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> Plus spitting is an offence under section 5 of the public act.
> P.s. Trevor Cooper is a solicitor who has decided to specialise in Dangerous Dog Law etc - however the incident you had was a criminal incident and you were the victim something that he wont deal with as he doesn't do crime and solicitors that do would be representing the defence not the victim
> A dog doesn't have to bite or even hurt someone to be classed as dangerously out of control, the person just has to have reasonable fear it will.
> If that's the case Tinar why does it say this on the government site and the act online that I can find?
> Sorry might just be me not getting it but I don't see why what the government and dda watch say relating to the changes to section 3 wouldn't apply
> so is it right or not that a dog doesn't have to injure someone to be classed as out of control under section 3?
> If the council receive a complaint of a dog behaving dangerously out of control in EITHER a public place or a private place, permitted or otherwise, but it does have to be proven to be "dangerously out of control". - However it is considered also an "aggravated" breach of Section 2 if there was injury caused
> The first possible offence under this section is where you can only be charged with this offence if your dog was dangerous out of control in a public place and injured a person or put them in reasonable fear of being injured. This is the most serious one.
> But with the Anti-social Behaviour, Crime and Policing Act 2014 saying section 3 subsection 1 of the dda the part 'a public place' is changed to 'any place in England or Wales (whether or not a public place)' and subsection 3 is is repealed.
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