Man who shot dog during attack in St. Charles Twp. awarded for life-saving heroism

Chris Shanahan is officially a hero for taking action to save a neighbor in the course of being bitten by two Rottweilers last December.

A St. Charles man who shot and killed a Rottweiler mauling a neighbor was hailed as a hero by Kane County officials March 8.

Chris Shanahan received Sheriff Ron Hain’s Heroic Citizens Award during a meeting of the Kane County Board.

Hain recounted the events that led to Shanahan’s actions before presenting him with a plaque.

The plaque recognized Shanahan “for courage and fast action to save the life of another citizen.”

Kane County Sheriff Ron Hain presents a Heroic Citizens Award to Chris Shanahan for saving a woman who was attacked by two dogs last December.

About 9:15 a.m. Dec. 13, Laura Kizman, a neighbor of Shanahan, was jogging in the 7N300 block of Windsor Drive in unincorporated St. Charles. A labradoodle escaped from under an electric fence and ran up to Kizman. Recognizing the dog as belonging to Steven and Ann Dorando, Kizman scooped the dog up by the collar and walked it back over to Ann Dorando, who was in her driveway.

At that point, Dorando’s two Rottweilers also escaped and charged at Kizman. In a 10-minute attack, Kizman suffered multiple bites to her arms, legs and head.

“I was probably going to die,” Kizman told FOX 32 Chicago in a January interview. “They were biting me from head to toe.”

Ann Dorando attempted to stop the attack and also suffered bites in the process. Shanahan was driving down the street when he saw the dogs attacking Kizman. Shanahan had attended a homecoming party at the Kizmans’ home two months before the attack. He has kids who go to school with Kizmans’ children. He knew he needed to do something.

“I was prepared to do this for anyone, but it made it a little different knowing Laura personally,” Shanahan said March 8. “That gets the adrenaline going a little bit more. You can imagine the sense of urgency I felt.”

Shanahan is a licensed gun owner with a concealed carry permit, but he wasn’t carrying a weapon with him that morning. He called his father, who also is a legal gun owner and lived nearby, and told him to bring him a weapon. His father responded quickly.

Once armed, Shanahan waited until he had a clear shot. He fired the gun at near point-blank range into the side of one of the Rottweilers, causing it to stop its attack. The sound of the gunfire sent the other Rottweiler scampering away.

Kizman was not out of danger yet. Paramedics transported her to Northwestern Delnor Hospital in Geneva, only to find her injuries were so severe she needed to be flown by helicopter to Advocate Good Samaritan Hospital’s trauma center.

Doctors used 6 feet worth of sutures to close Kizman’s wounds.

The dog Shanahan shot died. The Rottweiler that ran away was euthanized by its owners the following day.

“It put me in a situation where I had to defuse it anyway I could so (Laura) could go home and be there for the moments that matter to her four kids,” Shanahan said. “I was in the right place at the right time, I guess. There is a road to recovery for Laura. I have to admit, at the end of all of it, I wasn’t sure that was going to be the case.”

Shanahan received a standing ovation from the Kane County Board.

In a pending lawsuit, the Kizmans are accusing the Dorandos of failing to keep the dogs in a proper enclosure or chained in a manner that could have prevented the attack.

There are no pending criminal charges.