Pit Bulls, by Gary Wilkes: A 21st Century Depiction of the American Pit Bull Terrier

Pit Bulls by Gary Wilkes
Photo courtesy of the Wilkes family.

Behaviorist Gary Wilkes | Download PDF
Mechanicsburg, PA - Back in January, Gary Wilkes wrote to DogsBite.org asking for permission to use one of the most powerful images posted to the website in a forthcoming article about pit bulls. The photograph shows Wendy Blevins and her daughter in an emergency room just after a pit bull ripped off a third of her daughter's scalp. DogsBite.org reviewed Wilkes' website and bio information, then coordinated with Wendy to send him a high-resolution version of the image.

On May 1, we received an email from Wilkes saying that Off Lead & Animal Behavior, a quarterly magazine for behaviorists and pet care professionals, had published his article. Upon viewing the cover, we knew it was not going to be an ordinary article about pit bulls.1 The contents were so finely woven together with the genetic and behavioral traits of pit bulls and pieces of the Wilkes family history -- his grandfather was a dog fighter -- that we were left breathless by completion.

The article clearly explains why the pit bull problem is unconditionally linked to dogfighting.

It has been over 20 years since a U.S. journalist has presented the pit bull issue in such a compelling and candid way as Wilkes has here. The last was EM Swift who created the 1987 Sports Illustrated cover article, "The Pit Bull: Friend and Killer." The 2010 Wilkes piece depicts the first accurate U.S. version of pit bulls in the 21st century. Much of its power lies in his explanation of the genetic underpinnings of the breed, which cannot be disputed or "trained out" of the breed.

Wilkes, an acclaimed behaviorist, trainer and author with over 30 years experience with dogs, begins the piece by describing the unprovoked pit bull attack on little Charlotte Blevins. This attack sent shock waves through the heartland of America and 3-months later, moved the City of Omaha to adopt a breed-specific law. The Wilkes article is 6-pages and covers many areas, including breed-specific legislation. We've quoted page one below and a small portion from each section.

Pit Bulls by Gary Wilkes

They were the model of bonded, loving, friendly, affectionate family dogs. On the seventh day, they fought like demons.

"In December of 2008, Tina Agerson was sentenced to nine months in prison. Her jail time was the result of a simple misunderstanding -- two Omaha, Nebraska mothers thought they could pull their infants down the street in a red wagon. Duke, Tina's American Pit Bull Terrier (APBT) didn't think so. He decided to do something about it. More specifically, Duke grabbed 15-month-old Charlotte Blevins by the head and jerked her out of the wagon. He then proceeded to rip off about 1/3 of her scalp.
It is commonly claimed that Pit Bulls only attack people if they aren't properly trained. They are often portrayed as sweet, loving dogs that can be trusted with children. This isn't just the opinion of Pit Bull owners. The United Kennel Club breed standard says so. "APBTs make excellent family companions and have always been noted for their love of children."
Additionally, according to lovers of the breed, Pit Bulls have a very slow fuse and you really have to go out of your way to provoke one. It is also suggested that they are no more violent than other breeds such as Rottweilers -- a breed that also has a reputation for doing great damage to people. Therefore, Pit Bulls should not be regulated based on their breed type. You'll have to excuse me for spitting up my milk, but all of those arguments are hogwash.
If you automatically think I am strongly opposed to Pit Bulls, you'd be wrong. I have trained many of them. They loved me. I loved them. My comments merely reflect that I'm adamantly opposed to hogwash2 and infants having their scalps ripped off.
Gary Wilkes pit bull photoTo understand my opinion of the breed, it helps to know that I have a special attachment to them -- it's in my blood. My grandfather was a railroad station-master in Mississippi in the 1920's. On the side, he bred and fought Pit Bulls all across the south. His job allowed him to travel extensively from Georgia to Louisiana and most points in between, fighting his dogs for side-money.
Family albums include fighting dogs in almost every picture. Six days a week, they played with kids, went on vacations and were an integral part of family life. They also put up with the typical abuse that children heap on dogs and were praised for their ability to be poked, prodded and fallen upon without any reaction. They were the model of bonded, loving, friendly, affectionate family dogs. On the seventh day, they fought like demons.3
The prominence of dog fighting in that time and place isn't hard to understand. Many poor southern men, like my grandfather, made extra money gambling on virtually anything -- horse races, cards, cock fights and dog fighting. It had been a part of their culture since English, Irish and Scotts immigrants migrated south in the 18th century. Genteel Southern society disapproved of these sports and anyone connected with them. My Grandfather wasn't genteel. My grandmother was. Her high-class sensibilities caused her to initially oppose his dog fighting. As might be expected, the lovable, affectionate nature of the dogs led my grandmother to a reluctant acceptance and even a great love of their second source of income. That came to a halt in the late 1920's.
One night, an old drunk tried to cut across the Wilkes' backyard in Petal, Mississippi. The drunk tripped over a chain -- a simple mistake -- and lost a leg to Caesar, my grandfather's favorite pit dog. The old man was a lovable drunk who never harmed anyone. Losing a leg in 1928 Mississippi was no small thing. The community was outraged. A week later, the dogs were gone, for good.
No ordinance banned them from the community -- public outrage and my Grandmother's common sense were the active agents of change. What if one of her children tripped over the same chain, some dark night? Apparently, 90 years later, America is no better able to solve this problem than small-town Mississippi. We seem to have the same public outrage at incidents like Charlotte Blevins' attack, but may be lacking my grandmother's common sense."

