Judge orders Chesterfield woman’s Staffordshire Bull Terrier be destroyed after attack
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Recorder Adrian Reynolds told Tracy Coleman the dog’s destruction was “the only appropriate course to take” and it was “beyond argument” following the March 8 incident.
Derby Crown Court heard today how Coleman’s “powerful” dog Buster had been involved in an “identical” attack in 2017 and had been subject of a muzzling order ever since.
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Hide AdHowever on March 8 Buster - who was on a lead “but could not be controlled” - bit another dog named Jasper on Valley Road.


The other dog’s owner was able to rescue his pet - however it suffered a number of bites requiring stitches and he received cuts to his hand.
Recorder Reynolds noted Coleman - who he described as a “decent woman” - did “everything she could to stop the attack”.
However he added: “A Staffordshire Bull Terrier is a powerful dog and this defendant did not have the physical strength to bring the attack to an end”.
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Hide AdThe judge told Coleman, who was denied legal aid and had no representation, he was “puzzled” as to why she would want a Staffordshire Bull Terrier as a pet.


He said: “In 2017 her dog was involved in an incident in which it was dangerously out of control.
“A contingency destruction order was made and a condition was that the dog must be muzzled in public.
“She tells me she abided by the order in every other occasion apart from this night.”
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Hide AdHowever Recorder Reynolds added that the March 8 attack caused “extremely unpleasant injuries which required treatment at the vets.”
He said: “It’s an overwhelming case that the dog in question be destroyed - sad as it undoubtedly is.
“In view of the fact that she acknowledges taking the dog out that night without a muzzle I cannot regard her as fit to keep animals.”
Coleman, of Valley Road, Spital, admitted being in charge of a dog dangerously out of control causing injury.
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Hide AdAs well as making an order for Buster to be put down, the judge banned her from keeping animals for five years.