In this episode of Keep it Humane: The Podcast, Daniel Ettinger and Ashley Bishop unpack a controversial and costly case out of Los Angeles that has many in the animal welfare field asking hard questions.
A Los Angeles County jury recently awarded $5.4 million to a woman who was severely injured by a dog while picking it up from a city animal shelter for transport to a rescue group. The dog — a Belgian Malinois named Maximus — reportedly had a documented history of biting multiple people, including incidents that sent a teenager and a shelter employee to the hospital. The transporter alleged she was never warned about the dog’s dangerous history before the attack.
Daniel and Ashley break down what happened, what the jury decided, and why the City of Los Angeles was found 62.5% liable, with additional responsibility assigned to the rescue organization and the transporter.
But beyond the headlines, this episode explores the deeper issues the case raises for animal shelters and the professionals who work in them every day:
What are the legal and ethical obligations when a dog has a serious bite history?
How should shelters communicate risk to adopters, transporters, and rescue partners?
When does advocacy for saving animals collide with public safety and staff safety?
And what lessons should animal control agencies and shelter leaders take from multimillion-dollar verdicts like this one?
Drawing on their experience in animal control and shelter operations, Daniel and Ashley discuss how cases like this shape policy, liability, and the public perception of animal shelters — and why transparency and professional judgment are more important than ever in modern animal welfare.
If you work in animal control, sheltering, rescue, or law enforcement, this is a conversation you won’t want to miss.