Rosie The Great Dane Service Dog

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Rosie The Great Dane Service Dog Advocating for service dog rights and disability awareness. Sharing my journey to expose harassment and discrimination.

Follow for updates, stories, and resources to fight for justice. Full videos on YouTube: youtube.com/ This page is dedicated to advocating for service dog rights and raising awareness about the challenges faced by people with disabilities. Through my personal journey, I share stories of harassment, highlight legal rights, and provide resources to empower others. Together, we can fight for justice and equality.

08/10/2024
08/10/2024

In this video, a town leader insults my service dog, calling her a 'crutch.' This led to police involvement. Watch the full story of service dog harassment and discrimination—it's time to stand up for service dog rights!




In this video, a Brookfield Select Board meeting is dramatically interrupted by then-public official Mr. Holdcraft, who ...
19/09/2024

In this video, a Brookfield Select Board meeting is dramatically interrupted by then-public official Mr. Holdcraft, who demands to know why a service dog is in the room. The disruption forces the meeting into recess, and police are called to address the situation. Mr. Holdcraft repeatedly questions the presence of my service dog, Rosie, claiming that he and the townspeople have a "right to know what the dog is doing in the room." and that he has checked with not one or two attorneys but three of them and he knows "his rights"

Captured through police body camera footage, you’ll see Mr. Holdcraft explain to the officers his reasoning for interrupting the meeting. Despite promising the police that he wouldn’t disrupt the meeting again, Mr. Holdcraft returns to continue the interruptions.

Key Moments in the Video:

The initial meeting disruption by Mr. Holdcraft, just because there is a the service dog in the room, across the room from him.

Police arrive on the scene to manage the situation and speak with Mr. Holdcraft in the hallway.

Mr. Holdcraft’s explanation to the police, insisting he has the right to know what that the service dog is doing in the room.

Despite promising to stop, Mr. Holdcraft continues to interrupt the meeting.

Throughout the entire incident, my service dog Rosie, who is trained to remain calm, stays quietly by my side, across the room from Mr. Holdcraft, not causing any disturbance. This video highlights the ongoing misunderstanding and unnecessary tensions that arise around service dogs, even when they are simply doing their job.

Service dogs play a crucial role in assisting people with disabilities, and their presence is protected by law. However, situations like this show how public officials and others can misinterpret their purpose, leading to uncomfortable and discriminatory interactions.

In this video, a Brookfield Select Board meeting is dramatically interrupted by then-public official Mr. Holdcraft, who demands to know why a service dog is ...

Town Official Harasses Service Dog Handler – Police CalledIn this video, I capture an encounter with Mr. Holdcraft, a To...
19/09/2024

Town Official Harasses Service Dog Handler – Police Called

In this video, I capture an encounter with Mr. Holdcraft, a Town Official, just before a Board of Health meeting. As I entered the room with Rosie, my service dog, Mr. Holdcraft, who was standing 10 feet away, called out my dog’s name. In the past, he has called out her name many times, and despite me repeatedly asking him not to, he continued to do so, escalating the situation.

After I told him to stop, he asked, "Do you have a mental illness?" I responded, "Yes, I have PTSD—now stop calling out her name." This provocation persisted until I asked if I needed to call the Brookfield Police. When the police arrived, they informed him not to address the service dog, reminding him that she is a trained service animal and should not be distracted.

The next day, Mr. Holdcraft escalated the harassment further by putting up a message on his changeable sign on the busiest street in town, which read: "A change of medication is in order for Chris Kelleher." His actions demonstrate a disturbing level of harassment, particularly given his role as a Town Official.

In this video, I capture an encounter with Mr. Holdcraft, a Town Official, just before a Board of Health meeting. As I entered the room with Rosie, my servic...

Animosity bubbles over in Brookfield: Shouting escalates to the courtroomTHE FRICTION HAS ESCALATED TO THE POINT THAT PO...
15/01/2024

Animosity bubbles over in Brookfield: Shouting escalates to the courtroom

THE FRICTION HAS ESCALATED TO THE POINT THAT POLICE HAVE BEEN PULLED INTO THE DISPUTES.

Henry Schwan

Worcester Telegram & Gazette

BROOKFIELD – A dispute between two local officials spilled into entanglement with police and the court.

Christopher Kelleher claims John D. Holdcraft has repeatedly harassed him over Kelleher's disability. Kelleher relies on a service dog named Rosie for post-traumatic stress disorder and clinical depression that was diagnosed in 2001. Past verbal and physical abuse by a stepmother and foster parents are the root of Kelleher's challenges, he said.

What antagonizes Kelleher is that he has repeatedly asked Holdcraft not to approach Rosie and say hello to the dog, a greeting that startles the dog, but Holdcraft continues to do it: “I just want him to stop calling out the dog’s name. He’s calling out to Rosie, saying, ‘Come here’, and I tell him, ‘John, you can’t do that. It's a working dog.’”

Holdcraft said he loves dogs and questions Kelleher's disability. He believes the dog is simply a companion and that Kelleher is not fit for local office.

"The dog serves no purpose. It's a companion, not a service dog," Holdcraft said.

HOSTILITY HITS THE BOILING POINT

The animosity spilled over into a recent Board of Health meeting. Kelleher serves on the elected board and in separate interviews, both men said Kelleher started shouting at Holdcraft after he approached Rosie before the meeting started to say hello to the dog.

