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Dangerous Dogs Act 1991

The Dangerous Dogs Act 1991[2] (c. 65) is an act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom prohibiting or restricting certain types of dogs and codifying the criminal offence of allowing a dog of any breed to be dangerously out of control. After a series of eleven dog attacks in 1991,[3] Home Secretary Kenneth Baker promised "to rid the country of the menace of these fighting dogs".[4] The Act has been controversial for failing to stem the rise of dog attacks[5] and for focusing on a dog's breed or looks instead of an individual dog's behaviour.[6][7]

Dangerous Dogs Act 1991
Act of Parliament
Long titleAn Act to prohibit persons from having in their possession or custody dogs belonging to types bred for fighting; to impose restrictions in respect of such dogs pending the coming into force of the prohibition; to enable restrictions to be imposed in relation to other types of dog which present a serious danger to the public; to make further provision for securing that dogs are kept under proper control; and for connected purposes.
Citation1991 c. 65
Introduced byKenneth Baker, Home Secretary (Commons)
The Earl Ferrers, Minister of State for Home Affairs (Lords)
Territorial extent England and Wales, Scotland
Northern Ireland (section 8 only)
Dates
Royal assent25 July 1991
Commencement30 November 1991 (Section 3(1))
12 August 1991[1]
Status: Amended
Text of statute as originally enacted
Text of the Dangerous Dogs Act 1991 as in force today (including any amendments) within the United Kingdom, from legislation.gov.uk.

Introduction edit

The 1991 act[2] was introduced by then Home Secretary Kenneth Baker, and was amended in 1997.[8] The Act applies in England, Wales and Scotland, with The Dangerous Dogs (Northern Ireland) Order 1991[9] having a similar effect in Northern Ireland. The intention of the Act was the protection of the people. Prior to the Act there were no criminal penalties for injuries or deaths caused by dog attacks.[10][11]

In summary:

  • Section 1, Dogs bred for fighting, prohibits the ownership of certain types of dogs, unless exempted on the Index of Exempt Dogs. It was intended to have a preventative effect.[10]
  • Section 2, Keeping dogs under proper control, creates a criminal offence of allowing any dog (of any breed or type) to be dangerously out of control, and legal action may be taken against the dog's owner.[10]
  • Section 3, Destruction and disqualification orders, covers orders for destruction of dogs, and orders for prohibiting offenders from the keeping of dogs for a period of time.

Britain has a long history of various dog legislation in attempts to protect the public.[4] In the ninth century, dog-owners were fined if their dog bit a person. In 1839, fines were exacted for allowing dogs to run loose in London, and owners were liable if their unmuzzled dog attacked a person or other animal. In 1847, it became a criminal offence to let a dangerous dog run loose. The power to confiscate dogs was introduced in 1871. Prohibition of owning a dog as a penalty was available in 1989. The 1991 Act banned four types of dog, and made it an offence for an owner to allow any dog "to be dangerously out of control". In 1997, the Act was amended, relaxing rules and giving courts more flexibility about euthanasia orders. And in 2006, local authorities were empowered to ban dogs from certain public areas to reduce menace and fouling by dogs.

Section 1 (Breed Specific Legislation) edit

Under the Act, it is illegal to own certain dogs without an exemption from a court.[12] The Act bans the breeding, sale and exchange of these dogs, even if they are on the Index of Exempted Dogs.[13]

The Act applies to five types of dogs:

The first two are explicitly mentioned in the Act, and the third and fourth were designated by the Secretary of State in 1991, [14] and the fifth added in 2023.[15]

The Act also covers cross-breeds of the above four types of dog. Dangerous dogs are classified by "type", not by breed label. This means that whether a dog is prohibited under the Act will depend on a judgement about its physical characteristics, and whether they match the description of a prohibited "type". This assessment of the physical characteristics is made by a Dog Legislation Officer (DLO), a police officer experienced in dog handling and dog legislation, who assists in the investigation of dog-related allegations of crime.[10]

On 15 September 2023, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak announced that XL Bully would be added to the Dangerous Dogs Act. It was designated on 31 December 2023 for England and Wales,[16] and in Scotland on 23 February 2024.[15]