Sections Overview

  • A History of Violence
    "The reality is that from the beginning of the breed, several hundred years ago, it was steeped in terrible violence -- much to the pleasure of its creators. The ancient Roman blood-sports of bull baiting, bear baiting and dog fighting were still popular in 19th Century England. Growing cultural revulsion over the violence and brutality associated with animal fighting..."
  • Born to Fight
    "To develop a fighting dog required selective breeding for specific physical and behavioral traits. The dogs had to be physically strong, insensitive to pain, able to instantly attack without threats or preparation and to be indiscriminate about the target. Since the handlers were normally in the pit with the dogs, Pit Bulls had to allow a human to grab them from..."
  • It's All About How You Train Them
    "The knee-jerk response to serious Pit Bull attacks invariably focuses, not on their roots, but on their training. Either the dog was improperly trained, trained to be aggressive or not trained at all. This is meant to persuade the listener that the devil is in each dog's private history and not their blood. This leads to the assertion that you can't blame their genes..."
  • Breed Type and Behavior: What Are the Odds?
    "If we ignore the expert opinions of kennel clubs and breeders to the contrary, we can still test the theory that Pit Bulls have to be trained to be aggressive. All we have to do is look at other behaviorally selected breeds. Consider the English Pointer. An adult Pointer is supposed to run, lickety-split, back and forth across a field until it smells the scent of a bird..."
  • Who Trains These Dogs?
    "The next problem with the "training" defense is that 99% of pet owners can't teach their dogs to "come" reliably or virtually any other behavior. Conversely, the same number can't teach their dogs inhibitions of any kind. The common Pit Bull owner can't stop his dog from jumping on guests or chewing shoes, let alone "don't rip the scalp off the baby."
  • Blame the Victim
    "Another common defense of the breed is that somehow the victims provoked a perfectly friendly animal to attack. The claim sounds plausible. Any dog is capable of biting if the circumstances are right. Many dogs are capable of aggression if threatened or attacked. A cursory search on the internet shows the following provocations for recent Pit Bull attacks…"
  • What to Do About It
    "If you think I've laid out a biased case against Pit Bulls, you're right. Besides being the descendant of a pit fighter, I spent eight years working in shelters and animal control agencies. For three years of that time I routinely caught, impounded and attempted to control Pit Bulls as a field officer. I once investigated an attack on a three-year-old by a family's pit bull."
  • A Touch of Balance
    "To be fair, many other dogs seriously attack people. An Akita can kill you on a good day. The same is true for German Shepherds, Rottweilers, Cane Corsos, Presa Canarios and a few other breeds. If the goal of a community is to protect people from dog attacks, merely outlawing Pit Bulls isn't going to fix the problem. When the English attempted to outlaw animal..."
  • When it Works
    "As a result of Charlotte Blevins attack, a number of cities have created breed-specific legislation. Many follow the lead of Council Bluffs, Iowa, the neighboring city to Omaha. In 2005, Council Bluffs, enacted a ban on Pit Bulls. In the year prior to the ban, 2004, there were 29 attacks by Pit Bulls. In 2005, the number dropped to 12, in 2006, six attacks..."
  • What Will Be, Will Be
    "No other breed in America is currently bred for fighting, in such great numbers as the American Pit Bull Terrier. No other breed has instinctive behaviors that are so consistently catastrophic when they occur, regardless of how rarely they happen. The reality is that every English pointer has the ability to point a bird. Every Cattle Dog has the ability to bite the heel..."

