
Italy outraged at killing of heroic police dog ‘given food laced with nails'
His trainer, Arcangelo Caressa, said he had been fed bits of dog food laced with nails.
In an interview on Tuesday, Mr Caressa said he suspected the killing was revenge against him — not Bruno — for his volunteer animal rescue work.
'It was deliberately a horrific act to cause the dog intense suffering, because feeding him bites filled with nails means tearing apart his insides, tearing apart his esophagus and internal organs and causing excruciating pain,' Mr Caressa told The Associated Press.
Premier Giorgia Meloni, who was photographed with Bruno after one of his heroic rescues, said that his slaughter was 'vile, cowardly, unacceptable'.
Legislator Michael Vittoria Brambilla, a long-time animal rights activist, filed a criminal complaint with prosecutors under a new law that she helped push through stiffening penalties for anyone who kills or mistreats an animal.
The editor of the Il Giornale daily, Vittorio Feltri, voiced outrage, saying Bruno had done more civic good in Italy than most Italian citizens.
Mr Caressa said that he had told prosecutors that he suspected that he was the ultimate target of Bruno's killers, and that Bruno was killed 'to get to me'.
Mr Caressa runs a volunteer public animal rescue organisation, Endas, that among other things rescues dogs from illegal dogfights.
He said the service used to be run by for-profit firms and said he suspected that his competitors were behind Bruno's killing.
'In recent months, we have received threats, acts of persecution, defamation and slander from certain individuals who have already been investigated in the past and are known to the judicial authorities, who have been trying in every way to take over this rescue service by despicable means,' Mr Caressa told The Associated Press.
The new animal protection law, known as the Brambilla law, went into effect on July 1 and calls for up to four years in prison and a 60,000-euro (around £51,000) fine, with the stiffest penalties applied if the mistreatment is committed in front of children or is filmed and disseminated online.
Mr Feltri said that the penalty should be even greater than four years, saying animals must be respected 'especially when they behave heroically' as Bruno had.
Mr Caressa said that Bruno might have appeared clumsy and overweight, but was powerful, strong and dedicated to his job.
'He was a giant,' said Mr Caressa. 'When he went out on a search and you put his harness on, there was no one else like him.
'He would set off, smell the person we were looking for and run like a train until we found them.'
Officially, his record stands at nine people found – five people who were alive and four whose bodies were recovered, he said.
'But the motto for us rescuers is always the same: Bring the missing person home in any case, because there is always someone among their relatives who is looking for that missing person,' he said.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Metro
13 hours ago
- Metro
Three injured by falling rubble after van ploughs through Leeds car park
Three people have been taken to hospital after a van crashed through a multi-storey car park in Leeds. The van collided through the wall and barrier at the NCP car park on York Street at around 4.15pm this afternoon. Emergency services including the police, fire and ambulance service attended the scene. A West Yorkshire Police spokesperson said: 'Police were called to the NCP car park on Harper Street, Leeds at 4.09pm today to a report a van had collided with an interior wall while driving on the first floor. 'The collision caused damage to the building wall itself and led to the vehicle protruding outwards. 'Occupants of the vehicle were taken to hospital for precautionary checks. 'Three members of the public were also taken to hospital for assessment after being struck by rubble. None of the injuries are thought to be life threatening. 'A police scene has been established and damage to the building is being assessed by colleagues from the fire service and structural engineers More Trending 'The vehicle involved will be recovered.' The car park is currently sealed off while authorities investigate the cause of the crash. York Street, a busy route connecting to the A61 and Eastgate roundabout, remains closed this evening, with heavy traffic during rush hour. Drivers are being diverted and the public are advised to avoid the area where possible. Got a story? Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@ Or you can submit your videos and pictures here. For more stories like this, check our news page. Follow on Twitter and Facebook for the latest news updates. You can now also get articles sent straight to your device. Sign up for our daily push alerts here. MORE: Popular Italian restaurant chain on brink of administration to close six sites MORE: 'My son died riding on an e-scooter – we need to end these needless tragedies' MORE: Two children killed after youth sailing camp boat struck by barge in Miami


New Statesman
15 hours ago
- New Statesman
How do we keep the lid on race-related violence?
