Watch CBS News

Dogs In Court Provide Comfort To Victims But Can Hinder Fairness

(AP/CBS4) — As dogs and other animals are increasingly used in courts to comfort and calm prosecution witnesses, a few voices are calling for keeping the practice on a short leash, saying they could bias juries.

The use of dogs in courts has spread quickly across the U.S. with a growing number of laws and rulings in its favor — and, outside the legal world, a significant increase in the use of emotional support animals by the public.

There are now more than 155 "courthouse facility dogs" working in 35 states (including Colorado), compared with 41 dogs in 19 states five years ago, according to the Courthouse Dogs Foundation in Bellevue, Washington. And that's not counting an untold number of "emotional support dogs" that have been allowed case by case in many states. Many witnesses have been child sexual assault victims.

There has been a divide among judges, however, with some not allowing dogs because of potential bias against defendants. And many defense lawyers don't like the practice.

tilly2
Tilly, a courthouse facility dog at the 21st Judicial District in Grand Junction, walks with a child victim to the witness stand. (credit: 21st Judicial District Attorney's Office)

Having dogs and other emotional support animals in the witness box can illegitimately boost witness credibility and prejudice juries against defendants, Denver defense lawyer Christopher Decker argues. He has unsuccessfully fought the use of dogs in criminal trials several times.

"I think it distracts the jurors from what their job is, which is to determine the truthfulness of the testimony," Decker said. "It tends to imply or infer that there has been some victimization. It tends to engender sympathy. It's highly prejudicial."

Facility dogs are trained to provide companionship without disruption in courthouses, prosecutors' offices and other legal settings. They work at courthouses all day, then go home with their handlers. Emotional support and "therapy" dogs are pets that can be registered with organizations and may or may not have been specially trained.

Proponents say dogs help reduce the anxiety of traumatized victims, especially children, so they can overcome the stress of telling their stories in a deposition room or courtroom.

"We need to address how traumatizing it is for children to go through this process," said Ellen O'Neill-Stephens, a former prosecutor who founded the Courthouse Dogs Foundation. "The whole point for me is I want to make it easier for people to engage in this process without suffering additional emotional trauma."

At least eight states have laws allowing the use of dogs to comfort children and other vulnerable witnesses. Similar proposed laws are pending in at least another four states, while court rulings in a handful of states have set precedents allowing the use of emotional support dogs.

Ivy Jacobsen, of Lake Stevens, Washington, said three facility dogs helped her get through the three trials it took before her father was convicted of sexually assaulting her when she was a teenager. After two hung juries, he was convicted at the third trial and sentenced to 16 years in prison in 2013.

Ivy2
Ivy Jacobsen of Lake Stevens, Washington, visits with courthouse facility dog Lucy three years after Jacobsen testified in a sexual assault case. (credit: Facebook/Ivy Jacobsen)

The judge in Jacobsen's case did not allow a dog to accompany her on the witness stand during the trials because of objections by the defense. The animals helped her outside the courtroom, she said, during private questioning by defense lawyers, counseling sessions and in courtroom hallways after proceedings.

"It made it easier to talk knowing he was there," said Jacobsen, now 23 and a police officer, referring to one of the dogs that helped her during a tense deposition. "I felt like he was in a way whispering toward me that everything was going to be OK. I was 16 or 17 at this time having to talk about very explicit, very uncomfortable things that I was not willing to say out loud."

It's not clear how, or whether, the dogs are affecting juries and verdicts because of a lack of research.

Studies by researchers at Wofford College in South Carolina involving mock jurors reviewing real cases have shown dogs have no effect on verdicts or witness credibility. The findings surprised the researchers, and they're trying to determine why there is no effect.

"We consistently find that the presence of a dog makes no difference," said Wofford psychology professor Dawn McQuiston, a lead researcher. "It seems absolutely intuitive that it will elicit sympathy, that it will make the victim seem more like a victim, that it will make you feel sorry for them. We certainly expected these dogs would have an impact, so we were surprised when they didn't."

Dogs also are being used to comfort trial witnesses in other parts of the world including South America, Europe and Australia. One jurisdiction in Australia recently rejected emotional support dogs in courts, The Canberra Times reported.

Advocates say defense concerns can be resolved by placing dogs so they cannot be seen by juries and having judges tell jurors the dog is there but not to make any conclusions about it. Defense lawyers, however, say it's not that easy.

"The fact that a child needs a therapy dog is already a signal to the jury that there's something they need therapy for," said Connecticut public defender George Flores. "A child is sympathetic already. Give a child a dog and they're much more sympathetic."

"Absolutely," said Kathi Raley, Victim Witness Coordinator for the 21st Judicial District in Grand Junction. "(Tilly) has been denied more than she has been allowed to assist child victims. The reluctance is on the part of judges and defense attorneys who feel it will give an unfair advantage to the prosecution."

Tilly1
Tilly sits with a child victim. (credit: 21st Judicial District Attorney Office)

Raley's is one of two Colorado districts that uses courthouse facility dogs.

Pella, another yellow labrador, works in the 18th Judicial District's office in Centennial. She was previously featured in a CBS News story.

Vikki Magoya of the 18th Judicial District Attorney's Office acknowledges the presence of Pella can prompt a sense of sympathy in a jury. But her office has not had any issues because Pella sits in the witness stand, out of sight of jurors.

Pella3
Pella sits at the feet of a person providing testimony in a courtroom. (credit: CBS News)

"We definitely feel she's a help to the witnesses and victims we have," Magoya said.

Pella has been in use since 2012.

Both Pella and Tilly came from Canine Companions For Independence located in California, Raley said.

(© Copyright 2018 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

View CBS News In
CBS News App Open
Chrome Safari Continue
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.