Holdcraft then blasted Kelleher during the public comment portion of the meeting. His comments were recorded by Kelleher, who records the meeting for a local newspaper he started called The Brookfield Examiner. Holdcraft is heard on the video telling the board that Kelleher is not mentally fit to serve on the board.

“You’re very toxic to this board, Chris. You’re very toxic to the members of the community," Holdcraft says.

On the video, Holdcraft mentioned actions by Kelleher that Holdcraft alleges have slowed the board's work and said Kelleher admitted in court that he has mental illness. That information, said Holdcraft, came out in a court appearance earlier this month when a judge in East Brookfield District Court denied Kelleher's request to get a non-harassment order issued against Holdcraft.

“You admitted that you’re mentally ill and you admitted in this room here that you were mentally ill," said Holdcraft in the video, "and you’re sitting on the health board, dictating and making motions, this and that, for the town’s people?"

Holdcraft also told the board that when he arrived at the meeting, he asked Kelleher how his dog was doing and Kelleher, "flipped out on me. That just shows your mental state. I don't think you should be on this board."

Then Holdcraft urged Kelleher to resign: "You're not even in good condition. You have the dog to keep you stable...So why don’t you do the right thing for the community and consider about stepping down from the Board of Health?”

Kelleher filed prior harassment reports with local police. Police issued a court summons to Holdcraft for alleged criminal harassment, a development corroborated by Kelleher and Holdcraft. Both men are unsure what the next steps are in that legal process.

State law says people with disabilities have the right to be accompanied by a service animal wherever the person is allowed to go. Those with a service animal may not be asked to provide documentation of a disability, to answer questions regarding the disability or to have the service animal demonstrate its work.

Only when a person's disability is not obvious, a staff member may ask two questions to determine whether an animal is a service animal: Is the animal required because of a disability, and what task or service is the animal trained to perform? Staff must take the individual at their word, according to state law.

In addition, assistance animal owners in Massachusetts are not required to possess any certification or identification. However, all dogs, whether pets or assistance animals, need to be registered with their city or town, but there is no official registry of assistance animals.

ORIGINS OF THE ANIMUS

Kelleher pinpoints the ill feelings partly to his founding of The Brookfield Examiner. A "trash paper" is how Holdcraft described the newspaper.

The newspaper's page posted the video of the Board of Health meeting and a commentary of Holdcraft's comments during the meeting: "This blatant assertion chillingly echoes a dark chapter in history, characterized by prejudice and outright discrimination against the disabled, leading to tragic and inhumane consequences. Such a direct dismissal of Mr. Kelleher's abilities, solely due to disability, is profoundly offensive and reminiscent of the severe mistreatment that disabled individuals faced under the N**i regime.

“The suggestion that use of a service dog or a disability diminishes a persons ability to effectively serve on the Board of Health is not just offensive but dangerously echoes past prejudices.”

Another source of friction is disagreements over policies discussed at previous town meetings in Brookfield, according to Kelleher. Kelleher said both men were on opposite sides in a debate over long-term benefits for local firefighters and EMTs. They also sparred over whether recreational ma*****na should be sold in town, said Holdcraft.

HISTORY OF SPEAKING HIS MIND

John D. Holdcraft stands by his sign on Route 9 in Brookfield March 4, 2021.

Holdcraft stressed that he only verbalizes his disagreements with Kelleher in public meetings, which he said is his right, based on freedom of speech protections in the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.

He has a history of making his points heard, with associated courtroom drama.

A U.S. District Court judge in 2021 announced that Holdcraft and the town reached a settlement over Holdcraft's "Freedom of Speech" sign. The big, yellow sign on Route 9 in Brookfield advertises Holdcraft’s myriad views on issues including when it comes to Kelleher. The sign once posted this question, according to Holdcraft: "Does Christopher Kelleher need a change in his medications?"

In another legal matter, a state appeals court sided with Brookfield in 2020 that Holdcraft owed the town $27,000 in fines and more than $13,000 in attorney's fees and costs for violating local zoning bylaws. A lower court ruled Holdcroft illegally stored junk, debris and salvage materials on his properties in violation of zoning rules. He also violated a cease-and-desist order from the town.

John D. Holdcraft stands by his sign on Route 9 in Brookfield March 4, 2021.

Both men have deep roots in Brookfield. Kelleher also serves as chairman to the appointed Conservation Commission and has an elected spot on the Planning Board. In an ironic twist, Holdcraft is also an elected member of the Planning Board. Holdcraft has lived in town for over 20 years, where he said he owns a substantial amount of real estate.

Kelleher works for a packaging and shipping store in Spencer and called Holdcraft the “town bully.” It appears to be a badge of honor for Holdcraft when he said he has been engaged in Brookfield Town Hall business for over 20 years and he's not going to stop expressing his views on Kelleher, his dog and his disability.

"The whole thing is a big front. (Kelleher) is using his disability to get his way," Holdcraft said.

Contact Henry Schwan at [email protected]. Follow him on X: .

https://www.telegram.com/story/news/local/2024/01/14/animosity-bubbles-over-in-brookfield-shouting-escalates-to-courtroom/72217957007/?fbclid=IwAR3z8aATB3gjoB4W6VhBBCCJGoHMJeKkQflcZFsaz1ahgeP3TvZR5x41wpQ

A dispute between town officials, Christopher Kelleher and John Holdcraft, spilled into entanglement with police and the court over harassment.

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