VOLUSIA COUNTY, Fla. – Two women who owned dogs that Volusia deputies say killed an 8-year-old boy in DeLand had a hearing today as they prepare for trial. Deputies say Michael Millet was riding his bike last January when the dogs escaped from a nearby property and attacked him. Now, Michael’s family is urging prosecutors to push for stronger charges.
The two dog owners skipped court Tuesday and let their lawyers speak for them. It was supposed to be the final hearing before trial, but the trial has been pushed back after new evidence was just submitted.
At the same time, the Millet family has made a new push for justice.
“This was a preventable death — at the end of the day, that’s what this is. My son should still be here,” said Tiffani Connell, Michael’s mother.
[BELOW: New charges for both owners of dogs that mauled boy to death in DeLand]
Connell has formally asked prosecutors to reexamine the case and consider more charges.
In January 2025, Michael was attacked by two dogs that escaped.
The dog owners, Amanda Franco and Brandi Hodil, face felony tampering charges for deleting Facebook messages about the dogs’ troubles.
Connell said they should also be charged with manslaughter for culpable negligence.
“Her yard was not fenced in properly. Both of those things were in writing,” Connell said.
Body camera footage just sent to News 6 shows the dogs running near the scene after the attack. It was part of the prosecutors’ original discovery list that News 6 requested.
News 6 also obtained screenshots of the deleted conversations.
They show a history of neighbors telling Franco the dogs got out.
One message from November 2024 shows Franco talking about the dogs escaping their property and attacking and killing neighbor’s chickens. Then, messages from the day of the attack show Hodil surprised the dogs got out again and attacked.
The state attorney’s office said prosecutors reviewed the case for months, considering manslaughter charges but they concluded there was not enough evidence to prove culpable negligence beyond a reasonable doubt — a must for manslaughter — and they are bound by Florida statutes and laws.
Their statement said, “Culpable negligence requires proof that a person wantonly and consciously followed a course of conduct that the defendant knew, or reasonably should have known, was likely to cause death or great bodily injury to another.”
“I think any other parent would do the same thing. Your child is killed, he no longer has a voice so I’m his voice and I just won’t stop fighting for him,” Connell said.
With the trial delayed for these tampering charges, the case returns to court in March for an update, with a new trial date tentatively set for April.