Nonprofit Captured 76% of Breed Identification Images in 2023
Photographs of six fatally attacking dogs in 2023 obtained from multiple sources.
Jump down to view all 2023 breed identification photographs or read our analysis first.
DogsBite.org - In 2013, we began the tradition of publishing breed identification photographs of fatally attacking dogs when available through news reports, animal control agencies, police departments, social media and public information requests. Of the 58 dog bite fatalities recorded in 2023, 64% (37) had some form of a breed identification photograph. Our nonprofit was responsible for capturing 76% of them. Pit bulls and their mixes represent 65% of the identification images collected in 2023.
Of the 37 cases with breed identification photographs, 27% (10) comprised images captured or republished by news media; 76% (28) comprised images located on social media pages of the dog's owner or family members; and 76% (28) comprised images that were the result of our research and otherwise may have gone unpublished. Police and animal control agencies released dog identification images after only 3 deaths, yet 71% of all deaths (41 of 58) involved dogs taken into quarantine.
(Percentages are higher than 100% due to a single death containing multiple dog images, each attributed to a different source, as well as images that fall into overlapping publishing categories.)
Identification Photographs (2013-2023)
From 2013 to 2023, images captured by our nonprofit have risen from 26% to 76%. Images captured by media have fallen from 79% to 27%.
Chart shows 11 years of breed identification photographs collected between 2013 and 2023.
2023 Unreleased Breed Data
Of the total recorded 58 dog bite fatalities in 2023, 7 cases had no breed information (12%). A FOIA by our nonprofit lowered that number to 6. Our research of Facebook pages belonging to the dog owners -- to locate the suspected dogs -- lowered that number to only 3 cases (5%) when breed information was fully unknown. In 2022, the landscape was far worse, when 33% of all recorded fatal dog maulings fully lacked breed information until we brought forth multiple time-consuming FOIAs.
In 2023, 31% of deaths involved 1 or more dogs shot at the scene, which often diminishes the ability to collect breed identification images.
Characteristics of the 7 cases in 2023 where authorities did not release breed data include: 100% of victims are adults ≥ 39 years old (when age known 6/6); 100% of victims are classified as marginalized (when known 6/6); 86% of attacks occurred in the Southern United States (6/7) and 71% involved a pack of 4 or more dogs (5/7). In the 4 cases where breed information was discovered, 75% involved pit bulls (3/4), half involved Belgian malinois' (2/2) and half involved mixed-breed dogs (2/2).1
Pack Attacks, Off Property Attacks Rise
Pack attacks and off-property attacks rose sharply in 2023. Pack attacks accounted for 29% of fatal dog bites in 2023, which is a 93% rise from the pre-Covid combined year average of 15% (2005 to 2019). Off-property attacks accounted for 43% of fatal dog attacks in 2023, which is a 65% rise from the pre-Covid years of 26%. Of the 21 deaths where breed images were not captured in 2023, most attacks, 57% (12), occurred off the owner's property and 76% (16) involved 1 or more pit bulls.
Despite the high number of off-property attacks, it was more common to obtain a breed identification photograph when the attack occurred on property. Of the 33 on property attacks, 73% (24) had an identification image versus 52% (13/25) for off-property attacks. When property data is known, the dog owner's Facebook page is more easily located. For off-property attacks -- unless police name the dogs' owner -- it's harder to obtain the information required to run searches on social media.2
Breed Misidentification Conflicts
Two breed identification conflicts arose in 2023. They began with the death of a baby in Waterloo, Iowa. The grandmother, who was babysitting and called 911, identified the dog as a "pit bull" to the 911 dispatcher. In a 2018 Facebook post, the baby's father hashtagged "Echo" as a pit bull. The dog has the distinct "rose ears" of a pit bull, identified in the 1977 American Pit Bull conformation standard. Nonetheless, Waterloo officials stated the dog was a 9-year old "neutered male boxer-hound mix."
"334 for an animal attack on an infant ... The animal control, PD ... received a report that a 9-month old child possibly killed by a pit bull. Our reporting party was also injured as well ... Scott Avenue ... 10-4, send a truck ... Respond 334 for an animal attack ... for a pit bull that's attacked a 9-month old child, possibly killed it. We do have animal control and PD in route as well. Our reporting party was also injured. I don't know the extent. It does sound like the pit bull might be in the backyard, in a fenced-in backyard." - Black Hawk County Fire and EMS Dispatch
The other identification conflict arose after a 6-year old boy was killed by a pair of "very large and heavy great dane-mastiff mixes" in Portland, Oregon. The boy was routinely dropped off at the woman's home, who owns the dogs, before school. That day, the boy followed her into the garage where the dogs were kept, and the dogs attacked him. The woman operates a business called "K9 Protection" and had images of two cane corso-mixes on her Facebook page, one from February 2023.
