As soon as the dog was released, it was clear something was wrong."My baby," Arturo Arenas-Alvarez said in halting English as a Henderson police K9 ran toward his sport utility vehicle, which sat nearby in a parking lot. "I've got my baby.""There's an infant in that car! There's an infant in that car!" an officer yelled to his colleagues.It was too late. The Belgian Malinois had already gone into the SUV and bitten Arenas-Alvarez's 17-month-old daughter, Ayleen, on the right arm.She was left with nine punctures or abrasions, according to her family lawyer, but escaped serious injury.Henderson recently agreed to pay the girl's family $13,000 to settle a legal claim. After legal fees, $8,537.69 was put into a bank account for Ayleen. The money can't be removed without a court order.Police videos of the Jan. 30 incident show officers who ordered a confused Arenas-Alvarez out of his vehicle quickly concluded he wasn't the robbery suspect they were trying to find.But then Sgt. James Mitchell, who had arrived on the scene seconds earlier, got out of his cruiser and released his dog.In a recent interview, Police Chief Patrick Moers said Mitchell should have communicated better with fellow officers."In my opinion, the dog was used too fast," the chief said.Police recently turned over dash-cam videos of the incident, eight months after the Las Vegas Review-Journal first requested all records relating to the case. The videos, several hours of which were made available for viewing, show not only what happened, but how officers reacted in the immediate aftermath.Moers would not discuss the results of an internal investigation that was completed July 28, but said no policy changes have been made because of the case.Mitchell declined to comment through a department spokesman and referred questions to the chief. He remains a sergeant but moved from K9 to patrol in August, a move Moers said was voluntary.His 4-year-old dog, Doerak, has been assigned to a new officer.Moers said a police dog biting an innocent bystander was unprecedented in his time in the department. Henderson police dogs bite only a few people at most each year, usually suspects they've found who resist in some way, officials said.The city said it has not received a single other legal claim related to a dog bite since 2011.The videos and police report suggest a language barrier, confusion over what had happened inside the store and a lack of communication between officers contributed to the mistake.START AT 01:06