanted man ran from police and hid in a storm drain where he then strangled Sedgwick County Sheriff’s Office K-9 deputy Bane.

Bane, an 8-year-old Belgian Malinois, died at the scene of the Nov. 16 police standoff in southeast Wichita.

The state House approved HB 2583 115-6 on Tuesday. It is now up to Gov. Laura Kelly to sign or veto the bill.

The current punishment for killing or harming a police dog ranges from 30 days or up to a year in prison and a fine between $500 to $5,000.

If the measure passes, a first-time offender who disables or kills a police horse or dog, an arson dog, game warden’s dog or a search-andrescue dog could see a prison sentence of 38-43 months; it’s between 55-61 months if the animal is killed while the suspect is trying to elude police.

Additional­ly, they would face a minimum of a $10,000 fine and possible restitutio­n.

Kansas Speaker of the House Rep. Daniel Hawkins (R-Wichita) and Rep. Stephen Owens (R-Hesston) introduced the

legislatio­n. Hawkins commended Tuesday’s vote in honor of K-9 Bane.

“When I learned of the penalties for harming or killing a police dog were so minimal, I knew we needed to do better for these heroic animals,” Hawkins said in a statement to The Eagle. “Police service dogs, like K-9 Bane, are members of the police department and truly serve as a partner to their officer/handler.”

In November, Bane died after he and a Wichita Police Department K-9 were both released on extended leashes into the storm drain for a then 24-year-old Wichita man wanted in connection with a robbery and domestic violence battery.

A camera was also used. The other K-9 wasn’t injured.

The incident lasted more than 2.5 hours before police talked the man into surrenderi­ng.

Hawkins added: “I’m proud to have been a part of making this important law a reality to protect the law enforcemen­t animals who serve Kansans every day.”

Opponents of this type of legislatio­n have questioned how police dogs have been used, saying the animals have been directed to go after people who have surrendere­d. The history of police dogs includes being used to attack people of color during the Civil

Rights Movement of the 1950s and 1960s.

Keisha James, a staff attorney for the National Lawyers Guild’s National Police Accountabi­lity Project, said police dogs have jaws strong enough to puncture sheet metal. “Victims of attacks by police dogs have sustained serious and even fatal injuries,” James said in a written statement to a Senate committee last month. “It follows that an individual being attacked by a police dog would respond by trying to defend themselves.”

 ?? Courtesy Sedgwick County Sheriff's Office ?? K-9 Bane died after he ran into a storm drain after a suspect. The Kansas House on Tuesday passed a bill that increases the penalties for disabling or killing a police horse or dog, an arson dog, game warden’s dog or a search-and-rescue dog.
Courtesy Sedgwick County Sheriff's Office K-9 Bane died after he ran into a storm drain after a suspect. The Kansas House on Tuesday passed a bill that increases the penalties for disabling or killing a police horse or dog, an arson dog, game warden’s dog or a search-and-rescue dog.

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