More than 138,000 people have signed an online petition launched by a Balloch woman calling for stronger penalties against dog theft in Scotland.

Michelle Boyd started the petition after concern for her own welfare grew while out walking a new puppy, Luka, she got just seven months ago.

She found reports of violence and attempts at dognapping were on the increase as the cost of a puppy can be up to £3,500 - also leading to a rise in puppy farms with apparent links to organised crime.

Ms Boyd told the PA news agency she only expected "my best case scenario would have been if I managed to get 5,000 signatures".

She said that since launching the petition she had met a woman who had armed herself with a cooking blowtorch while out walking her dog in case of an attempted theft.

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She added: "I looked into it and I saw that the penalties for dog thefts are completely inadequate - if someone steals your dog it's treated the same as if they steal your mobile phone and the most common penalty's usually a £250 fine.

"I just started the petition to see how much traction it would get; the point behind it is trying to get sentencing for people that steal dogs to be much more appropriate, and for dog theft to be a specific crime.

"Particularly in the pandemic, dogs are companions to people that live on their own. They're part of the family.

"One of the few things you could do during the pandemic is walk your dog, and you didn't even feel comfortable doing that because you were scared somebody was going to leap out of a van and steal them.

"I've had support from a local politician who is prepared to offer more once the election is over, but I would really like to see it go to parliament and be properly debated, and the for the justice department to look at what sentences are being handed out."

Michelle Boyds pet dog Luka (Photo - PA)

Michelle Boyd's pet dog Luka (Photo - PA)

Ms Boyd pointed to a vote by MSPs to increase maximum sentences for animal cruelty from six months to five years, which was passed into law in the summer of 2020.

Ms Boyd admitted she won't walk her dog far on her own, and instead will wait to go out with her husband.

She added that some friends will not let their children walk their dogs because fear of theft had "spoiled the experience".

Through the petition, she has had others sharing stories – including reports of people posing as BT engineers and marking people's houses as part of dognapping schemes.

However Ms Boyd also said she has heard of people taking matters into their own hands to avoid being the victim of a dog theft.

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She said: "A lot of people, when I'm out walking my dog, say how scared they are, but also people are slightly taking things in their own hands and arming themselves.

"One lady I bumped into in the park was walking her dog carrying a cooking blowtorch and I said to her 'if you use that on somebody, the penalty for that will be far worse than the person that tries to steal your dog'.

"People are doing that because they feel that there's no option - very often when a dog is stolen the police are reluctant to even treat it as a crime, and it is a bit of a struggle to get a crime number out of them.

"What needs to happen, I think, is a concentrated effort that when a dog's stolen, it goes on to national register, and that can be communicated widely across the country, because these dogs are being stored and moved."

The petition can be found online at change.org/p/scottish-government-stronger-penalties-for-dog-theft.

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