
(Beth Clifton collage)
No known witnesses to multi-dog mauling
MODESTO, California–– Deborah L. Onsurez, 56, of Modesto, California, the record eighth American killed by dogs during the month of December 2017, appears to have died as little noticed as she lived.
Advised the Stanislaus County Sheriff’s Department, “On 12-28-2017 at about 7:50 a.m., deputies and emergency services personnel were dispatched to a 911 call of an unresponsive person in the 500 block of Crows Landing Road,” where Onsurez was found “in the driveway of a residence,” in a neighborhood consisting chiefly of three automotive wrecking yards, a tire dealership, a couple of used car lots, a nut-packing warehouse, and several run-down trailer parks, wedged between railroad tracks and the Golden State Highway.

(Beth Clifton collage)
Butler’s Camp murder
Satellite photos show no evident current residences in the 500 block of Crows Landing Road, though some structures now housing businesses were probably built as homes.
The 500 block of Crows Landing Road, however, meets South 7th Street at Butler’s Camp, also known as Sunrise Village. This was the scene of the locally notorious January 1989 drug-related murder of Kenneth Lawton Stewart. Dennis Harold Lawley received the death penalty for allegedly hiring the Stewart killing, but died from heart disease in 2012; confessed triggerman Brian Seabourn received a life sentence; and a third suspect, Steven Curtis Mendonca, was sent to a prison for mentally ill offenders after pleading guilty to second-degree murder.
“Pronounced deceased at the scene”
There were no known witnesses to Onsurez’s death. Almost no information was available about her in the first three days after her death. She appears to have had a husband, Miguel Ruiz Onsurez, 59. She may have been a grandmother. She had apparently lived quietly in several other California cities. But she died violently indeed.
“Onsurez had severe injuries to her body, and she was pronounced deceased at the scene,” the Stanislaus County Sheriff’s Department said.
“Detectives were called out to assist with the investigation. The preliminary investigation led detectives to believe the decedent was killed by stray dogs,” the advisory said, meaning “dogs running at large,” probably not homeless.

(Beth Clifton collage)
Let outside, then whistled back?
More likely, at the early morning hour when Onsurez appears to have been attacked, the dogs had been let outside by someone to urinate and defecate, and then been whistled back inside by an owner who may or may not have been aware that the dogs had attacked someone.
“Deputies and Animal Control officers searched several businesses in the immediate area, and no stray dogs were found,” the Stanislaus County Sheriff’s Department advisory added.
“Detectives do not have any information on the breed or ages of the dogs. We are working together with Stanislaus County Animal Services and the City of Modesto Animal Control to find the dogs responsible for this needless death,” the advisory finished.

Loose dogs photographed several years ago crossing Crows Landing Road at Hatch Road, about a mile from where Deborah Onsurez was killed.
(Facebook photo)
“My sister was mauled by the same dogs”
The area is known for dangerous dogs running at large.
Posted Modesto resident Heather Gutierrez to Facebook in a discussion of Onsurez’s death, “I drive down Crows Landing every single day and there are ALWAYS dogs running loose.”
Agreed another Modesto resident, Bernie De Rego, “Animal control is never out in this area. They don’t ever drive by to check. There are so many strays. If you call animal control, it takes forever to reach someone. Then they never come. So even if someone called about a stray being loose, this would have happened.”

Emma Mae Colvin, shown with husband Eric Colvin, on December 7, 2017 became the record-setting 50th dog attack death in the U.S. in 2017.
The most alarming comment came from Ceres resident Yesenia McClain. “My sister was mauled by the same dogs Tuesday night,” McClain posted, meaning two days before Onsurez was killed. “She said it happened by a car dealership and a house near the 500 block of Crows Landing. A couple of guys helped get the dogs off, but left her there and didn’t call for help. She got bit on her boob, back, stomach, and legs.”
55th death by dog attack in 2017
As well as being the record 8th human killed by dogs in the U.S. in December 2017, and the 9th killed since November 29, 2017, Onsurez was the also record 55th person killed by dog attack in the U.S. in 2017, of whom 36, another record, are known to have been killed by pit bulls.
ANIMALS 24-7, continuously logging dog attack deaths and disfigurements by breed since 1982, will wait another several days to post what we believe to be the 2017 “final” totals, to be sure of including attacks occurring late in the last week of the year that may not be reported until several days into 2018.

(Beth Clifton collage)
Even at that, the numbers of dog attack deaths, especially deaths attributed to specific breeds, may rise later in 2018 as result of late-arriving information. In 2017, for instance, three dog attacks initially listed in 2016 as having been by dogs of unidentified breed were subsequently attributed as result of police forensic work to specific pit bulls.
Annual totals rise in future years
The numbers of dog attack disfigurements logged for any given year also tend to rise during the next several years, mostly as result of lawsuits brought by victims whose lawyers had advised them against disclosing information while their cases were before the courts.
While ANIMALS 24-7 cannot as yet provide the data we expect to provisionally post as “final,” we can confirm that 2017 brought a record number of pit bull attacks on children, as well as a record number of fatalities, and that the records for numbers of pit bulls involved in attacks, adults injured, and total disfiguring injuries all may be exceeded if the totals for the last week of December 2017 are as high as were the totals for several of the preceding weeks.

(Beth Clifton collage)
Dog attacks on other animals
ANIMALS 24-7 has also for many years been continuously logging dog attack deaths and disfigurements inflicted on animals by breed, a category of dog attack violence that is notoriously underreported. The underreporting is partly because of a widespread lack of confidence among animal owners that attacks on pets and livestock will be properly investigated and prosecuted.
Since 2014 ANIMALS 24-7 has produced annual estimates of the numbers of animals killed in dog attacks, by species of the victim animal and by breed of the attacking dogs, where known, projected from our logged data using a combination of demographic factors in a manner similar to how public health agencies estimate cases of underreported infectious diseases.

Merritt & Beth Clifton
As this is a very time-consuming task, our estimated 2017 totals of animals killed by dogs will probably not be posted until mid-to-late January 2018.