'They tore my muscles as if I was their prey': Dog attack survivor wants owners held responsible - Action News
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'They tore my muscles as if I was their prey': Dog attack survivor wants owners held responsible

A woman who was attacked by three dogs in the Eastern Townships in March says owners of aggressive dogs should be held criminally responsible when their animals inflict harm.

12 surgeries later, Quebec woman still recovering from brutal attack suffered while out for a run

A woman holds up her arm which is covered in scars
Dominique Alain lost her tricep in a March encounter with three dogs in the Eastern Townships. (Denis Gervais/Radio-Canada)

Warning: Some of the events described below are graphic and disturbing.


While out for a jog this spring in theEastern Townships, an active, 55-year-old Quebec woman had the life she knew torn apart by three dogs.

She wasattacked on the evening of March 29while jogging near her homeinPotton, Que., about 100 kilometres southeast of Montreal.

Twelve surgeries later, Dominique Alain is missing a triceps, her legs are still wrapped in bandages and she is going to physical therapythree times a week.

Her life will never be thesame, and it's with increasing frustration that she sees a lack of action from lawmakers andno criminal charges against the dogs' owner.

Alain said that if no charges are laid, she feels she is living in the "wrong society," where "the animal is more important than the person."

"The owner of an irresponsible dog needs to become legally responsible for their dog," Alain said in an interview withRadio-Canada.

Quebec's Director of Criminal and Penal Prosecutions said it received the file mid-May and is analyzing it. It would not comment further.

The dogs were euthanized after the SPA de l'Estrie, an animal protection organization,found them to be aggressive and presented a "very serious, and perhaps deadly, risk to the population."

'They just kept going, going'

Running has always been a stress reliever for Alain.

A woman stands on her porch looking away from the camera
Alain's legs and arm are deeply scarred after the attack. (Denis Gervais/Radio-Canada)

While jogging near the Owl's Head ski resort, she noticed the dogs barkingaggressively inside a nearby house. She remembered thinking, "OK, that's a good thing they're inside."

When she passed the house on her way back, the dogs were loose.

"[The dog]comes right at me.Then I see a second and the third one coming."

The dogs did not slow down. They ran straight ather, barking, snarling and baring their teeth.

She remembered thinking, "What's going on? Stop! Stop! And then they just kept going, going," Alain said. "They worked together and then tore my clothes and then started just going into myarms and ripping the skin."

'This is it: I'm going to die'

She managed to fight back as best she could.She grabbed one of the dogs by the collar, trying to get him off of her, but she said they were unstoppable.

"And then finally, finally, I thought I was going to die," Alain said. "This is it: I'm going to die."

When the owner of the dog came out, she yelled at him to call 911.She remembers one of the first responders in the ambulance telling her, "Don't give up,don't let me go. Stay with me."

'This is it. I'm going to die': Eastern Townships woman describes mauling

5 years ago
Duration 1:38
Dominique Alain wants the owner of dogs that left her with serious injuries held criminally responsible for the attack.

In the hospital, Alain was in an induced coma for two days, and then spent weeks getting medical procedures and rehabilitatingwith her partner, Leo Joy, by her side.

Her injuries were extensive. She had to be resuscitated in hospitaland lost muscle, tendonsand tissue in both of her arms and legs.

Pointing to the space where the muscle on the back of her arm should be, she said, "This is gone.I lost muscle.Ilost ligament."

It's horrible, she said, and it should "never happen, should not happen. It has to stop."

Current laws don't go far enough, victim says

Earlier this year, the Quebec government introduced legislation aimed attightening the rules around dangerous dogs, giving municipalities a set of rules and the flexibility to adopt stricter ones if they see fit.

Under the new rules, dog owners would berequired to register their animals, ensure they're wearing a collar and on a leash when in public.

There would also be strict rules covering inspections and seizures, with penal provisions for those who disobey the law.

Alain said the rules need to go further.She wants dog owners to be obligated to take a safety courseand have insurance to cover medical costs if their animalsattack someone.

Jean-Franois Del Torchio, a spokesperson for Public Security Minister Genevive Guilbault, said in an email the government has consulted with stakeholders and couldmake additional changes before passing the legislation into law this fall.

Caroline Kilsdonk, the president of the Quebec Order of Veterinarians, said that dog owners "have to take responsibility and be accountable."

"This attack is proof that sometimes dogs are aggressive and are free repeatedly.And dogs should not be left to roam free," said Kilsdonk.

A dog sitting in a cage
This is one of three dogs seized by the SPCA in Potton, Que., after Alain was brutally attacked. (Marie-Hlne Rousseau/Radio-Canada)

Alain hasbeen in rehabilitation for three months, with plenty more to go.

"There'scost to that, not to mention physically what I have to go through for the rest of my life," she said.

She needed not only prosthetics and therapy, but alsospecial modificationsto her home.

"If your dog has attacked a human, children you as an owner, you're responsible with it," Alain said. "So you have to live with the consequence of negligence."

Based on an interview by Radio-Canada's Mlissa Fauteux, files from CBC's Daybreak and Elysha Enos