Index of Exempted Dogs edit

The process for getting a Section 1 dog exempted includes proving to the court that the dog is not a danger to public safety, that it is owned by a 'fit and proper' person to be in charge of a dog, that the dog is already neutered and microchipped,[Note 1] and that the owner has obtained third-party insurance that would cover an incident of bodily injury or death of a person caused by the dog. Ongoing conditions include keeping the dog at the address listed, notifying of address changes, notifying of the death or export of the dog, keeping the dog muzzled and on a lead in public places, keeping the dog securely to prevent escape, and maintaining all previous conditions for the life of the dog.[20]

The Act established the Index of Exempted Dogs and the Animal Welfare section of the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) oversees the administration of the Act and the Index.[18]

Initially, dogs born before 30 November 1991 were eligible to be put on the Index of Exempted Dogs (a grandfather clause). Applications were received for over 8,000 dogs; 5,223 dogs received their Certificate of Exemption.[21] Dogs born after 30 November 1991 were not eligible to be on the Index, and it was expected the Index would cease after the death of the last of the original 5,223 dogs. However, the 1997 amendments expanded eligibility, effectively continuing the Index. As of 2015, there were 3,001 Pit bull terriers on the Index, 6 Dogo Argentinos, 0 Fila Brasilieros, and 3 Japanese Tosas.[22] As of 2018, there were 3,514 Pit bull terriers, 3 Japanese Tosas, 13 Dogo Argentinos, and 0 Fila Brazilieros.[23]

What is prohibited edit

The act makes it illegal for anyone to own, breed, breed from, sell, advertise (even as a gift), give away, or allow a dog of any of the listed breeds to stray.[2] Those who previously owned individuals of the breed before the act came into force could apply for Certificates of Exemption for a limited period of time after the act came into effect for each of the breeds prohibited.[24]

Reception and responses edit

The Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals and the British Veterinary Association are both against the breed-specific legislation provisions of the Act (Section 1), claiming that there is no scientific evidence that all individuals of a breed are dangerous.[25][26] However, data from the Metropolitan Police shows that in incidents involving 'dangerously out of control dogs' banned breeds account for about 20% of offences. Defra says there are "a large number of serious cases from a very small population of dogs in circulation, and that is striking evidence that there is an issue with this particular type of dog",[27] while a Member of Parliament said "Despite the fact that dogs on the exempt list must be muzzled in public, that breed still accounts for almost 20% of all reported attacks. We know also that pit bulls have been involved in seven of the 31 fatal attacks that have occurred since 2005. That is highly disproportionate for one type of dog that is banned, and it underlines the need to be cautious about change in this area."[28]

The RSPCA have been criticised for their opposition to breed-specific legislation, and their own pet insurance excludes certain breeds from coverage.[29][30]

The act only covers dog attacks causing physical injury to a human, not physical injury or death to other animals, and does not cover mental injury to a human witnessing such an attack (PTSD, for example). Efforts have been made to get the law changed.[31] In some cases, injuries to humans have been ignored or not taken seriously by authorities because they were caused during a dog-on-dog attack.[32]

A 2018 proposal by PETA to have the Staffordshire Bull Terrier and American Bulldog added to the list of banned dogs spawned a petition in support of the Staffordshires which garnered 160,000 signatures. The proposal was debated by Parliament and rejected. George Eustice declared, "The Government have no plans at all to add Staffordshire bull terriers, or any other type of dog, to the list of prohibited dogs."[28]

The act has been described as a piece of rushed legislation which was an overreaction to a transient public mood.[33][34][35][36] The Act is sometimes cited as an unfavourable example of such legislation,[37][38] and in January 2007, the act was included in public responses to a BBC Radio 4 poll of unpopular UK legislation.[39]

A 1992 case involving a dog named Dempsey, a pit bull terrier which three years later had its destruction order reversed,[40][41] brought interest because of the lack of discretion that the Act gave magistrates regarding Section 1 dogs. Discretion was granted to magistrates with the 1997 amendment to the Act.[18]

