Remembrance Video Released on the First Anniversary of his Death
From the start of the murmuration to the end, the footage depicts the path of the birds at Lady Bird Lake on their final flight at dusk in the fall of 2021. Like these birds, Richard now lives in the sky.
Prescott, AZ - Richard Buffalin, who began commenting on the DogsBite Blog in 2019, passed away on January 7, 2022 in Prescott, Arizona. We did not learn about his death until late March of that year. During the last five years of his life, Richard had walked over 12,500 pedestrian miles, about 50 miles per week. In his time of walking residential streets in Prescott, he experienced several "ambush charge attacks" by aggressive dogs. He believed that dangerous canines had more rights than pedestrians. DogsBite.org eventually became his home page, and he became a vibrant voice commenting on our blog.
It was not until he began walking seven miles a day that he became aware of dangerous canines bolting off-property and their cavalier owners -- both often excused by local authorities. "For more than five decades, I have engineered my life to evade two things: the hostility of the surface of this earth, and dangerous people," Richard wrote in 2019. "Only when I started walking seven miles a day, every day, did both of these things come crashing down upon my head in the form of people who let their dogs ambush attack pedestrians."
A memorial service was held for Richard on his birthday, March 21, 2022, according to his obituary notice. "In memory of Richard 'Richie' Buffalin," states the notice. "He will forever be in our hearts. He is remembered for his scientific knowledge, his humor, and his love for music. He is responsible for saving thousands of lives during his time here with us. He had 27 years of sobriety at the time of his passing. We love you and miss you Richie."
In late March, after not hearing from him in three months, we ran a search on Facebook and found the notice. That is when we first became aware of his death, and became more aware of his life outside of the context of dangerous dogs. In 2019, Richard stated in a comment: "I operate a church property that is being used for multiple daily meetings, and I interact with over a hundred people every day…" No doubt referring to some of the lives he saved during his lifetime.
Richard had corresponded with our nonprofit over the last few years, chiefly when he found a typo on the site, when a link was broken and when he became aware of a troll in comments. During 2021, we started communicating by phone, regarding separate legal matters that both he and our nonprofit were facing. It is that fall when the founder began filming the murmuration that occurred just before dusk at Lady Bird Lake each night. Our remembrance video of Richard ties four of these filming episodes together. His sister kindly provided the personal photographs of him.
It has taken our nonprofit a long time to finalize our remembrance video and this post because we miss Richard so much -- his voice is so clearly no longer present on this website. Comments are not the same without his barbed humor either. Once, after a mother was passed out on medications when her dog attacked her baby, he asked: "What kind of medications? Well, we can rule out anti-narcissism medications." Or his blunt, critical thinking ones, such as after voters repealed Denver's pit bull ban, "Human beings are the only species that forces another dangerous species on itself," he wrote.
Richard could always see through the chronic blame games that play out after attacks, obscuring the underlying problem, as well. After an 8-day old baby was killed by a relatively new family pit bull, Richard identified the factor that ties together many of the attacks documented on this website. “It is not a matter of lack of correct information, or lack of knowledge, or lack of learning, or lack of thinking, or lack of training, or improper raising," he wrote. "It is a matter of risk-taking behavior." He did not assign blame, he simply identified what the behavior was.
It wasn't until we wrote about Sebewaing Police Chief Steven Repkie in late July of 2022 that we even mentioned his death. Repkie had issued a "community advisement" about a neighborhood "living of fear" of a vicious pit bull named "Lucifer" that had attacked a child in the face, but police did not have the legal grounds to seize the dog. Richard would have appreciated Repkie's sentiment, who stated in the advisement: "I will NOT allow my community to be held hostage by a dog. People should NOT be afraid to walk through their neighborhoods."
Richard will be remembered most by our nonprofit for his love of humanity, his love of God, his wit and intellect and his deep genuine caring for people. He will be remembered for always stating the obvious, "An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure," and for stating the inconvenient truth, "The only good thing about dangerous breed canines is that they result in medical innovation." Richard will always be remembered for being a generous donor and loyal supporter of this nonprofit, who also encouraged other people to donate. And for every future murmuration we see, we will always be reminded of Richard, who now lives in the sky.
We selected some of his comments to share. Our prayers go out to his family members and friends as they struggle with his loss. Especially today, on the first anniversary of his death.