While not technically a conflict, because no breed data was released, the dog pack that killed Sau Nguyen, 79, is unusual. Multiple photographs of the dogs were published by media. Some speculated a Kangal was involved. A woman whose chihuahua had been killed by the dog pack described them as, "akita shepherd-mix and a pit bull-akita mix." Media did not even follow up with Nguyen's cause of death, which was "multiple sharp force and blunt force injuries." The manner of death was accident.
Summary
In 2023, 64% of dog bite fatalities had some form of a breed identification photograph, just above the 10-year average of 62% (2013 to 2022). Our nonprofit captured over three quarters of them, 76%, in 2023. Pit bulls and their mixes represent 65% of the identification images collected in 2023, below the 10-year average of 74%. Breed identification photographs captured by media declined to 27% in 2023. The only worse year, 2020, was the peak of Covid when images captured by news media fell to 25%.
At 64%, 2023 marks the first increase in capturing these images since the pandemic. However, in 2019, 84% of deaths had a breed identity photo.
Finally, of the total recorded 58 dog bite fatalities in 2023, 7 cases lacked all breed information (12%). Through our nonprofit's research and FOIAs, we lowered that number to only 3 cases, 5%. We were able to capture breed identification images for 4 of these deaths, where otherwise the breeds involved would have been unknown.3 This is a better result than last year, when 33% of all recorded fatal dog maulings lacked breed information until we brought forth multiple time-consuming FOIAs.
2023 Fatal Dog Attack Breed Identification Photographs
Sadie Davila - East Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Photos of fatally attacking pit bull (news media)
Kellan Boner - Fort Hall Reservation, Idaho
Dated photos of two rottweilers on dog owner’s Facebook page (social media & dogsbite.org)
Doris McBurse - Pitts, Georgia
Photos of two "blue" pit bulls on dog owner’s Facebook page (social media & dogsbite.org)
Stanley Hartt - Tucumcari, New Mexico
Photos of two of five fatally attacking dogs (police, news media, social media & dogsbite.org)
Duane Osadchuk - Warren, Texas
Photos on dog owners’ Facebook page prior to fatal attack (social media & dogsbite.org)
Bonnie Varnes - Toledo, Ohio
Photos of fatally attacking family pit bull, "Amenia" (social media & dogsbite.org)
Ramon Najera Jr. - San Antonio, Texas
Photos of two fatally attacking pit bulls, "King" and "Snow" (news & social media)
Joe Scott - Jefferson County, Alabama
Photos of five of six dogs from fatally attacking dog pack (sheriff’s office)
Kristen Potter - Perry County, Pennsylvania
Photos of two great dane puppies on dog owner’s Instagram page (social media & dogsbite.org)
Donald Gibson - Tulsa, Oklahoma
Photos of fatally attacking female pit bull, "Isabella" (news media)
Blake Bettis - Brunswick, Maryland
Photos of fatally attacking mastiff-pit bull mix, "Cash" (social media & dogsbite.org)
Daniel Bonacorsi - Detroit, Michigan
Photos of two fatally attacking pit bulls, "DeNiro" and "Sola" (social media & dogsbite.org)
Glennaroy Blackwelder - Tulsa, Oklahoma
Photos of two of three fatally attacking pit bulls, "Bergle" and "Boba" (dogsbite.org FOIA)
Navy Smith - Waterloo, Iowa
Photos of fatally attacking pit bull-mix, "Echo" (news media, social media & dogsbite.org)
Infant Jane Doe - Madison Charter Township, Michigan
Photos of pit bull-mix on grandparent’s Facebook page (social media & dogsbite.org)
Lewis Flores - Rockport, Texas
Photos of three of five suspected fatally attacking dogs (social media & dogsbite.org)
Anthony Bastardi - Johnston County, North Carolina
Photos of fatally attacking bull terrier and cane corso (news media & social media)
Daylan Guillen - North Port, Florida
Photos of suspected fatally attacking family pit bull, "Theo" (social media & dogsbite.org)
Adult Jane Doe - Suwannee County, Florida
Photos of one of four fatally attacking American bulldog-mixes (social media & dogsbite.org)
Joseph Keeton - Deschutes County, Oregon
Photos of one of three fatally attacking pit bull-mastiff mixes, "D.J" (social media & dogsbite.org)
Chanthy Philavong Maetu - Modesto, California
Photos of two fatally attacking cane corsos, belonging to Kareem Morrell (news media)
Billene Cameron - Kennewick, Washington
Photos of one of two fatally attacking pit bulls (social media & dogsbite.org)
Brenda Witt - Miller County, Arkansas
Photos of fatally attacking pit bull-mixes (social media & dogsbite.org)
Diane Knepper - Toledo, Ohio
Photos of fatally attacking family pit bull-Labrador mix (news media)
Donovan Brooks - Ringgold, Louisiana
Photos of two current pit bulls on the owners’ Facebook pages (social media & dogsbite.org)
Paul Striegl - San Antonio, Texas
Photos of fatally attacking pit bull, "Ghost" (social media & dogsbite.org)
Jessica Wauters - Tomball, Texas
Dated photos of two family rottweilers on victim’s Facebook page (social media & dogsbite.org)
