An 8-pound Shih-tzu named Baby went off-leash in Bloomington, and the chain of events that followed cost the city's insurance company $150,000.
Documents were signed Tuesday to settle Isaac Ward's federal lawsuit accusing police of beating up Ward after a confrontation with an animal control officer.
"The stuff that was happening was really as surreal as can be," Ward testified in an earlier court deposition.
The incident dates to 2009 when Ward, 66, took Baby, his ex-wife's dog, for a walk in Dred Scott Park.
Ward, a retired car salesman, says Baby is afraid of big dogs, so he keeps her out of dog parks. He said he's walked her off-leash in the park before with police looking on.
But when Jay Young, an animal control officer, spotted him on Nov. 4, 2009, he yelled at him to put her on a leash. He used a disrespectful tone, Ward said. Young issued a warning letter.
When Young caught Baby off-leash again a month later, Ward told him to mail him the ticket and drove off. Young followed Ward to his ex-wife's condo, where more words were exchanged.
Ward says he warned Young he would "snatch him out of the car." Young said Ward threatened "to go into the house … get a gun" and kill him and his "friends in blue."