No living creature deserves to be on the receiving end of unprovoked violence. But that’s what happened to a 100-pound (approx. 181-kilogram) English Mastiff named Jackson who found himself in the wrong place at the wrong time, even though that “wrong place” was his very own backyard. Jackson was shot at 60 times with a pellet gun, and the attacker was, quite literally, a little too close to home.
Jackson, who was less than 12 months old at the time, was acting normally before Hayden noticed a strange pattern of wounds scattered across his body. She first thought the marks were bug bites but upon closer inspection realized that they looked much more sinister. Howard took Jackson to the vet.
Jackson had a painful puncture wound under his eyelid, one in his ear, one on his knee, and one covering his underbelly. “They came out there and he handed me this little cup,“ Howard recalled, ”and showed me all these little BBs; I just didn’t know what to say or what to do.”
Eventually, overcome with emotion, Howard had to leave the room for the remainder of Jackson’s procedure.
After shaving Jackson’s back for a closer look, the vet discovered that the poor dog’s skin had been punctured by 20 BBs and seven pellets. But Howard learned from a Seymour police officer that it was likely at least twice as many shots were fired.
“Twenty some pulled out of him,“ Howard regaled, ”twenty some that were probably still in him, and then twenty some that probably hit him and bounced off. So he said there were probably over sixty some that actually were shot at him.”
Authorities searched Howard’s backyard for clues and came across several BBs lodged in a tree on the dog owner’s property. Using deductive calculations, they traced the likely direction of fire to the house next door to Howard’s. Her neighbor Tim Woodward became an immediate suspect, and after obtaining a search warrant, police investigated the property.
The authorities discovered drug paraphernalia inside Woodward’s home, a BB gun, and pellets that visually matched those pulled out of Jackson’s body during his vet visit. Woodward was arrested on drug charges and under suspicion of the attack on Jackson. Additionally, police sent the pellets for laboratory testing in order to match them to Jackson’s injuries.
“Under the Law, criminal charges are merely accusations and the defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty,” the department explained, adding, “The investigation into the incident continues, and additional charges are likely.”
But strong, stoic Jackson, despite his ordeal, returned home with Howard and began the patient work of making a full recovery. “He’s good,” Howard shared. “He’s well, he’s home taking medicine and everything.”