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Death row dog's life spared by high court

Murphy had been ordered destroyed after neighborhood scrap

DOUG AND LORELE DITTOE, MURPHY, CHLOE
Doug and Lorele Dittoe sit with their dogs Feb. 18 in Lincoln, Neb., after they received word their dog Murphy, left, had been spared the death sentence by the Nebraska Supreme Court. Also pictured is their other dog, Chloe, right.
Bill Wolf / AP
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updated 9:47 a.m. ET March 2, 2005

LINCOLN, Neb. - The state Supreme Court granted clemency Friday to a dog sentenced to death for fighting with a neighbor’s pet.

The high court ruled unanimously that Murphy, an Alaskan malamute-shepherd mix belonging to Doug and Lorele Dittoe, should not be killed for causing “relatively minor injury” to the other dog after slipping out of the couple’s fenced-in yard in 2001.

Murphy had been deemed dangerous by the county sheriff, and a judge ordered her destroyed.

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“We conclude that the order for the destruction of the dog was not reasonable,” wrote high court Judge John Wright. “The county court ... abused its discretion.” He noted that the other dog’s owner waited two days to have the dog seen by a veterinarian, and the bill was only $34.06.

The Dittoes adopted Murphy in 1994 from a friend who found her malnourished and lying in a ditch. After she fought with neighborhood dogs several times, the couple took her to a trainer and put up a six-foot fence. But she got out again when a gate was accidentally left open.

At a hearing before the high court last fall, Assistant Attorney General Kim Klein said Murphy’s attacks on other dogs were “deliberate and vicious.” But the Dittoes’ lawyer, Mark Fahleson, said authorities trying to kill the dog were demonstrating “a bloodthirsty vengeance once thought reserved for only the most cold-blooded of human killers.”

Now, the Dittoes are planning a party for Murphy.

“She might just get a steak,” Lorele Dittoe said Friday.

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