Owners fear show dog poisoned at prestigious Crufts dog show

Police in both Belgium and Britain are aware of the incident, but authorities said they haven't been asked to investigate.

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Oakdene.Be/AP
Irish Red Setter Thendara Satisfaction, known as Jagger stands in this undated image, made available from Oakdene.Be on Monday March 9. The co-owners of the Irish setter feared poisoned at Britain's leading dog show are devastated by his death — but insisted Monday they don't believe that one of the other competitors is responsible.

The co-owners of an Irish setter feared poisoned at Britain's leading dog show are devastated by his death — but insisted Monday they don't believe that one of the other competitors is responsible.

Three-year-old Thendara Satisfaction, known as Jagger, died Friday, shortly after returning to Belgium following an appearance at the world-famous Crufts dog show in the central English city of Birmingham last week. A veterinarian performed a post-mortem examination and found pieces of meat laced with poison in his stomach.

The vet "found cubes of meat, some sort of beef, like steak, and they had been sewn up with poison inside," one of the owners, Jeremy Bott, told the BBC. "She thinks there were possibly two or three different types of poison," one of which was a slug killer.

Police in both Belgium and Britain are aware of the incident, but authorities said they haven't been asked to investigate. The Kennel Club, which organizes Crufts, is awaiting a toxicology report on the dog's death — a report that could take days.

Bott said he doesn't know what happened, but he believes the poisoner is someone with a grudge against dogs in general or the Crufts show in particular.

The owners have ruled out any suggestions that another contestant might have poisoned the dog.

"We can't and we won't think that this was the act of another exhibitor. If we thought this, we couldn't go on, and the last 30 years would be a complete waste," Dee Milligan Bott said on her Facebook page. "So I ask all of you to unite in finding the perpetrator who did this."

She told reporters in a brief statement outside her home that Jagger's death shouldn't overshadow "the positive sides ofCrufts."

"I certainly don't want our dog shows — the places we work so hard to get to — to become a ground of finger-pointing and suspicion," she said.

She suggested in an article in the publication, "Dog World" that it was possible that the target of the attacker might have been another dog she owns, Thendara Pot Noodle. The second dog won best of breed at Crufts, while Jagger finished second in a preliminary competition.

The Kennel Club, meanwhile, put out a second statement Monday amid reports another dog fell ill after the competition.

"The facts surrounding Jagger's sad death are still being established and we must stress that any other unsubstantiated rumors about dogs being poisoned are just that," it said. "There are any number of reasons why a dog may display symptoms such as sickness and should a dog fall sick there are vets at the show who will examine the dog in question and file a report."

The club insisted, however, that no vets raised concerns about poisoning and "there have been no official complaints from any owners at Crufts 2015."

Canine competitions have long been hit by claims of unscrupulous behavior — including the owners of rivals slipping dogs drugs. In 1996, a breeder was banned for giving Valium to a Chihuahua at another British show.

Crufts is Britain's most famous dog show, attracting more than 21,000 competitors from 43 countries this year. It was founded in 1891, about 14 years after New York's Westminster dog show.

The stakes can be high. Though the prizes for such shows are small — the Best in Show title carries a purse of just 100 pounds ($150) — puppies from winners can fetch thousands.

The Botts, who run a dog breeding operation in England, were part owners of Jagger. The dog lived as a family pet with their co-owners in Belgium, where he visited care homes so elderly residents could pat him on the head.

The co-owner in Belgium, Alexandra Lauwers, wouldn't answer questions about the dog's death when she arrived at her home in Lauw, Belgium on Monday. She referred all questions to a statement by the dog's co-owner in Britain.

"He was a typical Irish Setter, totally trustworthy and so loved," Milligan Bott said. "We are devastated."

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