Prosecutor: Man Charged with Attempted Dog Drowning Jailed Until Trial

Aaron D. Davis, who was arrested last week for attempting to drown a caged dog in Highlands, was ordered to remain in jail pending trial by Monmouth County Superior Court Judge James J. McGann.

Davis surrendered to authorities on the morning of Aug. 7 in connection with the attempted drowning of River, a dog found last week in a cage on a bulkhead in Highlands, Monmouth County Prosecutor Christopher J. Gramiccioni said in a released statement last week.

Davis, 36, of Long Branch, was charged last Friday with third-degree animal cruelty — attempting to cause death or serious bodily injury to an animal — and disorderly persons offenses of abandonment of a domestic animal, failure to provide necessary care and failure to provide proper shelter.

On July 31, 2018, at approximately 6:15 AM, a Highlands resident, who was walking her dog in the area of Veterans Memorial Park on Bay Avenue, observed something on the water side of the rock bulkhead. As the passerby investigated, she spotted a black wire cage with a small dog cowering inside the cage.

The cage was on a small portion of sand between the bulkhead and the water. The tide was coming in and the water had reached the cage. The passerby climbed over the wall and rescued the animal.

The dog, a pitbull-mixed breed named River by the rescuer, was brought to the Highlands Police Department who then contacted Highlands Animal Control.  When Animal Control officers responded to the site of the canine’s rescue, they found the cage almost submerged by the rising tide.

A subsequent joint investigation conducted by the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office SPCA Division and the Highlands and Long Branch police departments, determined that Davis had abandoned the caged dog near the water’s edge in an attempt to drown the animal.

If convicted of the third degree crime of Animal Cruelty, Davis faces a maximum sentence of 5 years in a New Jersey state prison. On each disorderly persons offense, he faces a separate 6-month period of incarceration.

Davis turned himself in to authorities early Aug. 7 and remains held at the Monmouth County Correctional Institution.