The behavior of many people in this thread, particularly (but certainly not limited to them) Alyrium, Schatten and AlphawolfNUMBERS, is absolutely fucking ridiculous.
Repeat after me: The plural of Anecdote is NOT data!
Gee, good thing that is not what I am doing. I have not relayed a single anecdote here. I have relayed breed characteristics, and then applied them to the known behavior of a specific dog. Anecdotes about an individual applied to that individual are perfectly valid. It is when you apply anecdotes to the population that you have a problem.
And anecdotes is what all the bullshit about golden retrievers and labradors being universally gentle and nonviolent is.
No. It is not. They are breed characters. It is the equivalent of me talking about behavioral syndromes in fiddler crabs, or defensive behavior in snakes. Those dogs are bred to be friendly. Are there exceptions? Of course. You can abuse a dog and make it mean. The dog can be in constant pain, and become aggressive. It happens. It is entirely possible that a dog with arthritis might become aggressive. However, we have ONLY the officers word against a dog's lifetime of behavior, and when you are talking about an individual's behavior and the central tendency in the behavior, anecdotes about that behavior are valid evidence. Unless you want to collect statistics on every individual.
For whatever reason, their lab did not like me at all and I had no business going near if the dog was around, such as if we happened to meet in the stairwell. I've seen and met other labs that you had to be careful around at first if you wanted to make sure you stayed in one piece.
Yes. Is there variance around the central tendency? Yes. Is there a central tendency in the dogs behavior? Yes. It happens to be on one side of the central tendency of the mean. This means that the probability that its behavior will shift suddenly to the other side is low. Possible? Yes. Likely, no.
Then, the most astonishing thing in this thread by far: We are dealing with a burglary alarm in the US. Where criminals tend to be well supplied with these things known as firearms, due to widespread availability and little respect for any possible restrictive laws. More likely than not, the possible criminal is armed, so the police officer needs to go with a weapon out, as our resident officers have repeatedly stated.
Which is perfectly acceptable. The issue is when they pull the trigger by accident. If this was a teenager who had come out to investigate and the cop pulled the trigger and it turned out to be a family friend who accidentally flipped the burglar alarm and the cop claimed to have shot him in self defense, we would not be having this argument. The cop would not be taken at his word, and the members of this board would be screaming for blood.
They have also made the point about the tactical situation and what you can and can't do there, how long switching weapons would take etc.
Yes. And again, if he saw the dog, did not want to risk being chomped, and then later said "Look, I had to make the call in a split second and may have shot a non-aggressive dog" we would not be having this argument.
The issue is not that he shot the dog. Reacting out of instinct and training is not shameful. It is that we only have his word that it was unambiguously aggressive, and that the dogs past behavior counter-indicates that aggression. And yes, referencing the behavior of an individual to predict future behavior is perfectly valid. If this is the case, and the police officer did act instinctively, that is fine, but he needs to take responsibility for it rather than claiming the dog attacked him.
Also: I love how you bitch about use of anecdotes, and your post is smothered in them.
None of that is apparent. Yet a lot of people here have been making pretty sweeping statements of fact of how it must have been based on what amounts to nothing but ignorance and the benefit of hindsight.
No. It is based on the dog's prior behavior. What is more likely? That the dog became aggressive? Or that the cop acted on muscle memory to a fast moving dog with his gun drawn. In other words, made a mistake, and is then either rationalizing his behavior, or lying about it? The answer is obvious. The later is more likely. Not definite, but more likely, and I have stressed that my argument is probabilistic.