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This Week In the News

Agitated dog bites
suspect in face, ending police pursuit
Associated Press Jun.
14, 2006 07:25 AM
CEDAR CITY, Utah - A police pursuit ended when the
suspect's dog - not happy about being bounced around in the car -
bit its owner on the face.
Sheriff's officers said they
approached Nicholas T. Galanis of Salt Lake City to talk to him
about some stolen property, but he got in his car and fled with his
dog.
The chase Monday went through a winding, bumpy dirt road
about 5 miles northwest of Modena, said sheriff's detective Jody
Edwards.
"Deputies could see the dog in the passenger seat
getting slammed into the window," he said.
The dog, which is
part pit bull, became so agitated "he bit his owner in the face,"
removing part of Galanis' nose, Edwards said. "And this is what
ended the chase."
Galanis was taken to Valley View Medical
Center before being booked into Iron County Jail. His dog was taken
to a local animal shelter.
Galanis was held for investigation
of supplying false information to police, receiving-possession of
stolen property and theft.

Woman catches piranha at N.D. reservoir
Associated Press Jun.
27, 2006 08:25 AM
JAMESTOWN, N.D. - State
wildlife officials have a fish story with some teeth to it. Game
officials responded to a call over the weekend of a woman catching
what she thought was a piranha at the Casselton
Reservoir.
Game warden supervisor Dick Knapp said the catch
was confirmed by biologists. The state Game and Fish Department
believes the four-inch-long red-bellied piranha probably came from
someone's aquarium.
"It had to have been somebody's pet,"
said Greg Power, the state fisheries chief.
The small fish
with big, sharp teeth is native to the Amazon River in South
America.
Introducing a foreign species to North Dakota
waterways is illegal, but officials said they have no idea who put
the piranha in the reservoir. Knapp said the warm-water fish would
not have survived the winter, anyway.
Power said the piranha
likely was too small to have done any damage to other fish in the
reservoir, which has trout, panfish and other species.
He
said he has heard of piranha being caught in other states, but that
this might be a first for North Dakota.
"We have had goldfish
that were put in ... but never a piranha," Power said.
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