HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016624.jpg
Extracted Text (OCR)
Code Enforcement Board Meeting Minutes 07/17/08
dogs are not in the area. He said he was bitten by Duke a couple of years ago. He
was talking with Dr. Lynn and the dog just reached out and bit him, tearing his
pants and breaking the skin. He said he has been friends with Dr. Lynn and
Margrit for many years but it was just unsafe for anybody and any animals in the
area.
Bobby Goodnough said he was jogging in the area and the dog lunged at him,
causing him to have to dive through a 12 foot hedge to get away from it. He said
he just thought it was a matter of time before the dog got a person or a child. Sgt.
Krauel asked if Mr. Goodnough had reported the incident to the police department
or had a time frame of occurrence. Mr. Goodnough said he had not made a police
report but it occurred about 2 years ago.
Laura Klein, 130 Seaspray Ave., said she had lived here for 12 years, having
moved from Washington, D.C. for a sense of security. She said she was now in
the process of installing surveillance cameras. She said she could no longer walk
her dog without constantly looking around, worrying if Duke had once again
escaped from the open gates. She said it is a privilege to own a dog and dog
ownership and responsibility should go hand in hand. She said Dr. Lynn was
issued a citation in August of 2002 for locking his dog in a car with the windows
rolled up. She said she mentioned this to prove his irresponsibility. She said his
voluminous file from Animal Care and Control would attest to this. She said no
one was safe while Duke is in Palm Beach.
James Merola was present on behalf of Dr. Lynn and said he was present on a
revised Notice of Code Violation and Hearing dated July 15, 2008. He said he
was not denying there were incidents with Duke. Palm Beach County had the dog
taken into custody and the hearing was held June 5, 2008. At that hearing, it was
agreed upon by the County and Dr. Lynn that the dog would be classified as
dangerous. The dog was classified as dangerous which required certain
restrictions on the dog which Dr. Lynn complied with and the dog was returned to
him. In the event Duke has another incident, pursuant to state and county law, but
some reason not Town law, the dog would be taken into custody and euthanized.
Mr. Merola said Dr. Lynn feels very badly about the situation and agreed with the
County to do what they required. Mr. Merola said Dr. Lynn then received a
letter, dated June 16, 2008 from the police department, mentioning the order of
the County and stating for the first time that the Town was declaring the dog
dangerous and giving him ten (10) days to appeal, which he did not. On June 20,
2008, 4 days after the dog was declared dangerous by the Town, the police
department sent a second letter, citing 10-45 (i), advising that since the dog
already had two incidents, they wanted it removed or euthanized. The dog had not
done anything since being declared dangerous. This letter did not mention an
appeal, but he sent a letter anyway, stating they did not agree with that. He said
the dog was declared dangerous on June 16", requirements were imposed and they
complied with those, including the filing of a $1000 bond and they did not agree
the dog should now be removed. There was a Town Council hearing on August
8" and the Council said they needed to have the dog removed or euthanized. Mr.
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HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016624
Extracted Information
Document Details
| Filename | HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016624.jpg |
| File Size | 0.0 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 3,396 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-04T16:28:43.266545 |