The terrible murder of a police blood dog, which helped in nine people in the course of his career as a sniffer dog career, indicated the Italians and triggered a criminal investigation to find his murderers.
Bruno, a 7-year-old Blood dogwas found dead in his scales in Southern Taranto on Friday morning. His trainer Arcangelo Caressa said he fed nails.
In a social media contribution on Tuesday, Caressa asked the police to “find the murderers before I do it”.
Premier Giorgia Meloni, who was photographed with Bruno after one of his heroic rescues. said on social media that his battles were “hideous, cowardly, unacceptable”.
Legislator Michael Vittoria BrambillaAccording to a new law, a long -standing animal rights activist submitted a criminal complaint to prosecutors, in which she contributed to stiffening the penalties for everyone who kills or abused an animal.
The editor of the IL Giornale Daily, Vittorio Feltri, expressed outrage and said that Bruno had done more civic in Italy than most citizens.
Caressa said that he announced prosecutors that he suspected that he was the ultimate destination of Brunos Mberdern and that Bruno was killed “to reach me”. He quoted his efforts to save dogs that were used for illegal dogs and said he had already received threats for his work. He said he had given the police the names of two people he suspected.
He told the local media that he received murder threats in the weeks before Bruno’s death, the BBC reported.
“It was not a random gesture. They want me to step aside. But I will never give in. This is a hideous attack that is executed for money and revenge,” he told the newspaper Corriere della Sera.
In a homage to Bruno Posted on FacebookCaressa wrote: “Maybe you wag your tail under the stars, or maybe you are watching us in silence, with eyes that said everything without the need to words.”
“You weren’t just a dog,” he added. “You were my loyal shadow, my strength in dark moments, the good heartbeat of the world.”
The new Animal Welfare Act, which is known as a Brambilla law, came into force on July 1 and demanded up to four years in prison and a fine of 60,000 euros (around $ 70,000), whereby the stiffest punishments are used when the abuse is committed or spread online.
Feltri said that the punishment should be even greater than four years and said animals “especially if they behave heroically” like Bruno.
Caressa said that Bruno lived five people during his career in rescues and the corpses of four people who died but could be returned to their loved ones.