Lovell Anderson - Detroit, Michigan
Photos of two pit bulls seized after the fatal attack (news media)
James McCool
Photos of the primary breeding lines on the kennel property (social media & dogsbite.org)
Colton Kline - Spokane, Washington
Photos of fatally attacking adopted pit bull-mix, "Spud" (social media, supplied & dogsbite.org)
Makai Williams
Photos of fatally attacking American XL bullies, "Bruno" and "Rock" (dogsbite.org FOIA)
Sau Nguyen - Houston, Texas
Photo of dog pack (4 of 7 dogs) that authorities seized after the attack (news media)
Leo Caddel - Chelsea, Alabama
Photos of female wolf-dog hybrid, "Kuna" on owner’s Facebook page (social media & dogsbite.org)
Loyalty Scott - Portland, Oregon
Photos of two mastiff-mixes on dog owner’s Facebook page (social media & dogsbite.org)
Beverly Hayden - Cass County, Indiana
Photos of fatally attacking male, family pit bull, "Oden" (social media & dogsbite.org)
Adult John Doe - Yuma County, Arizona
Photo of fatally attacking male pit bull (sheriff’s office)
Alexander Torres - Miami, Florida
Photos of male, brindle pit bull-mix on victim’s Facebook page (social media & dogsbite.org)
Post Publication Identification Photographs
Breed identification photographs discovered after the publication of this post on January 30, 2024. These photographs are not included in our overall analysis; they were unavailable at that time.
Child John Doe - Hahira, Georgia
Photos of fatally attacking American bulldog-mix, "Petey" (dogsbite.org FOIA)
How We Track Photograph Sources
We track the identification photograph's original source. There may be multiple images of a dog, thus multiple sources may be attributed to a single death. We also track where the image was published. For instance, after Stanley Hartt's death, media obtained images from the dog owner's social media pages and police lapel video. We obtained an image of the sire of one of the dogs on the owner's Facebook page. Thus, the images were sourced to news media, social media, police and DogsBite.org.
What is simpler to measure in our tracking and analysis is the rising number of breed identification photographs located on the dog owner's or family member's social media pages, from only 16% of all collected images in 2013 to 76% in 2023, a 375% rise. It is also easy to see the small number of images provided by law enforcement even though most dogs after a fatal attack are held in a quarantine facility. Police released identification images after 3 deaths this year, 8%, of cases with images.
Photograph Tracking Categories
- DogsBite.org published only; no news media republished the photograph
- U.S. news media supplied original photograph and/or republished photograph
- Social media website supplied breed identification photograph
- Law enforcement or animal control department supplied photograph
- Canines shot to death at the scene of a fatal dog attack
- Canines held in a quarantine facility after a fatal dog attack
2There were three cases in 2023 (Dezmond Trawick, Tamieka White, and Rita Vasquez) where property information was known, but dog ownership was not. This is because the victim was dog sitting at the victim's home. This is an off-property attack because the dog did not live at that home. The dog belonged to a person the police did not identify, therefore, social media accounts could not be located.
3The deaths of Duane Osadchuk, Glennaroy Blackwelder, Donovan Brooks, and James McCool.
Related articles:
01/20/23: 2022 Fatal Dog Attack Breed Identification Photographs - DogsBite.org
01/12/22: 2021 Fatal Dog Attack Breed Identification Photographs - DogsBite.org
01/12/21: 2020 Fatal Dog Attack Breed Identification Photographs - DogsBite.org
04/23/18: Fatal Wolf-Dog Hybrid Attacks - The Archival Record - DogsBite.org
08/31/15: Who Can Identify a Pit Bull? A Dog Owner of 'Ordinary Intelligence'...
Law enforcement departments across the United States should release consistent "baseline" information to the media and the public after each fatal dog mauling, including these items.
Extrapolating a straight line from the graph of deaths per year, yields 80 killings by dogs in the year 2028.
It’s just a simple line going up from 2016 to 2023 and then extending out past another 4 years. A disturbing trend that shows no reduction even with numerous laws and education. There are too many people with these dangerous animals around humans.
Have you been able to get the information for all the dog bite fatalities or do you have some that you never find information about? If you don’t get all the information what percentage of them are missing every year?
Great reporting, Colleen. Thank you for your incredible investigative research. We see these mutants going after the most vulnerable: children, the elderly and the disabled. Unfortunately, if nothing changes…nothing changes. The numbers don’t lie.
What we don’t see…no photos of dogs resembling poodles, chihuahua’s, golden retrievers, or many other dog breeds. Not surprising to anyone who follows this blog.