According to the police, Picciano admitted ownership of the dogs. He was arrested and later was arraigned before Coroner William J. Flynn, who held him in $2000 bail on a charge of homicide.
New York Tribune, August 18, 1917
New York Tribune, August 18, 1917
2 comments:
Huh, homicide charges. I wonder if bringing homicide charges more often eventually made the pit bulls go underground the 30s and 40s til the 70s.
That's a pretty good theory theory actually maybe some more research in that area would yield some results
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