In the case of R (Sandhu) v. Isleworth Crown Court [2012], the claimant Sandhu was in prison and sought to nominate a temporary keeper to have his dog. The judicial review held that a person does have the right to nominate a person to temporarily keep the dog. This decision has more recently been more regulated to only allow for temporary keepership in certain circumstances.[42]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ All dogs in the UK were mandated to be microchipped and registered in one of the authorised commercial databases by 2016.[17][18][19]

References edit

  1. ^ Statutory Instrument 1991 No. 1742 (section 3) The Dangerous Dogs Act 1991 (Commencement and Appointed Day) Order 1991
  2. ^ a b c "Dangerous Dogs Act 1991". www.legislation.gov.uk.
  3. ^ "Dangerous Dogs (Hansard, 23 May 1991)". api.parliament.uk. 23 May 1991.
  4. ^ a b Clare, Sean (22 May 2012). "Dangerous dog laws: A history". BBC News.
  5. ^ Barkham, Patrick; Murphy, Simon (18 January 2012). "Bark but no bite: Dangerous Dogs Act in spotlight as attacks rise". The Guardian. Retrieved 26 May 2018.
  6. ^ Crookes, Del (13 April 2016). "A short history of the 'dangerous dog' and why certain breeds are banned - BBC Newsbeat". BBC News. Retrieved 19 May 2018.
  7. ^ "The Dangerous Dogs Act 1991 - what is it?". Blue Cross.
  8. ^ "Dangerous Dogs (Amendment) Act 1997". www.legislation.gov.uk.
  9. ^ "The Dangerous Dogs (Northern Ireland) Order 1991". www.legislation.gov.uk.
  10. ^ a b c d "Dangerous dogs law: Guidance for enforcers (PB13225)". GOV.UK. Defra. 2009.
  11. ^ "Dangerous Dog Offences - The Crown Prosecution Service". cps.gov.uk. Crown Prosecution Service.
  12. ^ "Controlling your dog in public". GOV.UK.
  13. ^ (PDF). Defra. 2003. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 March 2007. Retrieved 7 February 2013. via Internet Archive Wayback Machine
  14. ^ "The Dangerous Dogs (Designated Types) Order 1991 No. 1743". www.legislation.gov.uk.
  15. ^ a b Clarke, Jennifer (11 September 2023). "What is an American XL bully and why are they being banned?". BBC News. Retrieved 9 March 2024.
  16. ^ "American bully XLs: Attack victim named as Ian Price after PM vows to ban the dogs". BBC News. 15 September 2023. Retrieved 22 February 2024.
  17. ^ "Dog microchipping law brings fines risk". BBC News. 6 April 2016.
  18. ^ a b c Bennett, Oliver (11 August 2016). "Dangerous Dogs, Briefing Paper number 4348". House of Commons Library – via researchbriefings.parliament.uk. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  19. ^ "All dogs in England to get free microchips". GOV.UK.
  20. ^ "The Dangerous Dogs Exemption Schemes (England and Wales) Order 2015". www.legislation.gov.uk. 2015.
  21. ^ "Dangerous Dogs consultation, 9th March 2010" (PDF). Defra. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 February 2011. Retrieved 10 June 2020 – via The National Archives.
  22. ^ "Numbers of dogs on the Index of Exempted Dogs". GOV.UK. 27 March 2015.
  23. ^ "Written evidence by Defra to House of Commons EFRA Committee for Controlling dangerous dogs Ninth Report of Session 2017–19, May 2018".
  24. ^ "[Withdrawn] Apply for a Certificate of Exemption to keep an XL Bully dog". GOV.UK. 1 February 2024. Retrieved 22 April 2024.
  25. ^ "Breed Specific Legislation - A Dog's Dinner" (PDF). rspca.org.uk. RSPCA. 2016.
  26. ^ "BVA policy - Dangerous dogs". bva.co.uk.
  27. ^ "Controlling dangerous dogs - Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee - House of Commons". publications.parliament.uk. 17 October 2018.
  28. ^ a b "Dangerous Dogs Act: Staffordshire Bull Terriers - Hansard". hansard.parliament.uk. 16 July 2018.
  29. ^ Whipple, Tom (22 February 2024). "RSPCA's own insurance refuses cover for fighting dogs it defends". ISSN 0140-0460. Retrieved 22 February 2024.
  30. ^ "Why is the RSPCA defending the American Bully dog?". The Spectator. 28 August 2023. Retrieved 22 February 2024.
  31. ^ "Justice for dog owner after fatal attack". Basingstoke Gazette. 24 March 2018.
  32. ^ Graham, Hannah (22 July 2019). "'I needed surgery after dog attack but police didn't want to know'". ChronicleLive.
  33. ^ Schmidt, William E. (29 May 1991). "London Journal; Bad Dogs and Englishmen, What's to Be Done?". The New York Times.
  34. ^ "Is the Dangerous Dogs Act dangerously out of control?". www.bcu.ac.uk. Retrieved 16 May 2019.
  35. ^ "Dog control laws and pit bulls". BBC News. 11 September 2007. Retrieved 30 April 2010.
  36. ^ "The Lords is the more democratic house". The Daily Telegraph. London. 13 April 2004. Retrieved 30 April 2010.[dead link]
  37. ^ . Archived from the original on 12 January 2007. Retrieved 19 May 2018.
  38. ^ Hollingshead, Iain (5 November 2005). "Whatever happened to dangerous dogs?". The Guardian. Retrieved 19 May 2018.
  39. ^ "Hunting ban tops 'unpopular' poll". BBC News. 1 January 2007. Retrieved 30 April 2010.
  40. ^ "LEADING ARTICLE : Love Dempsey, hate pit-bulls". The Independent. 8 September 1995. Retrieved 26 June 2019.
  41. ^ "BBC News - UK - Death row dogs". news.bbc.co.uk. 20 November 1998. Retrieved 26 June 2019.
  42. ^ "R (on the application of Sandhu) v Isleworth Crown Court - LexisWeb". lexisweb.co.uk. Retrieved 19 May 2018.

