[nfbmi-talk] outragious assault on gude dog user

Larry D. Keeler lkeeler at comcast.net
Wed Sep 21 12:57:32 UTC 2011


That's when I wish we could let our dogs bite!
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "joe harcz Comcast" <joeharcz at comcast.net>
To: <nfbmi-talk at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Wednesday, September 21, 2011 8:43 AM
Subject: [nfbmi-talk] outragious assault on gude dog user


Social Security guard faces arrest in fracas over service dog  | ajc.com

By

David Ibata



The Atlanta Journal-Constitution



Melissa McMann, who is visually impaired, recalls minor incidents in which 
people challenged her about her service dog, but nothing like what happened 
last

week with a security guard at a Social Security Administration office in 
Winder.

Enlarge photo

A security guard at a Social Security office faces charges after he's 
accused of trying to forcibly remove Melissa McMann, who is visually 
impaired, from

the building because she had her service dog with her.

Manuel Bojorquez, Channel 2 Action News A security guard at a Social 
Security office faces charges after he's accused of trying to forcibly 
remove Melissa

McMann, who is visually impaired, from the building because she had her 
service dog with her.



 “Usually, once we educate people and explain the purpose of the dog, that’s 
all it takes to get people to understand why the dog is there and he’s not 
just

a regular, run-of-the-mill dog,” the Winder resident said of Hurbie, her 
5-year-old yellow Labrador.



“We have never run into an incident like this where it escalated so 
 quickly,” she said in a telephone interview with the AJC. “My arm is still 
bruised,

and I still have pain to my shoulder, but otherwise I’m doing OK.”



The guard, Leroy Huff, faces a charge of simple battery after he allegedly 
grabbed the 38-year-old McMann and tried to remove her from the office.



The Athens man told

Channel 2 Action News

on Tuesday that he was aware a warrant was pending for his arrest and would 
turn himself in. He said he was following orders and his training, but did 
not

want to comment further because of the continuing investigation.



Efforts were being made to reach a spokesman for Huff’s employer, Paragon 
Security Services. Paragon provides contract security to the Federal 
Protective

Service of the Department of Homeland Security.



Patti Patterson, regional spokeswoman for the Social Security 
Administration, told Channel 2 in an email, “Service animals are allowed in 
Social Security

field offices. We have apologized to Ms. McMann for the unfortunate incident 
that occurred with the contract security guard in our Winder field office.”



The matter has been referred to the Federal Protective Service “for 
appropriate action,” Patterson said.



The incident began Thursday afternoon when McMann and her husband, 
Christopher, went to the Social Security office at 37 S. Center St. to 
complete some

paperwork for their youngest daughter, who they adopted from Thailand.



According to a Winder Police Department report, as the couple was seated 
waiting to be called, Huff, an armed security guard, came up and told them 
dogs

were not allowed in the facility.



When the couple explained that the Labrador was a service dog and legally 
allowed to there, the officer demanded to see papers to prove it – even 
though

the dog had a guide harness and a sign attached to the harness stating it 
was “a working dog for the blind,” the police report said.



The McManns said they did not have such paperwork and continued to protest 
that the dog was a permitted animal. At this point, the police report says, 
Huff

“proceeded to grab (the woman) and attempted to forcefully remove her from 
the building.” The husband objected and called the police on his cell phone.



Huff told a Winder police officer that the woman had failed to obey him. He 
admitted she had not tried to resist him physically. When asked why he did 
not

call the police, “Huff informed me that he did not have to call the police. 
He told me he was a federal officer and was not required to involve the 
police,”

the officer wrote in his report.



The officer contacted Paragon, which referred him to the Federal Protective 
Service. An official there said Huff was not a federal officer and in this 
situation

should have called Winder police, his supervisor or the federal agency.



The McManns, meanwhile, went to their primary care physician and then to a 
hospital emergency room, where a doctor treated her for a bruised right arm 
and

determined her shoulder may have been dislocated, police said.



Melissa McMann said she has retinitis pigmentosa or RP, a condition that has 
left her with little functional sight. Hurbie is her second service dog; she’s

had the animals for 10 years. They're trained by the Florida-based

Southeastern Guide Dogs.



“It was something we were not expecting, especially in a federal building,” 
she said. “It was a frightening incident, and obviously we feel (Huff) went

too far.



“All that we’re looking for at this point is for the security company that 
has the contract with Social Security to understand the importance of 
educating

all of the people that work for them as to the laws regarding service dogs 
and also with regard to not placing their hands on people – you just can’t 
go

placing your hands on people.”

http://www.ajc.com/news/social-security-guard-faces-1185244.html
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