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Chicago wife tries to track down dogs who killed her miniature roof dog, Qweenie

A woman in Chicago would like to know whether someone has seen the dog who attacked and killed her miniature roof dog in the Bronzeville district over the weekend and is still at large.

Bencia Berry is frustrated because she does not believe that someone will help and she fears that the dog who killed her pet could strike again.

She brought her story to the town hall on Wednesday and spoke to the city council's public security committee after her beloved 2-year-old dog Qweenie was killed on Saturday.

“This dog is still free from a school. It can kill,” she said.

On Saturday near the 37th Place and the State Street, Qweenie was with their dog sitter in a back yard in Bronzeville when another dog somehow entered the fenced property and attacked and killed Qweenia.

“I am very concerned about the security of our neighbors. They deserve to play it – their children, their pets – to play safely in their own back yard. You can see that there is a school there,” said Berry.

The attack occurred on the other side of the street from perspectives/Iit Math & Science Academy.

Berry has warned her story in social media and everyone who will contemplate the community of what it calls a murderous dog.

“When you have seen this dog, there is video material of it. Please, please, please access,” she said.

Berry offers a reward of 450 US dollars for information because after the death of Qweenie the other dog has disappeared.

“We suspect that the owner came and packed her dog and hid him,” she said.

Berry needs answers because she said that the Chicago Police Department and the Chicago Animal Care and Control cannot help her if the place of the killer dog is found.

“It's pretty sad,” she said.

She hopes that answers can provide the pain that she now feels.

“She was a really sweet, loving dog. She thought I didn't know, she was just like my other half. I got her after my father died a few years ago,” said Berry.

Chicago Animal Care and Control said, even though a police officer reacted to the scene and wrote a report after Qweenie was killed, CPD noticed any animal control officers.

Animal Care officer said Berry had to call 311 to a police station to create an official bite report, even though an official was already accepting a report.

The entire bureaucracy not only has sadly about Qweenie's death, but also frustrated with bureaucracy.

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