Bibliography edit

External links edit

  • DDA Watch - Organisation offering free advice and support to owners affected by the Dangerous Dogs Act. Campaigning for workable dog laws
  • BBC Article on a dog attack - July 2005
  • BBC Article on a dog attack - January 2007
  • BBC Article "How do you fend off a dangerous dog?"
  • Deed Not Breed: UK Campaign fighting the addition of any new breed to the DDA.
  • Independent Article On Dog Attack June 2010.

UK Legislation edit

  • Text of the Dangerous Dogs Act 1991 as in force today (including any amendments) within the United Kingdom, from legislation.gov.uk.

dangerous, dogs, 1991, parliament, united, kingdom, prohibiting, restricting, certain, types, dogs, codifying, criminal, offence, allowing, breed, dangerously, control, after, series, eleven, attacks, 1991, home, secretary, kenneth, baker, promised, country, m. The Dangerous Dogs Act 1991 2 c 65 is an act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom prohibiting or restricting certain types of dogs and codifying the criminal offence of allowing a dog of any breed to be dangerously out of control After a series of eleven dog attacks in 1991 3 Home Secretary Kenneth Baker promised to rid the country of the menace of these fighting dogs 4 The Act has been controversial for failing to stem the rise of dog attacks 5 and for focusing on a dog s breed or looks instead of an individual dog s behaviour 6 7 Dangerous Dogs Act 1991Act of ParliamentParliament of the United KingdomLong titleAn Act to prohibit persons from having in their possession or custody dogs belonging to types bred for fighting to impose restrictions in respect of such dogs pending the coming into force of the prohibition to enable restrictions to be imposed in relation to other types of dog which present a serious danger to the public to make further provision for securing that dogs are kept under proper control and for connected purposes Citation1991 c 65Introduced byKenneth Baker Home Secretary Commons The Earl Ferrers Minister of State for Home Affairs Lords Territorial extent England and Wales Scotland Northern Ireland section 8 only DatesRoyal assent25 July 1991Commencement30 November 1991 Section 3 1 12 August 1991 1 Status AmendedText of statute as originally enactedText of the Dangerous Dogs Act 1991 as in force today including any amendments within the United Kingdom from legislation gov uk Contents 1 Introduction 2 Section 1 Breed Specific Legislation 2 1 Index of Exempted Dogs 2 2 What is prohibited 3 Reception and responses 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 6 1 Bibliography 7 External links 7 1 UK LegislationIntroduction editThe 1991 act 2 was introduced by then Home Secretary Kenneth Baker and was amended in 1997 8 The Act applies in England Wales and Scotland with The Dangerous Dogs Northern Ireland Order 1991 9 having a similar effect in Northern Ireland The intention of the Act was the protection of the people Prior to the Act there were no criminal penalties for injuries or deaths caused by dog attacks 10 11 In summary Section 1 Dogs bred for fighting prohibits the ownership of certain types of dogs unless exempted on the Index of Exempt Dogs It was intended to have a preventative effect 10 Section 2 Keeping dogs under proper control creates a criminal offence of allowing any dog of any breed or type to be dangerously out of control and legal action may be taken against the dog s owner 10 Section 3 Destruction and disqualification orders covers orders for destruction of dogs and orders for prohibiting offenders from the keeping of dogs for a period of time Britain has a long history of various dog legislation in attempts to protect the public 4 In the ninth century dog owners were fined if their dog bit a person In 1839 fines were exacted for allowing dogs to run loose in London and owners were liable if their unmuzzled dog attacked a person or other animal In 1847 it became a criminal offence to let a dangerous dog run