The pit bull is strong. Its jaw grip is almost impossible to break
If a dog has "vicious propensities," the owner is assumed to share in this projected violence, both legally and generally in public perception. And once deemed "contraband," both property and people are at risk.
This was evident in the much-publicized 2007 indictment of Atlanta Falcons quarterback Michael Vick for running a dogfighting business called Bad Newz Kennels in Virginia. Even the Humane Society of the United States and People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals - two of the nation's leading animal welfare advocacy groups - argued that the 47 pit bulls recovered from the facility should be killed because they posed a threat to people and other animals.
If not for the intervention of Best Friends Animal Society, Vick's dogs would have been euthanized. As the film "Champions" recounts, a court-appointed special master determined each dog's fate. Ultimately, nearly all of the dogs were successfully placed in sanctuaries or adoptive homes.
Pit bulls still suffer more than any other dogs from the fact that they are a type of dog, not a distinct breed. Once recognized by the American Kennel Club as an American Staffordshire terrier, popularly known as an Amstaff, and registered with the United Kennel Club and the American Dog Breeders Association as an American pit bull terrier, now any dog characterized as a "pit bull type" can be considered an outlaw in many communities.
For example, in its 2012 Tracey v. Solesky ruling, the Maryland Court of Appeals modified the state's common law in cases involving dog injuries. Any dog containing pit bull genes was "inherently dangerous" as a matter of law.
This subjected owners and landlords to what the courts call "strict liability." As the court declared: "When an attack involves pit bulls, it is no longer necessary to prove that the particular pit bull or pit bulls are dangerous."
Dissenting from the ruling, Judge Clayton Greene recognized the absurdity of the majority opinion's "unworkable rule": "How much ‘pit bull,'" he asked, "must there be in a dog to bring it within the strict liability edict?"
It's equally unanswerable how to tell when a dog is a pit bull mix. From the shape of its head? Its stance? The way it looks at you?
Conundrums like these call into question statistics that show pit bulls to be more dangerous than other breeds. These figures vary a great deal depending on their sources.