DogsBite.org extends enormous gratitude to Gary Wilkes for creating this hallmark piece. It is rare to see the multi-layered issue of the pit bull problem compressed into a single narrative and penned by an award-winning writer. Upon reading the Wilkes piece, one will find that the pit bull problem is only complex due to listening to pro-pit bull groups instead of listening to one's own common sense: Pit bulls are dangerous and the public deserves protection from them.

Gary Wilkes is an internationally acclaimed behaviorist, trainer, author, columnist and lecturer. He has more than 30 years experience with dogs, including eight years of shelter work. Gary Wilkes is responsible for the innovation and development of clicker training as a practical methodology for dogs and with his former colleague, Karen Pryor, introduced this method to the world in 1992. Read full bio.

1Pro-pit bull groups, such as Bad Rap and Animal Farm Foundation memorialize and "glorify" the pit bull's history of dogfighting by depicting old photographs of a bygone era, websites and online forums do as well. The Wilkes family photos, however, remind us of the implicit danger the breed poses and how one event forced a 1900s family to alter course. This is untrue of John Colby, a prized breeder of fighting dogs during the same era, who continued breeding his dogs after one killed his nephew.
2Hogwash refers to the many arguments and claims pro-pit bull groups make to distort and sugar coat the breed's true genetic underpinnings. Primarily they claim that genetics -- selective breeding to attack without reservation -- is irrelevant in the pit bull argument and that only environmental issues, such as, "It's all in how you raise 'em!" matter.
3It must be noted that of the 10 fatal pit bull maulings so far in 2010, 90% (9) were committed by pet pit bulls upon family members (only 2 instances involved the victimized family member not living within the dog's household). We are near certain that reviewing data from 2005 onward, will show similar results. What may have been true in the early 1900s, pit bulls rarely killing family members, particularly small children, is not true today. This trend has been in place since the "leakage period," (1975-1979) when pit bulls leaked from the tight-knit dogfighting community and began being bred indiscriminately by gangs, drug operatives and pit bull fanciers.

Related articles:
05/12/10: 1909 Fatality: John P. Colby's Fighting Pit Bull Kills Nephew
05/20/09: The Charlotte Blevins Charitable Benefit - June 25, 2009
12/18/08: Comment: Pit Bull Owners Consistently Blame Victims
12/18/08: 275 Days in the Slammer for Pit Bull Owner Tina Agerson
06/28/08: Charlotte's Parents Recount Devastating Pit Bull Attack
06/28/08: Coverage of the Omaha Pit Bull Attack - DogsBite.org

2010 Dog Bite Fatality: Boyfriend's Dogs Suspected in Death of 5-Year Old

Kyle Holland - killed by welf-dog hybrid
Kyle Holland, 5-years old, was fatally attacked by one or more dogs in Lincoln Park.

Autopsy Report Released
UPDATE 07/15/10: An autopsy report released Wednesday confirmed that Kyle Holland died of multiple crush wounds due to dog bites. An earlier article by FOX 2 reported that neighbors had complained of the dogs "time and time again" to Lincoln Park Animal Control. Neighbor Mike Lockhart said, "They told us that they thought it was a hybrid wolf and it wasn't supposed to be in the city." Despite this knowledge, the owner was allowed to keep the prohibited animal.

"According to official reports found by FOX 2, the dogs were involved in a bloody fight with another dog in November. Plus, at least one of them was found roaming the neighborhood. Animal Control officers told the owner that wolf hybrids were not allowed in the state. He said he was leaving and heading to West Virginia, another state that won't allow them in. But despite that, the owner paid his fines and Animal Control gave the dog back. Neighbors say that should never have happened." (Alexis Wiley, MyFoxDetroit.com)

07/13/10: Victim: Kyle Holland, 5-Years Old archived
Lincoln Park, MI - In a story that emerged Monday evening, officials continue to investigate the death of a 5-year old Lincoln Park boy. The boy was found upstairs by his mother at about 9:30 am Monday morning. An autopsy report by the Wayne County Medical Examiner's Office had been expected to be available Tuesday afternoon. However, Police Chief Thomas Karnes said that due to the extent of the boy’s injuries, the report might not be available for seven to 10 days.

