Chicago Sun-Times

One lucky dog: Firefighte­rs save Chihuahua from drain

- BY STEFANOESP­OSITO Email: sesposito@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ slesposito

Staff Reporter

Almost five hours into an ordeal that brought four Chicago Fire Department vehicles and a team of 16 profession­als to her Northwest Side apartment this month, Maria Aguila faced a wrenching decision.

But the soft, slightly bulging, hazel eyes staring back at her from inside the bathtub made the choice clear.

“I said, ‘ Do whatever you have to do, but save the dog,’ ” Aguila said this week, recalling the May 6 rescue.

And so, firefighte­rs set to work tearing open the ceiling below so they could cut through a pipe under the tub where little Moky, a 5- yearold Chihuahua, had somehow lodged a tiny paw in the drain while his owner was giving him a bath.

Some seven hours after it all began, firefighte­rs reached the drain and shook Moky’s swollen paw free.

“He was definitely happier afterwe got him out,” said Chicago Fire Capt. Mark Altman, who oversaw the rescue. “The family was very grateful.”

And so are the folks at People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, who this week said they’re sending along a “Compassion­ate Fire Department Award.” It includes, PETA said, “a box of delicious vegan cookies.”

Baths are a routine part of Moky’s life, but on that day things went horribly wrong. Aguila had forgotten to put a plug in the tub. The Chihuahua’s leg slipped into the open drain and wouldn’t come out.

“I tried to pull him out, but it was too late,” Aguila said.

She called 311. But four hours later, no one had turned up, she said. So she called PETA, which alerted the Fire Department toMoky’s plight.

Noticing the abundance of fire equipment, curious neighbors wondered if someone was dying. Not if the Fire Department had anything to say about it.

Why four pieces of equipment for one tiny dog? You never quite know what tools might be needed in such a rescue, Altman said.

Firefighte­rs decided the only way to safely get the dog outwould be to break through the ceiling in the room below in the family’s duplex. When they finally freed Moky, he leaped into his owner’s arms.

Some two weeks later, Moky is physically fine. The emotional trauma lingers.

“He runs from the bathroom,” Aguila said.

 ?? | SUPPLIED PHOTO ?? Moky, a 5- year- old Chihuahua, was freed by firefighte­rs some seven hours after he got a paw stuck in a bathtub drain.
| SUPPLIED PHOTO Moky, a 5- year- old Chihuahua, was freed by firefighte­rs some seven hours after he got a paw stuck in a bathtub drain.

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