loose The power to confiscate dogs was introduced in 1871 Prohibition of owning a dog as a penalty was available in 1989 The 1991 Act banned four types of dog and made it an offence for an owner to allow any dog to be dangerously out of control In 1997 the Act was amended relaxing rules and giving courts more flexibility about euthanasia orders And in 2006 local authorities were empowered to ban dogs from certain public areas to reduce menace and fouling by dogs Section 1 Breed Specific Legislation editUnder the Act it is illegal to own certain dogs without an exemption from a court 12 The Act bans the breeding sale and exchange of these dogs even if they are on the Index of Exempted Dogs 13 The Act applies to five types of dogs Pit Bull Terrier Japanese Tosa Dogo Argentino Fila Brasileiro XL Bully The first two are explicitly mentioned in the Act and the third and fourth were designated by the Secretary of State in 1991 14 and the fifth added in 2023 15 The Act also covers cross breeds of the above four types of dog Dangerous dogs are classified by type not by breed label This means that whether a dog is prohibited under the Act will depend on a judgement about its physical characteristics and whether they match the description of a prohibited type This assessment of the physical characteristics is made by a Dog Legislation Officer DLO a police officer experienced in dog handling and dog legislation who assists in the investigation of dog related allegations of crime 10 On 15 September 2023 Prime Minister Rishi Sunak announced that XL Bully would be added to the Dangerous Dogs Act It was designated on 31 December 2023 for England and Wales 16 and in Scotland on 23 February 2024 15 Index of Exempted Dogs edit The process for getting a Section 1 dog exempted includes proving to the court that the dog is not a danger to public safety that it is owned by a fit and proper person to be in charge of a dog that the dog is already neutered and microchipped Note 1 and that the owner has obtained third party insurance that would cover an incident of bodily injury or death of a person caused by the dog Ongoing conditions include keeping the dog at the address listed notifying of address changes notifying of the death or export of the dog keeping the dog muzzled and on a lead in public places keeping the dog securely to prevent escape and maintaining all previous conditions for the life of the dog 20 The Act established the Index of Exempted Dogs and the Animal Welfare section of the Department for Environment Food and Rural Affairs Defra oversees the administration of the Act and the Index 18 Initially dogs born before 30 November 1991 were eligible to be put on the Index of Exempted Dogs a grandfather clause Applications were received for over 8 000 dogs 5 223 dogs received their Certificate of Exemption 21 Dogs born after 30 November 1991 were not eligible to be on the Index and it was expected the Index would cease after the death of the last of the original 5 223 dogs However the 1997 amendments expanded eligibility effectively continuing the Index As of 2015 there were 3 001 Pit bull terriers on the Index 6 Dogo Argentinos 0 Fila Brasilieros and 3 Japanese Tosas 22 As of 2018 there were 3 514 Pit bull terriers 3 Japanese Tosas 13 Dogo Argentinos and 0 Fila Brazilieros 23 What is prohibited edit The act makes it illegal for anyone to own breed breed from sell advertise even as a gift give away or allow a dog of any of the listed breeds to stray 2 Those who previously owned individuals of the breed before the act came into force could apply for Certificates of Exemption for a limited period of time after the act came into effect for each of the breeds prohibited 24 Reception and responses editThe Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals and the British Veterinary Association are both against the breed specific legislation provisions of the Act Section 1 claiming that there is no scientific evidence that all individuals of a breed