Brittany Furlan, wife of Tommy Lee, says coyote tried to run off with her dog

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LOS ANGELES — Brittany Furlan, the comedian and wife of rocker Tommy Lee, says her dog’s extra flab saved it from being carried off by a coyote that snatched it near the pool of their Los Angeles home.

Ring surveillance camera video posted Tuesday to Instagram by Furlan shows the coyote snatching the small dog, Neena, from poolside and running out of frame while Furlan screams and follows.

“I climbed up the wall and grabbed her out of its mouth. Thank God she’s a little bit fat because he couldn’t make it over the wall with her,” Furlan wrote.

Furlan said on Instagram that Neena is safe.

Furlan and Lee, the famous co-founder of the band Mötley Crüe, are express shock at the animal encounter in the video.

Furlan wrote that the too-close encounter happened around 1 p.m. She said the incident occurred at the couple’s home in Brentwood, a neighborhood on the west side of Los Angeles near and in the Santa Monica Mountains, NBC Los Angeles reported.

Furlan said that she was shaken up but that she spoke to the station because "I just think it's such an important message" about the safety of pets in Southern California.

"We get lazy, and we go, 'You know, it's OK, it's 1 o'clock in the afternoon, nothing's going to happen,'" she said. "And this is what happens. Sometimes you just get too comfortable."

"Thank God, I always watch them," she told NBC Los Angeles.

coyote dashund grab neena brittany furlan petWhat was described as a coyote positions to grab Brittany Furlan's dog Neena from her backyard in the Brentwood neighborhood of Los Angeles on Tuesday.Courtesy Brittany Furlan

Coyotes are not an uncommon sight in parts of Los Angeles. They usually weigh 10 to 35 pounds, according to the California Department of Fish and Wildlife.

People are encouraged to not leave small pets outside unsupervised and to bring small pets inside at night to prevent coyote attacks. Trash and things like pet food can also attract coyotes.

The number of coyotes in California has been estimated at 250,000 to 750,000, according to the U.S. Forest Service.

The state Fish and Wildlife Department says on its website, “They have adapted to surviving, and often thriving, alongside humans in many California communities.”

Phil Helsel

Phil Helsel is a reporter for NBC News.

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