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Attorney John Boucher Jr. has filed a lawsuit in U.S. District Court on behalf of Kenny Bailey and wife Tina Bailey against KCSO and the Knox County Emergency Communications District, which operates the 911 call center and dispatching operations for law enforcement in Knoxville and Knox County.According to the lawsuit, Tina Bailey had placed her phone in the pocket of her robe and had no idea a call to 911 had resulted when, around 4 a.m., she received a call from the 911 center to seek to verify if she intended to dial for help. She confirmed the hang-up call to 911 was "inadvertent," the lawsuit stated.
The lawsuit seeks $1.5 million in damages over the November 2016 fatal shooting of the Bailey family's pit bull outside the Thorngrove Pike home where the Baileys and their four children live.
Comment: American College of Pediatrics: Transgenderism of children is child abuse