What is this magical amount "hard enough to kill it"? I see people using it like it's a set amount that is assumed to be very hard. There's no specific amount. It may have been a jogging speed kick to the wrong spot that killed the dog.
http://theilovedogssite.com/what-to-do-when-an-off-leash-dog-charges-your-dog/ said:
Assume Its Aggressive. The first rule is to NEVER assume the dog is friendly. Dont try to read its signals and definitely do not think its friendly because its wagging is tail (see this article for why).
Read more at
http://theilovedogssite.com/what-to-do-when-an-off-leash-dog-charges-your-dog/#8jzrWYHH8ILMmslg.99
Animal Control(Quote from video on the site) said:
A small dog bit [the jogger] back in 2012
They also say that he was afraid. For reasons he knows first hand because he was bitten. It's almost irrelevant how big the dog was, or what breed it was. He was bitten in the past by a tiny dog. He doesn't want to be bitten again.
I don't condone killing dogs, in fact I loved my dog like family when I had her. If this happened to my dog, I would be extremely angry with the guy. However, I do condone defending yourself from a dog if you feel threatened. If the guy felt threatened, he has a right to defend himself. No matter how ridiculous that sounds to any one of us because it was a pug.
It's clear that this lady
loves her pugs. They're adorable, and it's absolutely awful that this happened. Yet, she has to be more responsible as a dog owner. I would never let my dog off a leash when I wasn't in a dog park. It's just common sense. I want to protect my dogs from strangers like this, just as much as I want to keep her out of harms way from herself (running into traffic etc.)
Also, I want to let it be known. All this above. Speculation. None of us know. I don't know if the guy was just an asshole or not. It's just best practice to look at both sides with an unbiased mindset.