Officials are treating the incident like a homicide investigation. The child had been dead for several hours prior to police arriving. Authorities seized two dogs from the house, an alleged German shepherd-husky mix1 and a black lab-mix, neither of which appear bloody in the photos.2 Both dogs belong to a live-in boyfriend who is not Kyle's father. He is currently being held for possession of drugs. The boy's mother was released from police custody after being questioned.

Neighbors said they could hear the mother screaming after she found her son. One said the boyfriend fled in his vehicle after the screaming erupted. He later returned. Another neighbor described one dog he saw as "pretty good sized" and "brown and white." He added, "From what I understand, there was another dog that was a full blooded wolf." (It is difficult to mistake a black dog from a "brown and white" dog, but the person may have been referring to the husky-mix).3

The number of questions this case raises about potential criminal behavior is uncharted territory for DogsBite.org. Fortunately, the case lies in the hands of Lincoln Park officials and the Wayne County Medical Examiner's Office. In 2007, The American Journal of Forensic Medicine and Pathology published a fatal dog bite injury study, Pitbull Mauling Deaths in Detroit, by Cheryl Loewe, Fransico Diaz, and John Bechinski, of the Wayne County Medical Examiner's Office.

1Just as pit bull owners and some humane groups intentionally mislabel a pit bull after a serious or fatal dog attack, owners of wolf hybrids do as well. While the former mislabels the breed to "protect" its reputation, the latter may be forced to -- wolf hybrids are prohibited by most municipalities.
2A dog cannot bite a child to death without blood left on its mouth and fur. As in other fatal dog attack cases, the offending dog may have been washed down afterward.
3In addition to neighbors having confusion about the dogs, they also believed that more than one child lived at the home. Police confirmed that Kyle was the only one.Nate Stemen, "LINCOLN PARK: Autopsy scheduled for 5-year-old killed by apparent dog attack (with videos)," The News-Herald, July 13, 2010 (www.news-herald.com) URL:http://www.thenewsherald.com/articles/2010/07/13/news/doc4c3cadd047354589179648.txt?viewmode=fullstory. Accessed: 2014-04-29. (Archived by WebCite® at https://www.webcitation.org/6PCUwUCbP)
Nate Stemen, "LINCOLN PARK: Death of boy mauled by dog ruled homicide
July 14, 2010 (www.news-herald.com) URL:http://www.thenewsherald.com/articles/2010/07/14/none/doc4c3e0a5ad85bf270253001.txt?viewmode=fullstory. Accessed: 2014-04-29. (Archived by WebCite® at https://www.webcitation.org/6PCVKwY6w)

Related articles:

04/23/18: Fatal Wolf-Dog Hybrid Attacks - The Archival Record - DogsBite.org

06/30/11: Justice for Lincoln Park Fatal Dog Attack Victim Finally Emerges
09/25/10: Activist Seeks Justice for Kyle Holland After Fatal Dog Mauling

2010 Dog Bite Fatality: Lorain County Man Killed by 'Rescued' Dangerous Breeds

Michael Winters killed by rescued dogs
The property where Michael Winters lived with his father.

Breed Info Released
UPDATE 06/16/10: A report issued later in the day presented even more disturbing information. The nine dogs involved in the attack included: 5 bullmastiffs,1 1 rottweiler and 3 pit bull-mixes. It is important to point out that Kywa (who said "my dogs" in the 911 call) was not "rescuing stray dogs." He was only rescuing dog breeds known to be dangerous. As was put to us in a recent email, "The victim could have had a machine-gun and still have been in desperate trouble."

When deputies arrived, they shot and killed one bullmastiff and the rottweiler. Kywa had managed to coral the remaining seven dogs into the garage. The dog warden then tranquilized the dogs through a window and a vet later euthanized them at the scene.2 The tenth dog was not put down. This dog was a yellow Labrador that was inside the family's home during the horrific attack. This dog appears to be the only true family dog and likewise was kept inside the residence.

A subsequent news article by The Morning Journal posted parts of the 911 call:

911 audio
Warning: Disturbing content.

06/16/10: Photos of Scene Released
In a disturbing update, the Chronicle-Telegram has published quotations from the 911 call that Kywa made upon finding the victim's body. The group also published photos of the crime scene and deputies posed to shoot aggressive dogs. County Dog Warden Jack Szlempa Sr. said his office was called out to the home about a year and a half ago after several dogs attacked another dog. No report was taken on the incident because it occurred on private property.

