Share: 

More charges filed against man who shot Oak Orchard dog

Herbert Manley facing three felony indictments
February 10, 2022

The man accused of shooting a dog in Oak Orchard last May faces more felony charges and has turned in his gun, officials say.

Herbert Manley, 69, of Dover was first charged May 31 with felony cruelly or unnecessarily killing an animal after he shot a chocolate Labrador retriever that later died in a Salisbury pet emergency room.

On Jan. 7, Manley was charged with possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony and first-degree reckless endangering, both felonies. He also turned in his gun, which is now being held as evidence by the Delaware State Police, said Caroline De Jose, a public information officer with the Delaware Department of Justice.

Manley remains free on his own recognizance; a case review is scheduled for Monday, Feb. 21, at Sussex County Superior Court.

Witnesses and court documents state that Manley was in the area of Delaware and Oak Orchard avenues at 8:50 p.m., May 31, and had walked up and down Oak Orchard Avenue several times before he shot the dog, known as Tank.

Manley told an officer with the Office of Animal Welfare that the dog charged at him and was foaming at the mouth, records state. 

“Herbert felt threaten[ed] and felt if he did not shoot the dog it would have jumped up on him. He shot one round at the dog’s head. He said he did not want to kill the dog, just injure it to protect himself,” court documents state.

Witnesses to the shooting said the dog was not aggressive and did nothing to provoke the shooting.

In a previous interview, Oak Orchard resident Charles Drummond said there was some commotion in the area about 8 p.m. when the dog got out of his yard. Drummond said Manley was in the area looking at a home, and Manley had walked up and down the street three times before taking out a gun and shooting the dog.

“The dog was on his [own] property, and he was backing up,” Drummond said.

The dog’s owner, Jim Sekcienski, said he heard a pop, then someone said his dog had been shot.

“I went up to him face-to-face,” he said. “He was still holding his gun, and he said Tank was trying to bite him.”

Melissa Steele is a staff writer covering the state Legislature, government and police. Her newspaper career spans more than 30 years and includes working for the Delaware State News, Burlington County Times, The News Journal, Dover Post and Milford Beacon before coming to the Cape Gazette in 2012. Her work has received numerous awards, most notably a Pulitzer Prize-adjudicated investigative piece, and a runner-up for the MDDC James S. Keat Freedom of Information Award.