Victoria LaQuier was in her aunt's basement when Minneapolis police kicked open the front door Tuesday morning and fired three shots in quick succession.
When police escorted her upstairs what she saw shocked her: one of the family's dogs was dead, slumped on the floor as blood pooled around him. A second family dog tracked bloody paw prints up the nearby stairs.
Minneapolis police were executing an arrest warrant at the home in the 1600 block of Bush Avenue in St. Paul when they killed Blu and badly wounded Conan, two male pit bull terriers, about 11 a.m.
"Pets aren't disposable things," LaQuier said Wednesday. "Somebody loves them."
Minneapolis police declined to confirm the incident, and refused to answer questions about what happened and why their officers apparently fired on the dogs. St. Paul police spokesman Steve Linders said his agency only provided Minneapolis police with traffic assistance outside and was not involved in executing the warrant.
Limited public data from Minneapolis police's daily incident log showed that they were at the St. Paul address to execute an arrest warrant on a possession of a firearm without a permit case. LaQuier confirmed that the warrant was for her boyfriend, but said she did not know the details of the case. He was arrested later.
Bloody paw prints left behind when Conan was taken out by St. Paul's animal control were still visible on the family's front stoop on the Greater East Side. Inside, two fresh bullet holes marred the living room floor.
"It's just a lot of unnecessary brutality … and it's not being accounted for," said LaQuier's aunt, Jennifer Hankerson.