06/16/10: Family Rescued Stray Dogs archived

The Plain Dealer reports that Michael Winters and his father Michael Kywa rescued stray dogs and cared for them at their home on Ohio State Route 511. The two tried to find homes for the dogs in their care. They had about a dozen dogs of various sizes and breeds including a 200-pound mastiff. Kywa found his son lying in the driveway heavily bleeding with hundreds of bite wounds covering his body. His clothes had been ripped off by the attacking dogs as well.

Authorities believe multiple dogs were involved in the attack, but have declined to provide "breed information" thus far. Though clearly a fatal pack attack scenario, it is important to point out that such scenarios usually involve a pack of roaming dogs that attack strangers, not on-property dogs who attack and kill their keeper. Authorities eventually caught all of the dogs. Police shot and killed two of the dogs because they were aggressive toward officers.

06/15/10: Victim Dies Violent Death
Henrietta Township, OH - In a developing story, 30-year old Michael Winters was killed earlier today by a group of dogs his family kept in a fenced-in yard. Investigators said around 11:30 am, the father left the house and then returned at about 12:15 pm. At some point during that period, his son came home and was attacked by the 8-10 dogs in the driveway. His father Michael Kywa called 911. Winters was pronounced dead at the scene by emergency personnel.

1Five bullmastiffs easily equates to 500 lbs of dogs and likely more.
2Only in the most horrific fatal attacks are the dogs "euthanized at the scene" by animal control or veterinarians.

Related articles:
01/18/10: 2010 Fatality: 56-Year Old Man Killed by Daughter's Six Pit Bulls
08/18/09: 2009 Fatality: Senior Couple Killed by Pack of Dogs in Oglethorpe County

Photo: Cleveland.com

Oceanside Letter Carrier Dies After 'Non Bite' Injury from Rottweiler

letter carrier dies after rottweiler ambush
Letter carrier dies after being ambushed by a rottweiler in Oceanside, California.

Fatal Brain Injury
Oceanside, CA - A 33-year old letter carrier died earlier this month after a rottweiler lunged at him along his Oceanside route, causing him to fall and suffer a fatal head injury. Letter carrier Hao Yun "Eddie" Lin encountered the dog while delivering mail on May 25 in the 500 block of Stanley Street, according to postal inspector Slivia Torres. Oceanside police were alerted to the incident at about 4:13 pm that afternoon and found Lin lying in the street with a severe head injury.

According to the victim's wife, Teri Lin, doctors induced a coma to try to control severe brain swelling. But he did not recover. Eddie Lin died from the injuries June 3. A coroner's report shows the cause of death as "blunt head trauma." Lin leaves behind his wife and three children ---- a 10-year-old girl, 4-year-old boy and a 5-month old girl. San Diego Humane Society, who has the animal control contract for Oceanside, said the dog was euthanized at the owner's request.

On Friday, Teri Lin told North County Times she's frustrated that officials still aren't sure exactly what led to her husband's death. She said she knows the dog somehow pushed or jumped on her husband, but she doesn't know how it got out, where it came from, or how her husband reacted -- whether he tried to use Mace, fight or flee. She heard he had a tear on the back of his uniform, and she also heard that the same rottweiler attacked a different letter carrier four years ago.

The postal inspector said that investigators were still trying to "piece together" exactly what happened. Torres said they have talked to witnesses, but have not finished their work. North County Times could not determine if the Oceanside Police Department was conducting its own investigation; telephone messages left with supervisors on Friday were not returned. Teri said her husband was devoted to her family. A funeral is scheduled Thursday at Rose Hill Cemetery.

Noted:
Incidents involving non-dog bite injury1 that led to fatal brain injury in the past year include: letter carrier Hao Yun "Eddie" Lin, Animal Control Officer Theresa Foss, knocked to the ground by a pit bull and Beverly Head, knocked to the ground after being entangled in a leash as a mountain biker riding alongside with his two huskies passed her on a trail. It's interesting that even non bite-related deaths by dogs involve the top killing dog breeds: Pit bulls, rottweilers and huskies.2

1Deaths involving non-dog bite injury are not included in DogsBite.org statistical fatality data.
2From January 1, 2005 to March 8, 2010, DogsBite.org recorded 158 U.S. fatal dog attacks. Pit bulls were responsible for 56% (88) of these deaths. Rottweilers, the second leading killer, accounted for 15% (23) and huskies took third position with 6% (9).

Related articles:
10/11/09: "Non Bite" Pit Bull Injury Leads to Death of Plainfield AC Officer
09/09/09: Elderly Woman Suffers Broken Hip and Crushed Wrist After Pit Bull Attack