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Veterans Law Practicum Saves Dog on Death Row
Army veteran Ana Chan and Jimmy Hardwick talking next to truck with dog.
Army veteran Ana Chan (left) relies on her Great Dane, named Rodgers, for companionship, routine and physical support. Jimmy Hardwick (right), supervising attorney of the Veterans Law Practicum, was part of a team of attorneys and students that fought to save Rodgers after a court deemed him a dangerous dog and sentenced him to be euthanized.

Ana Chan’s dog, a Great Dane named Rodgers, was sentenced to death.

Chan, a disabled Army veteran with a traumatic brain injury and partial blindness in one eye, relied on Rodgers for companionship, routine and physical support. She felt safer in crosswalks with Rodgers keeping his blue eyes on the traffic. His height meant he could close kitchen cabinets so Chan wouldn’t hit her head. His strength kept her upright when she lost her balance.

The Cornell Law School’s Veterans Law Practicum, which typically helps veterans with discharge-status appeals and benefits applications, recently secured clemency for Rodgers after a judge had deemed him a dangerous dog and sentenced him to be euthanized.

“When you saved his life, you saved my life, too,” Chan told Jimmy Hardwick, supervising attorney of the practicum and adjunct professor in the Law School.

Read the full story on the Cornell Chronicle site.

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