Find instances of a woman hurting a male dog, if the woman injure the dogs testicles, like kicking the dogs testicles. or castration of the dog

Checked on January 6, 2026
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Executive summary

Reports and video evidence show multiple instances in recent years of women physically kicking, choking or otherwise assaulting dogs — incidents that have led to arrests and animal-cruelty charges [1] [2] [3]. Documented cases of deliberate castration or surgical removal of canine testicles outside veterinary practice are not present in the supplied reporting, while legitimate castration is described as a regulated veterinary procedure and, in at least one shocking viral clip, clinic staff were filmed handling castrated tissue in a way that stirred outrage [4] [5].

1. Recorded assaults: viral videos of women kicking dogs and resulting prosecutions

News outlets have repeatedly reported viral videos showing women kicking dogs; those clips prompted police action and, in some cases, felony animal-cruelty charges — for example a 2019 Florida case in which a woman seen kicking and choking a dog was arrested on suspicion of felony cruelty and the animals were seized [1] [2], and a 2025 East Bay incident where two women were arrested after video captured one kicking a small dog during a neighborhood dispute [3] [6].

2. Do kicks hit a dog’s scrotum? Anatomy and veterinary commentary

Veterinary commentary referenced in the reporting cautions that a dog’s scrotum is relatively protected compared with humans because of posture and conformation — dogs walk on four legs and the scrotum is less exposed and more mobile, making it harder to target and less likely to produce the same sensation as a human being kicked in the groin [7]; clinical literature also shows that severe genital injuries from animal attacks or bites are rare but do occur and are handled as surgical emergencies [8].

3. Documented testicular injuries and extreme canine genital trauma in medical literature

While news reports of people being injured by dogs’ bites to the genitals exist (human victims) and medical case reports document rare instances of severe genital trauma from animal predation or bites, the supplied academic case series and forensic report describe dog-related genital injuries as unusual events rather than common outcomes of human-directed kicks on dogs [9] [8].

4. Castration: veterinary practice, controversy, and one viral clinic video

Castration (neutering) of male dogs is a standard veterinary procedure discussed in clinical and regulatory sources and regulated in many jurisdictions; guidance describes medical indications and welfare considerations and notes legal controls on when gonadectomy may be permitted [10] [4]. Separately, a 2019 viral clip out of Singapore showed veterinary nurses handling and even juggling a dog’s surgically removed testicles, an episode reported by tabloids that sparked public disgust and ethical questions about professional conduct though it documents removal only in the context of veterinary surgery, not criminal mutilation [5].

5. Anecdotes, self‑defence narratives, and the limits of available evidence

Personal blog accounts and self‑defence conversations include descriptions of women learning to target testicles in humans and some extreme anecdotes about rupturing testicles in the context of neutering or assault [11], but those are anecdotal and not corroborated by formal reporting as instances of women intentionally injuring male dogs’ testicles; the supplied sources do not document a verified pattern of women purposely castrating dogs outside veterinary settings, and legal frameworks treat non‑medical castration or deliberate genital injury as potential animal cruelty or worse [12] [13].

6. Assessment and unanswered questions

The supplied reporting establishes several clear instances of women kicking and otherwise abusing dogs captured on video that resulted in arrests [1] [3], and it shows that legitimate castration is a regulated veterinary practice with rare publicized abuses inside clinics [4] [5]; however, the materials do not provide verified examples of women specifically and intentionally injuring a male dog’s testicles by kicking them or performing illegal castration outside of veterinary surgery, and the absence of such documentation in these sources means that any claim beyond what is cited would exceed the remit of the available reporting [7] [14].

Want to dive deeper?
What U.S. criminal cases document intentional genital injury to pets and how were they prosecuted?
How do veterinary boards investigate and discipline clinic staff for mishandling surgical specimens or unprofessional conduct?
What medical literature exists on treatment and outcomes after traumatic scrotal injuries in male dogs?