A police car set on fire by far-right activists in Sunderland last August. Photo by Ian Forsyth / Getty Images 'Shower upon us abundant rain,' goes a Muslim prayer one learns in childhood, 'swiftly and not delayed.' A prayer for rain that makes sense in the desert. Imagine my surprise on learning the Church of England has one too. Whose idea was it to institute such a prayer in this soggy, inclement land? Its diverse uses have, however, recently become apparent: in the middle of an inconvenient hosepipe ban, to foil defeat in the cricket, or – more seriously – to maintain public order in times so tense that the country is being called a 'tinderbox' at risk of exploding again into nationwide rioting. Last summer, a far-right frenzy gripped towns across Britain. Hotels housing asylum seekers were almost burned down. Now, another such hotel in Epping is subject to anti-migrant demonstrations; these are spreading. Fearing another summer of discord, officials have been appealing to the deus ex machina of the weather. It's well known that hot summers provide the perfect conditions for public unrest to germinate. The London riots in 2011 were a summer affair, as were the 1981 England riots, the worst race-related violence the UK has seen. Tempers flare with temperatures. And rain souses the appetite to indulge in outdoor clashes. A historic heatwave also provides the metaphor for simmering conflict in Do the Right Thing (1989), Spike Lee's classic film about racial tension in a predominantly black Brooklyn neighbourhood. Lee saturates the frame – Gauguin-like – with volcanic hues of red and orange. Our eyes are primed – lava will surely fly – and after a youngster is choked to death by a cop, as George Floyd would be, the community at last erupts into violence. What would be the right thing to do in these circumstances? Lee is a dialectical filmmaker. He ends by quoting from two opposing – though equally compelling – schools of thought about political protest: Martin Luther King Jr's contention that violence is 'both impractical and immoral', and Malcolm X's rejoinder, that when violence is 'in self-defence, I call it intelligence'. The film doesn't say which of these courses of action is, in the end, right. I admire Malcolm X's courage. His insinuation that the bullet may ultimately be more effective than the ballot was born of the chronic failure of American democracy. But rewatching Lee's film, I found myself leaning more towards King. I recoiled during the climactic scene, when the amiable protagonist, Mookie, smashes up the Italian-American pizzeria that provides him with employment, a father-figure and a lively communal space (last year's rioters similarly ransacked their own community centres and amenities). Finally, the rioters threaten the local Asian-run grocery. At this moment, seeing such a familiar character threatened, I fully realised where it was that I stand in this debate. Subscribe to The New Statesman today from only £8.99 per month Subscribe For all my sympathy with this community ravaged by the violence of an unjust state, I could not accept this rage against blameless bystanders. I recalled the real-life Bangladeshi family in Minneapolis, whose livelihood – a restaurant – was destroyed in Black Lives Matter protests five years ago. 'Let my building burn,' its immigrant owner, Ruhel Islam, proclaimed, 'justice needs to be served.' The restaurant's name still sticks in the mind: Gandhi Mahal, in homage to the man whose still revolutionary doctrine of non-violence King was an adherent of. By overcoming self-interest and standing with a just cause at personal cost, so clearly was Ruhel Islam. The rioters from Do the Right Thing and from last summer have divergent motives: Mookie and his friends in 1980s New York are crying out for racial justice, while last year's rioters were motivated, I do believe, by racial animus. Nevertheless, in distinct ways, they exemplify anxieties and resentments around race that can stew in any 'melting pot' society. Incidents of police brutality or, as has recently been the trigger in UK unrest, sexual assault, can blow the lid off. When that happens, since time immemorial, immigrant communities like mine are the ones consumed in the fury. How, then, to keep the lid on? This, now, is our challenge. Personally, I'd like to spread the Mahatma's teachings in Epping, but alas, that may fall on deaf ears. Severe sentencing was what the courts opted for – on violent demonstrators, deservedly, but also on inciteful or hateful speech. This, on reflection, seems appropriate. Terror was unleashed by the now jailed Lucy Connolly's call to burn down asylum hotels. But such authoritarianism betrays a political establishment increasingly of the view that the country's diverse ethnic and religious make-up can no longer sustain open discussion of topics sensitive to its respective communities. Note the state's recent activity: a superinjunction to prevent media reporting on Afghan refugee resettlement; an Online Safety Act that is concealing from the public controversial footage; making it a crime even to voice support for Palestine Action; penalising the burning of a Koran. Here, then, is a government that thinks segments of the population are so vexed by migration, or so offended by criticism of Israel, or Islam, that these conversations must be suppressed to keep the peace: ignorance coerced for the sake of bliss. If this is the cost of being tolerated, I don't really feel like paying it. I refuse to believe the country is such a tinderbox. Social cohesion will come, but only by having and withstanding difficult conversations, not by avoiding them. That's how to do the right thing. Failing that, I have my prayer for rain. [See also: One year on, tensions still circle Britain's asylum-seeker hotels] Related


Scottish Sun
20 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
Ibiza Rocks Hotel issues major update on safety changes after tragic deaths of two Scots who plunged from balconies
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A PARTY resort in Ibiza could raise the height of their balconies after deaths of two young Scots in a fortnight. Ibiza Rocks Hotel chiefs have vowed to carry out improvements following the fatal falls of ice hockey star Gary Kelly, 19, from Dundee and 26-year-old Evan Thomson from Aberdeen. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 3 Evan Thomson from Aberdeen tragically lost his life in the accident 3 Gary Kelly tragically lost his life in a fall from a third floor balcony 3 Ibiza Rocks Hotel in San Antonio Credit: Darren Fletcher San Antonia Mayor Marcos Serra and two leading councillors including head of tourism Miguel Tur said after the meeting they had urged the hotel to 'reinforce existing protocols' and 'adopt stricter safety measures'. Town hall sources subsequently confirmed the hotel had indicated it was willing to raise the height of balcony railings at the four-star establishment, although it insisted they already met legal requirements. They also indicated the hotel's British owners had pledged to reinforce security with more staff. Ibiza Rocks announced it was 'pausing' its music events following Gary's July 21 death although it has now resumed its normal programme. In a new statement it confirmed: 'We've taken the opportunity to review the strong safety measures already in place across the hotel and look at where we can go further. 'As we always have, we continue to work with independent inspectors, external experts and listen to feedback from our team, guests and the wider community to keep improving and strengthening our approach.' It added: 'We're also being clearer about our expectations around respectful behaviour and personal responsibility. 'A safe and positive environment is something we all contribute to, so we're encouraging all guests to look out for their friends, trust their instincts and speak to a member of the team if they need help.' Gary became the fourth holidaymaker to die at the hotel since April 27 when he plunged from a third-floor nine days ago in an incident which police categorised as an accident. Evan's Thomson's family raised questions about safety at Ibiza Rocks and blasted the hotel over the way his July 7 death was handled, with his sister Teila claiming afterwards: 'Once it did happen, the hotel's response was just completely heartbreaking; almost as if it never happened.' Inside the abandoned wreck of Ibiza's first super club A 19-year-old Italian tourist of Turkish origin plunged to her death on April 27 from a fourth-floor at the hotel. And on April 30, a 33-year-old British woman died in her room at the adults-only hotel after going into cardiac arrest. None of the deaths are being treated as suspicious.