A heartbreaking call in Lucasville has once again put the spotlight on dangerous dog encounters, Ohio’s strengthened animal laws, and a shelter system already stretched to its limits.
Scioto County Sheriff’s Deputies were dispatched after a woman reported that her neighbor’s dog charged toward her, and in a tragic split-second, her own dog jumped in front of the attack — and was killed.
Deputies contacted the Dog Warden’s Office, which advised they would handle the investigation.
Where Avery’s Law Comes In
Incidents like this fall under Ohio’s Avery’s Law, which toughened penalties for animal cruelty and gave authorities more tools to act when dogs are injured or killed due to another animal’s aggression or an owner’s negligence.
Under the law, situations involving:
- Dogs running loose
- Prior aggressive behavior
- Serious injury or death of an animal
can now carry stronger criminal consequences — especially if an owner failed to properly contain their dog.
Officials say Avery’s Law was designed for exactly these moments: when preventable attacks end in devastating loss.
One More Case Added to a System in Crisis
This tragedy also feeds directly into Scioto County’s ongoing animal control emergency.
Right now:
- The dog shelter is beyond capacity
- Temporary kennels are being used for overflow
- Dogs are facing euthanasia due to lack of space
- Wardens are juggling bite cases, roaming packs, neglect calls, and aggressive dog reports daily
Every serious incident like this puts more pressure on a system that already has nowhere to put the animals involved.
A Pattern Playing Out Across the County
This Lucasville attack is part of a troubling trend:
- Dogs escaping yards or breaking free from restraints
- Owners “rehoming” pets informally
- Aggressive dogs roaming neighborhoods
- Beloved family pets paying the price
Experts warn that when dogs are allowed to run loose, pack behavior and territorial instincts can escalate quickly, putting people, pets, and first responders at risk.
A Message to Dog Owners
With Ohio’s laws now stricter and enforcement ramping up:
- ✅ Secure fences and check for dig-outs
- ✅ Keep dogs leashed or properly contained
- ✅ License and tag your pets
- ❌ Don’t ignore prior aggressive behavior
- ❌ Don’t assume “it won’t happen again”
Because when it does, the consequences can be permanent.

















































