are dangerous 25 26 However data from the Metropolitan Police shows that in incidents involving dangerously out of control dogs banned breeds account for about 20 of offences Defra says there are a large number of serious cases from a very small population of dogs in circulation and that is striking evidence that there is an issue with this particular type of dog 27 while a Member of Parliament said Despite the fact that dogs on the exempt list must be muzzled in public that breed still accounts for almost 20 of all reported attacks We know also that pit bulls have been involved in seven of the 31 fatal attacks that have occurred since 2005 That is highly disproportionate for one type of dog that is banned and it underlines the need to be cautious about change in this area 28 The RSPCA have been criticised for their opposition to breed specific legislation and their own pet insurance excludes certain breeds from coverage 29 30 The act only covers dog attacks causing physical injury to a human not physical injury or death to other animals and does not cover mental injury to a human witnessing such an attack PTSD for example Efforts have been made to get the law changed 31 In some cases injuries to humans have been ignored or not taken seriously by authorities because they were caused during a dog on dog attack 32 A 2018 proposal by PETA to have the Staffordshire Bull Terrier and American Bulldog added to the list of banned dogs spawned a petition in support of the Staffordshires which garnered 160 000 signatures The proposal was debated by Parliament and rejected George Eustice declared The Government have no plans at all to add Staffordshire bull terriers or any other type of dog to the list of prohibited dogs 28 The act has been described as a piece of rushed legislation which was an overreaction to a transient public mood 33 34 35 36 The Act is sometimes cited as an unfavourable example of such legislation 37 38 and in January 2007 the act was included in public responses to a BBC Radio 4 poll of unpopular UK legislation 39 A 1992 case involving a dog named Dempsey a pit bull terrier which three years later had its destruction order reversed 40 41 brought interest because of the lack of discretion that the Act gave magistrates regarding Section 1 dogs Discretion was granted to magistrates with the 1997 amendment to the Act 18 In the case of R Sandhu v Isleworth Crown Court 2012 the claimant Sandhu was in prison and sought to nominate a temporary keeper to have his dog The judicial review held that a person does have the right to nominate a person to temporarily keep the dog This decision has more recently been more regulated to only allow for temporary keepership in certain circumstances 42 See also editFatal dog attacks in the United Kingdom Breed specific legislation Dog attack Dogs Act Dog licence Dog bite Dog bite prevention Status dogNotes edit All dogs in the UK were mandated to be microchipped and registered in one of the authorised commercial databases by 2016 17 18 19 References edit Statutory Instrument 1991 No 1742 section 3 The Dangerous Dogs Act 1991 Commencement and Appointed Day Order 1991 a b c Dangerous Dogs Act 1991 www legislation gov uk Dangerous Dogs Hansard 23 May 1991 api parliament uk 23 May 1991 a b Clare Sean 22 May 2012 Dangerous dog laws A history BBC News Barkham Patrick Murphy Simon 18 January 2012 Bark but no bite Dangerous Dogs Act in spotlight as attacks rise The Guardian Retrieved 26 May 2018 Crookes Del 13 April 2016 A short history of the dangerous dog and why certain breeds are banned BBC Newsbeat BBC News Retrieved 19 May 2018 The Dangerous Dogs Act 1991 what is it Blue Cross Dangerous Dogs Amendment Act 1997 www legislation gov uk The Dangerous Dogs Northern Ireland Order 1991 www legislation gov uk a b c d Dangerous dogs law Guidance for enforcers PB13225 GOV UK Defra 2009 Dangerous Dog Offences The Crown Prosecution Service cps gov uk Crown Prosecution Service Controlling your dog in public GOV