From Yahoo:
“‘She was just doing her job’:
Homeless vet loses service dog during arrest for panhandling”
(Pvt. First Class Joshua Rohrer
(right) and two of his fellow soldiers pose for a photo in a 642nd Military
Intelligence Battalion photo album, owned by Rohrer.)
Joshua Graham Rohrer, a homeless
veteran in North Carolina, says he was wrongfully arrested and mistreated by
Gastonia police officers, who also tased his service dog Sunshine, sparking
support from those who witnessed the incident. The Gastonia Police Department
told Military Times that although Rohrer will go to court for the charges
against him, the department is now looking into the incident to “determine if
the conduct of our officers was appropriate.” Rohrer was standing on a median
near a Gastonia shopping center with Sunshine on Oct. 13 when a 911 caller
contacted police. While Rohrer wasn’t bothering anybody, having Sunshine with
him was his way of using sympathy to get money from people, the caller said,
according to a copy of the audio call. Even though Rohrer wasn’t armed or
harassing passersby, according to witnesses at the scene, the encounter would
ultimately end with his arrest and Sunshine’s death.
Rohrer deployed to Kuwait and
Iraq from October 2004 to November 2005 with the Kentucky Army National Guard.
He suffers from service-connected post-traumatic stress disorder, and his
2-year-old Belgian Malinois Sunshine was his Veterans Affairs-prescribed
treatment, according to an official letter from the VA provided to Military
Times by Rohrer. He said he wasn’t doing anything illegal on Oct. 13. “I was
just standing there, waving at people, when this lady waved me over and offered
me money,” Rohrer told Military Times. “I was accused of falsely using my dog
to get money from people and asking people for money but that’s not true.” Rohrer
said that as soon as he took the money offered to him, the police drove up,
“aggressively, with the lights on and everything.”
The officer asked for Rohrer’s ID
card and told him that she’d be giving him a ticket for panhandling. The act,
which falls under the term solicitation in North Carolina state law, is
considered illegal if an individual verbally panhandles at night, or at any
time of day when within 20 feet of a financial institution, outdoor dining area
or transit stop. Rohrer argued that he wasn’t doing anything wrong, and the
officer on scene called for back-up. Police asked Rohrer to produce a valid
state ID, which Rohrer said he didn’t have, stating that he only had a VA card.
Justyn Huffman and Nydia Conley witnessed Rohrer’s arrest, telling local TV
station WCNC that they saw officers surround Rohrer during the Oct. 13
encounter. “The officer asked him for his ID,” Huffman said. “He wasn’t moving
fast enough so he tried to reach into his pocket to get his ID. They slammed
him up against the car and they put cuffs on him.”
(Sunshine was Rohrer's 2-year-old Belgian Malinois service dog, 2021.)
Sunshine, responding to his
distress, jumped up on the hood trying to help him, Rohrer said. “She was just
doing her job, licking me and trying to calm me down,” Rohrer said. “The cops
starting yelling at her and me, telling me to get her to settle down but they
wouldn’t allow me to physically get control of her.” Rohrer said Sunshine
nipped at one of the officer’s ankles as she was hopping down from the hood of
the car, prompting the officer to tase her. “We’re out here screaming, ‘Don’t
shoot the dog! Don’t shoot the dog!’” Huffman said. Huffman said Sunshine ran
to a nearby store with one of the taser prongs dangling off her body while
police took Rohrer to the back of the car and “slammed him on the pavement.” “It
was really traumatizing,” Conley said. “I’ve never seen anything like that.”
According to the police report,
Rohrer was arrested on charges of solicitation and resisting arrest. As he was
taken away by police for booking, Rohrer said he begged the officers to let
Sunshine come with him. He cited a North Carolina statute that affords people
with disabilities the right to keep their service dogs with them, especially in
cases where the individual’s health is at risk. “They laughed at me,” he said.
“I begged them to bring her to me or to give her to an officer to take with
them but they wouldn’t listen, they didn’t care.” Rohrer never saw Sunshine
again. While his friend and fellow veteran Dave Dowell was able to get his
hands on the service dog that night, she later slipped her leash and ran away
while Rohrer was still in jail,. He was released the next day after posting
bail and facing more insensitive treatment by the police, saying they laughed
at him and continually told him how horrible of a person he was, Rohrer
claimed. He immediately began searching for his dog. After nearly two days,
Sunshine was found in nearby Shelby, where Dowell lives.
She had been hit by a car and
killed. “I begged them not to separate us,” Rohrer said. “They didn’t care
about me or about her or about the fact that I needed her.” Rohrer’s grief over
losing Sunshine almost killed him, Dowell said to Military Times. According to
Dowell, Rohrer took off into traffic after learning Sunshine was gone, and
tried throwing himself in front of any car that he could. “He absolutely lost
his mind,” Dowell said. Losing Sunshine and facing the allegedly rough and
careless treatment of the police left Rohrer feeling hopeless enough that he
“just wanted to die,” he said. After Dowell and Shelby police were able to
subdue Rohrer, he had to be treated at the VA Medical Center in Asheville for
injuries suffered during the PTSD episode caused by losing Sunshine.
Bended Knee Outdoors, a
non-profit corporation in Granite Falls, North Carolina, has been providing
Rohrer with housing since his Oct. 16. release from the medical center, Dowell
said. Rohrer said he wanted to share his story to draw attention to how he was
treated. “I’m just blown away that this could happen to a veteran and service
dog team, or anybody really, homeless or not,” he said. “I just lost my ability
to believe in and function in society,” Rohrer said. “I cannot function without
a service dog and they stole that from me. I don’t know how I’m going to
recover from this.” Dowell and Rohrer said that his case was recently accepted
by the Veterans Justice Outreach program, which works “to identify
justice-involved Veterans and contact them through outreach, in order to
facilitate access to VA services at the earliest possible point.” The program
doesn’t provide legal counsel, but it does help point veterans in the right
direction, according to their website. “He has an army of people behind him
now,” Dowell said, “but he doesn’t have his battle buddy anymore.” According to
the Facebook group, “Support Joshua Rohrer and Sunshine Rae,” a protest will
take place in front of the Gastonia Police Department Oct. 29.
^ This extremely sad case
highlights the continued ignorance of Police Officers and Police Departments
towards the issues that Veterans and Veterans with Service Dogs face. The Gastonia
PD were in the wrong and because of their actions a Service Dog is dead and a
Veteran is without the support and care they deserve. This needs to be a
wake-up call for the Gastonia PD and for every Police Department across the
United States on how to deal with Veterans, Disabled Veterans, Homeless
Veterans and Service Dogs. This should NEVER happen ever again. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/she-just-doing-her-job-200827668.html
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