To commemorate the fast-approaching anniversary of the time it forcibly dragged a ticketed passenger off a plane, on Monday night United Airlines upped the ante by (accidentally!) murdering a dog. The animal, a French bulldog named Kokito, reportedly died at some point during a three-hour trip between Houston and New York, after a flight attendant made his owner shove him into an overhead compartment. While the company’s response was a step up from the time it blamed passenger David Dao for last year’s dragging incident—which left him with a concussion, a broken nose, and two missing teeth—not everyone is satisfied with the explanation that the flight attendant didn’t “hear or understand” the owner when she said the bag she was being forced to stow overhead had a living, breathing thing inside of it. And the people want justice for Kokito, dammit.

In addition to the Department of Transportation, which is launching an investigation into “the circumstances surrounding the recent death [of the pet],” the district attorney’s office in Harris County, Texas—where the flight took off—is probing the situation and United Airlines’ general animal-transportation practices. (According to CNN, United has cornered the market on pet deaths, with three times as many animals dying on its flights last year than all U.S. carriers combined.) In addition, Senator John Kennedy, who, it should be noted, wanted nothing to do with gun-control legislation in the wake of the Parkland shooting, introduced a bill on Thursday that would prohibit airlines from storing living animals in overhead bins and impose civil fines for doing so.

Also on Thursday, United Airlines admitted to shipping a Kansas-bound dog named Irgo to Japan by mistake, having confused the German shepherd for a Great Dane en route to Asia. According to Irgo’s owner, he was without food or water on the over-16-hour flight, and was never given his medication. In a statement, United said, “An error occurred during connections in Denver for two pets sent to the wrong destinations. We have notified our customers that their pets have arrived safely and will arrange to return the pets to them as soon as possible. We apologize for this mistake and are following up with the vendor kennel where they were kept overnight to understand what happened.”

White House: Trump is a hero for introducing tariffs

“It’s courageous what [Trump’s] doing, because he’s taking such heat from the swamp and all the usual suspects,” White House National Trade Council Director Peter Navarro told CNBC on Thursday. Navarro, who characterized the criticism of his boss as “not fair,” and who’s one of the few people who thinks the aluminum and steel tariffs are a good idea, said that the punitive measures don’t actually have to result in a trade war—if other countries just agree to just sit back and take it. “Our allies have got to understand that we’re simply defending ourselves against what’s been an unfair relationship for many, many years,“ Navarro said. “This is going to work out fine. The world’s going to be a better place.”

Happy Collapse of Bear Stearns Week!

To celebrate, the Senate passed a bill rolling back regulations put in place after the financial crisis: