星空无限传媒

漏 2025 星空无限传媒
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Family of Ashville woman killed by dogs sues owners, Pickaway Co. dog warden and condo association

Three people sit at a wooden table with a box of tissues and three news microphones. Two women stand slightly behind them.
Allie Vugrincic
/
星空无限传媒
The family of Jo Ann Echelbarger of Ashville announce a wrongful death lawsuit Wednesday at Cooper Elliott Law Firm in Columbus. Echelbarger, 73, died after she was attacked by her neighbor's two pit bulls. Pictured from left, Echelbarger's daughter, Earlene Romine, attorney Kaela King, attorney Rex Elliott, Echelbarger's son and daughter-in-law, Bill and Tasha Rogers.

The family of a 73-year-old Ashville woman who was killed by two dogs in October is suing the dogs鈥 owners, as well as the Pickaway County dog warden, and the condominium association where the dogs鈥 owners lived.

In February, a jury found Susan Withers, 62, and her son, Adam Withers, 35, guilty of involuntary manslaughter in the fatal dog attack of Jo Ann Echelbarger. The Withers are being held in the Pickaway County Jail while they await sentencing.

Echelbarger was the Withers鈥 neighbor in Ashville when the Withers鈥 two pit bull terriers, Apollo and Echo, attacked her while she was gardening.

Police shot and killed the dogs during the attack.

The wrongful death civil lawsuit filed Wednesday in Pickaway County Common Pleas Court alleges that the Withers鈥 dogs had 鈥渢errorized the community for years鈥 and that the owners allowed them to roam free.

Rex Elliott, an attorney with the Columbus law firm Cooper Elliott, is representing Echelbarger鈥檚 estate. He said that while the suit names the Withers and several other parties, including the Pickaway County Dog Shelter, the main defendants are county Dog Warden Preston Schumacher, the Reserve at Ashton Village condo association, and the condo鈥檚 property manager, Towne Properties Asset Management.

At a news conference Wednesday, Elliott said the dog warden and the condo management company knew the Withers鈥 dogs were dangerous and didn鈥檛 do enough to remove them.

鈥淗ad the dog warden, the condominium association or the property management company done their jobs, Jo Ann would be alive and with her family today,鈥 Elliott said. He called Echelbarger鈥檚 death 鈥渢he most vicious and savage dog mauling in the history of the state.鈥

The legal complaint says that Echelbarger and her husband moved into the private condo community in June 2024 and that they were not warned about the Withers鈥 dogs, even though one pit bull had been declared a 鈥渄angerous dog鈥 one year before.

Photos of Jo Ann Echelbarger and her family are shown on a screen during a news event announcing a wrongful death lawsuit. Echelbarger, 73, of Ashville was gardening when she was attacked and killed by her neighbors' pitt bulls.
Allie Vugrincic
/
星空无限传媒
Photos of Jo Ann Echelbarger and her family are shown on a screen during a news event announcing a wrongful death lawsuit. Echelbarger, 73, of Ashville was gardening when she was attacked and killed by her neighbors' pitt bulls.

The condo association first issued a warning to the Withers in February 2015, then went on to issue six additional warnings: in May 2017; September 2020; April, May, and June 2021; and March 2022. One dog attacked a visitor in October 2023 and the other bit a visitor the following May, according to the complaint.

Elliott added that in one of those incidents, one of the Withers鈥 dogs seriously injured a woman and killed her dog.

鈥淒ogs do not show aggressive tendencies and then get better. They escalate,鈥 Elliott said. 鈥淎nd so, once that occurs, they're a ticking time bomb and you need to do something about that.鈥

In September, condo management got a court order to remove the two dogs, but the lawsuit alleges that management never followed through.

鈥淭he HOA had a responsibility to take that order to law enforcement and get those dogs out of there the day that it was issued,鈥 Elliott said.

The suit also claims that the Pickaway County dog wardens were 鈥渦ntrained, improperly trained, improperly supervised, and improperly retained to the point where the dog wardens were incapable of performing their duties in a non-reckless manner,鈥 and that wardens didn鈥檛 enforce dangerous dog requirements for the Withers鈥 pit bulls.

Three weeks before Echelbarger was attacked, police were called to the condo community because the two pit bulls had ingested cocaine, according to the lawsuit. It claims the dog wardens refused to come help a police officer.

The suit seeks more than $25,000 in damages. Echelbarger鈥檚 adult children said they also want to see changes in Pickaway County and beyond.

Echelbarger鈥檚 daughter, Earlene Romine, called her mother 鈥渢he rock of the family,鈥 and said she was extremely healthy and had many years of life ahead of her.

鈥淭his is not what you expect your parent to go through. This is not what you expect to happen to anyone you love. She did not deserve this. She was tortured and she suffered,鈥 Romine said.

The family and Elliott noted that Echelbarger was attacked by a dog as a child and as a result was afraid of dogs.

Echelbarger鈥檚 son, Bill Rogers, said Echelbarger moved to the condo to make her life easier as she took care of her husband, Stanley Echelbarger, who was suffering from dementia. He said the family didn鈥檛 know about the dogs when they moved in.

鈥淚t's awful. It's reckless. I feel like they were gambling with a lot of people's lives that day, and she (Echelbarger) was the one that paid the price,鈥 Rogers said.

The family and Elliott also said that Stanley Echelbarger鈥檚 health deteriorated quickly after his wife鈥檚 death, and that he is now in hospice.

鈥淲hat we're trying to do is send a message loud and clear that those responsible for policing these types of activities need to be more vigilant about what they do,鈥 Elliott said. 鈥淲e hope this message reverberates throughout the state of Ohio, so something like this doesn't happen again.鈥

Elliot added that a jury can only award in compensation, but the point of this case is to provoke change.

星空无限传媒 reached out to defendants in the case, but did not immediately hear back.

Allie Vugrincic has been a radio reporter at 星空无限传媒 89.7 NPR News since March 2023 and has been the station's mid-day radio host since January 2025.