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Beltsville woman sues Prince George鈥檚 Co. over pit bull ban

A Beltsville, Maryland, woman’s dogs were taken away by Prince George’s County authorities in July; to get them back, she had to negotiate a process her lawyer compared to the Salem witch trials. Now, she’s suing to get the county’s 25-year-old ban on pit bulls overturned.

Denise Venero鈥檚 two emotional support dogs, Mimi and Bella, escaped from her yard in July and got into a fight with a neighbor鈥檚 dog. Venero took responsibility, paid the resulting fines and improved the fence around her yard. But the county tried to seize her dogs anyway, arguing that they were pit bulls that violated county law.



For 16 days, they sat in a county kennel, where they got sick; then they had to spend another two weeks in another county.

County law identifies three breeds of dogs that are considered illegal pit bulls: Staffordshire Terriers, American Pit Bull Terriers, American Staffordshire Terriers, or 鈥渄ogs that exhibit the characteristics of a pit bull more than any other breed of dog.鈥

鈥淓verything is just very subjective at this point,鈥 said Venero. 鈥淭hey don鈥檛 have a criteria of how they go about these evaluations.鈥

Venero has documentation that shows Bella鈥檚 breed is listed as 鈥渓ab mix.鈥 She also knows Mimi’s mother was an American bull dog; the father, a Yorkie Havanese. Venero offered to provide DNA evidence showing her dogs weren鈥檛 in the banned breeds, but says she was told the county doesn鈥檛 use DNA to make that determination.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e saying, 鈥榳e visually identify鈥 the dogs,鈥 said Richard Rosenthal, Venero’s lawyer. 鈥淎n animal control officer looks at the dog and depending on how he feels that day he鈥檒l determine whether it is or is not.鈥

He added that saying 鈥’By looking at a dog I can tell you what breed it is’ is roughly the same as trying to define what makes a witch,鈥 he argued.

Last month, Venero had a hearing before the Prince George鈥檚 County Commission for Animal Control, which ruled that she was not guilty of violating the county鈥檚 dangerous animal statutes, or the law prohibiting pit bulls.

But by then, she had filed a federal lawsuit against the county that seeks to overturn the law. And even though she got her dogs back, she isn鈥檛 dropping the case.

鈥淭here鈥檚 so many dog owners that are potentially at danger of this,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his is a big issue that needs to be looked at even further. It鈥檚 been going on for 25 years and it needs to change now.”

“We want actual standards,” Rosenthal said. “We want something with science behind it.”

The lawsuit argues in part that the law is a violation of the federal Fair Housing Act, since the dogs have been certified as emotional support animals by a medical professional.

鈥淭he county takes the position that their law doesn鈥檛 provide an exception鈥 under that law, said Rosenthal. The lawsuit argues otherwise.

Court records show that both sides have entered into settlement negotiations. Neither Venero nor Rosenthal would comment on anything related to those talks. The county declined all comment.

John Domen

John has been with 海角社区app since 2016 but has spent most of his life living and working in the DMV, covering nearly every kind of story imaginable around the region. He鈥檚 twice been named Best Reporter by the Chesapeake Associated Press Broadcasters Association.聽

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