8:56:57 Thursday 21 August 2025

Tauranga judge orders Chopper to be put down

A Judge has ordered Chopper must be put down after his owner was convicted of owning a dog causing injury.

 

Cries of “No Way” rang out through the courtroom as a judge ordered the destruction of Tauranga Rottweiler, Chopper that bit a vet.

The dog’s owner Helen Fraser was convicted of owning a dog causing injury at the Tauranga District Court on Monday.

The charge carries a maximum sentence of three years imprisonment or a $20,000 fine.

Fraser was crying with her head in her hands as Judge David Cameron gave his decision to have Chopper euthanised. This was a mandatory requirement of the conviction, unless exceptional circumstances could be proven. 

Security cleared the packed public gallery of Fraser’s supporters, some of whom swore and yelled, after the announcement.

Fraser’s dog Chopper bit veterinarian Dr Liza Schneider during an appointment to discuss the dog’s neutering in October 2021.

The attack left Schneider, the owner of Holistic Vets, with a fractured ulna, four puncture wounds, nerve and muscle damage and required two surgeries.

During the sentencing hearing in June, Schneider said in her victim impact statement: “This was the most aggressive and unprovoked attack I have ever experienced in my 22 year career as a veterinarian, which has included working with aggressive and dangerous dogs.”

Tauranga City Council initially failed in its prosecution when Judge Cameron dismissed the charge in July 2022, after a judge alone trial held in June that year.

Chopper was released from the pound following this decision, after 271 days there.

Helen Fraser and her son Ryan Tarawhiti-Brown outside court in April. Photo: Alisha Evans/SunLive

The council appealed Judge Cameron’s decision stating they felt the judge had made an “error of law” by focussing on the conduct of the victim, rather than Fraser’s legal responsibility to control her dog at all times.

The appeal judge Justice Timothy Brewer upheld the appeal and found Fraser guilty of the charge.

Fraser’s lawyer Lynne Mathieson filed for discharge without conviction, which if granted by the judge would mean Fraser was guilty of the offence but have no criminal record. She also sought exceptional circumstances to prevent Chopper’s destruction.

In giving his decision, Judge Cameron said it was a strict liability offence and “only a complete absence of fault will excuse the owner of the dog”.

He gave details of the events leading up to the attack, where Fraser’s son Billy was holding Chopper on a lead outside the vet clinic near the family’s car.

“The veterinary surgeon approached and the dog lunged at her, causing the injuries described.”

Justice Brewer, in his appeal decision, held that Fraser could have avoided the situation by putting Chopper back in the car or held the dog herself, said Judge Cameron.

“The defence position is that Dr Schneider shared some of the culpability for the offending. I do not accept this.

“The charge required Ms Fraser to prove a total absence of fault, and she failed to do so. The only person culpable is Ms Fraser.”

“The extent of the injuries caused to Dr Schneider is a seriously aggravating factor of the offending…. The attack has had enormous negative consequences for her.”

Cameron said he didn’t accept the Fraser had shown remorse for the offending because she was complicit in her son’s running of a social media page that blamed Schneider and criticised the council.

He declined the discharge without conviction because the “gravity of the offending is moderately serious” and there was “nothing to suggest the consequences of the decision would be “out of all proportion” to the gravity of offending.

Ryan Tarawhiti-Brown and supporters outside court after the judge announced his decision on Monday. Photo: Alisha Evans/SunLive.

With the application for exceptional circumstances, Judge Cameron said: “I agree with the council that … any person could have exited the [vet] clinic and been attacked by Chopper.

“I also agree with the council that there can be no expectation that the dog would behave in a different way in similar circumstances in the future.”  

Under section 58 of the Dog Control Act 1996 he made the order for the destruction of Chopper.

The council did not seek a fine only reparation be paid to the victim.

Fraser was ordered to pay $2894.50 for medical expenses and emotional harm. Substantially less than the $100,000 Schneider was seeking.

Speaking outside court, Fraser’s son Ryan Tarawhiti-Brown said he was numb and in shock.

“The worst thing is dogs in New Zealand have no rights.”

Tauranga City Council regulatory and compliance general manager Sarah Omundsen acknowledged “this has been a difficult and long process for everyone involved”.

“As a territorial authority, Tauranga City Council is required to enforce the Dog Control Act 1996. The decision to prosecute a dog owner is never taken lightly, and our focus is always on keeping the community safe.”

Public Interest Journalism funded through NZ On Air.

9 comments

Unfortunate

Posted on 21-08-2023 18:30 | By jed

Sad to see any animal put down, but it was the right outcome.

I feel sorry for the owners, but, the dog was dangerous to others.


WTF??

Posted on 21-08-2023 18:44 | By DaveTheCynic

"dogs in New Zealand have no rights", what about the right of the vet to be safe? If your dog tries to eat someone, shoot it.


chopper

Posted on 21-08-2023 19:20 | By dumbkof2

so, a dog can attack somebody and gets put down. a person murders somebody and told naughty naughty dont do it again, punishment should be the same.


RIP Chopper

Posted on 21-08-2023 23:59 | By Thea2023

Shocked to hear this news, Chopper had come so far since the incident and turned out to be a gentle fur babe after good training and socialisation. Was this a political move? did Chopper get sentenced to death because of “unbeknown to him” his Social Media following which to the court, council and vet appeared to show no remorse. If this is what he was put down for on appeal then this is a real concern.


Chopper

Posted on 22-08-2023 07:48 | By peter pan

Correct decision .


Unfair

Posted on 22-08-2023 10:03 | By thinking Out loud

If this had of been a workplace incident involving machinery WorkSafe would've been all over it I don't feel that the vet had the animals best interest at heart and should be struck off as vet


@ dumbkof2

Posted on 22-08-2023 13:29 | By Tga Citizen

I agree the punishment should be the same. We need to have a referendum about capital punishment, but the politicians are too scared of the result.


Blame the owners

Posted on 22-08-2023 15:05 | By Lvdw

I blame the owners. Dogs are pack animals that need an alpha and if they are not trained correctly, this is what happens.


@ Unfair

Posted on 22-08-2023 20:42 | By k Smith

This is the owners fault, the dog dose what it's trained to do and the owners never had full control of chopper. The owners would have known the dog is a risk. If not they should not have such a dog, what if the vet was a kid? If you want to own a dog like this make sure you know the rules.
I also agree those who wrote in about the criminals who murder, especially women & children, especially when they get long term jail time, if they are put down we can use that money for cancer drugs and health care which would save innocent lives.


Leave a Comment


You must be logged in to make a comment.