Recent Comments
"The police said that it was not a random attack? That is so nice of them to let us know that. If it was not a random attack, then what kind of attack was it? It was a non-random attack. Better than a scheduled attack, or a planned attack, or a training attack, or love attack or an erroneous attack. It was an artificial selection attack, is my best take on this. Just did what it was simply primarily bred to do. Thank Goodness that it was not a random attack. Such a comforting thought." - R. Buffalin, 09/26/2021
-----
"The horror of America’s most hushed-up public health crisis is in the living room." - R. Buffalin, 01/01/2022
-----
"They did not raise it to kill. They did not train it to kill their own selves. Therefore, it is not how they are raised. It is what they were bred for … Until dangerous breed canines are declared by law to be dangerous animals, it will be legal to force them on other people, their own children and their own selves." - R. Buffalin, 12/17/2021
-----
"The dog’s enclosure was not child resistant. The child’s flesh was not dog resistant. What can possibly happen in a few seconds?" - R. Buffalin, 11/26/2021
-----
"After 12,500 pedestrian miles in Prescott in five years, and after three dogs sicced themselves on me in ambush charge attacks in that time frame, I marvel at pedestrians who are on the public street completely, totally vulnerable. I am just amazed at such a sight." - R. Buffalin, 06/14/2021
-----
"The backyard did not also have to be full of fast food wrappers, cigarette butts, empty alcoholic beverage containers and spent cartridge shell casings. The two family pet dangerous breed canines were more than sufficient to effect the expected outcome." - R. Buffalin, 06/10/2021
-----
"It’s comforting knowing that the veto survived an attempt to overturn. I am sure that the Dangerous Animal Industry will outspend victims on its advertising campaign in the months leading up to the November ballot initiative. The DAI generates megabucks that they will spend on campaign advertising, while the victims do not generate money; instead, they spend their money picking up and repairing the pieces of their shattered lives." - R. Buffalin, 02/26/2020
-----
"It is not a matter of lack of correct information, or lack of knowledge, or lack of learning, or lack of thinking, or lack of training, or improper raising. It is a matter of risk-taking behavior, because ‘We love our dangerous breed canine, and we love our newborn child, so therefor our dangerous breed canine must love us and our dangerous breed canine must love our newborn child.’" - R. Buffalin, 11/10/2021
Related articles:
07/30/22: Sebewaing Police Chief Takes Pit Bull 'Lucifer' into Custody; Issues Rare and Inspiring Community Advisement
What a wonderful memory of Richard Buffalin! Thank you for the peaceful video of the bird murmuration. One of my first posted comments when a friend gave me my first smartphone was of the splendid synchrony of a bird murmuration. “Brought to you by….Almighty God!” was my YT comment. I found out quickly that notifications of Likes were countered with removal of each Like. I spotted some accumulated Likes occasionally but then they would be removed. Then one day a year later, the same URL no longer had my comment.
So glad that we can comment here about the tragedy that has befallen our nation of decreased safe public space. I am now much more leery about being anywhere in public alone. Pitbulls arrive faster than a speeding bullet, catching innocent citizens unaware. Richard is now safe from the terror of a pitbull attack. May he indeed rest in peace.
Rest In Peace. We are the poorer for his loss.
Jeeze, I meant to say, we are poorer for the loss of him. Sorry.
I miss his honest, tongue-in-cheek comments. He was a remarkable man. Thank you for honoring him.
Thank you for letting us know Richard a little better, Colleen. He was the first to comment on many posts. I appreciate seeing some of his words again and understanding the context.
The birds look like pigeons. This is near where the hundreds of thousands of bats stream out every night, too.
And the beat marches on: Erick Lopez, 20, is the owner of a dangerous dog in Baton Rouge that killed a 7-year-old girl Friday evening.
I meant to say hundreds OR thousands.
I copied Richard’s most profound posting into my notes….the one about “America’s most hushed-up public health crisis.” As I did so, I realized he wrote that only six days before he passed.
Thank you, Colleen, for this beautiful tribute. I, too, loved reading Richard’s insightful and, at times, profound comments. He was able to say so much with very few words.
There are THREE houses in a row across the street from me whose dogs run loose. One has been cited by Animal Control but continues to have his dogs out front because there are no real consequences until someone is hurt. The next one has snarling door dashers. The third has dogs that dig out but can’t figure out how to buy and pour some quikcrete or get a few cinder blocks. It should be an automatic $200 fine for dogs loose, no excuses, and double with each successive violation.
Beautiful memorial Colleen.
Richard was one-of-a-kind, direct, forthright and honest to a fault he could cut through a problem without dilly-dallying around the politics, feefees and other diversions to get right to the heart of it.
We miss him. I hope his family sees this to know how much his contribution is missed, every day.
Rest in peace, Richard. Thank you for standing up for humans against dangerous dogs.
Thank you for this remembrance of Richard. I also miss Richard’s witty and insightful comments. I’m so sorry for his passing and that he was plagued by dangerous dogs while doing something healthy and beneficial that he loved – walking. What an amazing accomplishment – all those miles! For me too, murmurations will always remind me of Richard now. I just saw a starling murmuration yesterday as I was driving.
It may be strange to feel loss for someone you never met but if that is the case, call me strange.
I felt like I got to know Richard after reading his intelligent comments over the years.
I am comforted by the thought that while he has left this world at some point I will go to where he is.
Godspeed, Richard you were one of the good ones and will be missed.
I’ve been gone from checking this site for awhile. But I do remember Richard and his sudden absence. Kind of had a feeling he was gone for good.
Kind of had a feeling about reading and occasionally trading posts with Richard that he’d of been a welcomed coffee clubber. Or tea too.
Seem to recall him steering me toward a local story in his neck of the woods about a most appalling family of breeders/hoarders.
Takes all types I guess.
Oh well. He’s left his mark and did it well.