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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.
"Dangerous Dogs" – a legal term referring to dogs that are "dangerously out of control" A dog shall be regarded as dangerously out of control on any occasion on which there are grounds for reasonable apprehension that it will injure any person, whether or not it actually does so, but references to a dog injuring a person or there being ...
The laws then state it will be illegal to own an XL bully from 1 February, 2024. ... The breed will become the fifth type of dog prohibited under the Dangerous Dogs Act in the UK, alongside the ...
Ashley Warren, 40, has denied being in charge of a dog which caused injury resulting in death while dangerously out of control in a private place. Esther Martin, who was fatally mauled by two XL ...
The NPCC said it was “aware of court cases not being scheduled until mid-2026” for some dangerously out of control dog cases. ... Tesla's law firm drafts Delaware bill that could salvage Musk ...
Animal welfare laws are enforced by local authorities. A 2024 report by the Animal Law Foundation found there to be one local authority inspector for every 878 farms in England, Scotland and Wales and that in 2022 and 2023, 2.5% of the more than 300,000 UK farms were inspected at least once. [6]
Police are searching for the “out of control” dog after it ... of allowing a dog to be dangerously out of control on Saturday. ... police by emailing 3000@lancashire.police.uk or calling 101 ...
Paterson, William (ed). "Dogs Act". The Practical Statutes of the Session 1871. Horace Cox. Wellington Street, Strand, London. 1871. Pages 142 to 148. "The Law and the Lawyers" (1885 to 1886) The Law Times 21, 128, 203 "The Dog Regulations and the Dog Owners" (1886) 21 The Law Journal 527 (18 September). See also pages 39, 525, 531 and 586.