UK Types of dogs prohibited in Great Britain Guidance on the recognition of prohibited dogs in Great Britain PDF Defra 2003 Archived from the original PDF on 9 March 2007 Retrieved 7 February 2013 via Internet Archive Wayback Machine The Dangerous Dogs Designated Types Order 1991 No 1743 www legislation gov uk a b Clarke Jennifer 11 September 2023 What is an American XL bully and why are they being banned BBC News Retrieved 9 March 2024 American bully XLs Attack victim named as Ian Price after PM vows to ban the dogs BBC News 15 September 2023 Retrieved 22 February 2024 Dog microchipping law brings fines risk BBC News 6 April 2016 a b c Bennett Oliver 11 August 2016 Dangerous Dogs Briefing Paper number 4348 House of Commons Library via researchbriefings parliament uk a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help All dogs in England to get free microchips GOV UK The Dangerous Dogs Exemption Schemes England and Wales Order 2015 www legislation gov uk 2015 Dangerous Dogs consultation 9th March 2010 PDF Defra Archived from the original PDF on 2 February 2011 Retrieved 10 June 2020 via The National Archives Numbers of dogs on the Index of Exempted Dogs GOV UK 27 March 2015 Written evidence by Defra to House of Commons EFRA Committee for Controlling dangerous dogs Ninth Report of Session 2017 19 May 2018 Withdrawn Apply for a Certificate of Exemption to keep an XL Bully dog GOV UK 1 February 2024 Retrieved 22 April 2024 Breed Specific Legislation A Dog s Dinner PDF rspca org uk RSPCA 2016 BVA policy Dangerous dogs bva co uk Controlling dangerous dogs Environment Food and Rural Affairs Committee House of Commons publications parliament uk 17 October 2018 a b Dangerous Dogs Act Staffordshire Bull Terriers Hansard hansard parliament uk 16 July 2018 Whipple Tom 22 February 2024 RSPCA s own insurance refuses cover for fighting dogs it defends ISSN 0140 0460 Retrieved 22 February 2024 Why is the RSPCA defending the American Bully dog The Spectator 28 August 2023 Retrieved 22 February 2024 Justice for dog owner after fatal attack Basingstoke Gazette 24 March 2018 Graham Hannah 22 July 2019 I needed surgery after dog attack but police didn t want to know ChronicleLive Schmidt William E 29 May 1991 London Journal Bad Dogs and Englishmen What s to Be Done The New York Times Is the Dangerous Dogs Act dangerously out of control www bcu ac uk Retrieved 16 May 2019 Dog control laws and pit bulls BBC News 11 September 2007 Retrieved 30 April 2010 The Lords is the more democratic house The Daily Telegraph London 13 April 2004 Retrieved 30 April 2010 dead link fabians org uk Archived from the original on 12 January 2007 Retrieved 19 May 2018 Hollingshead Iain 5 November 2005 Whatever happened to dangerous dogs The Guardian Retrieved 19 May 2018 Hunting ban tops unpopular poll BBC News 1 January 2007 Retrieved 30 April 2010 LEADING ARTICLE Love Dempsey hate pit bulls The Independent 8 September 1995 Retrieved 26 June 2019 BBC News UK Death row dogs news bbc co uk 20 November 1998 Retrieved 26 June 2019 R on the application of Sandhu v Isleworth Crown Court LexisWeb lexisweb co uk Retrieved 19 May 2018 Bibliography edit The Turbulent Years Hardcover 13 Sep 1993 by Kenneth Baker pge 433 36 ISBN 978 0571170777External links editDDA Watch Organisation offering free advice and support to owners affected by the Dangerous Dogs Act Campaigning for workable dog laws BBC Article on a dog attack July 2005 BBC Article on a dog attack January 2007 BBC Article How do you fend off a dangerous dog Deed Not Breed UK Campaign fighting the addition of any new breed to the DDA Independent Article On Dog Attack June 2010 UK Legislation edit Text of the Dangerous Dogs Act 1991 as in force today including any amendments within the United Kingdom from legislation gov uk Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dangerous Dogs Act 1991 amp oldid 1220196580, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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