Thursday, December 31, 2009

CA: Assailant attacks, kills Orange County woman's schnauzer

Assailant attacks, kills Orange County woman's schnauzer

December 30, 2009 |  1:56 pm
A 26-year-old San Clemente man killed a dog today, the Orange County Sheriff’s Department said, then ran naked through a tennis club where he poured hot water on himself.

Deputies responded around 6:15 a.m. to several reports of a woman screaming at the intersection of Calle Del Cerro and Calle Venezia, where a man had grabbed a woman’s mini schnauzer and beat, choked and slammed the dog into the sidewalk, said Sheriff's Sgt. Dan Walsh.

Minutes later, deputies received a separate call that a man was running naked at the Rancho San Clemente Tennis Club at 111 Avenida Vista Montana.  Arriving deputies found the man lying on ground and took him  into custody, Walsh said.

The man, identified by sheriff's officials as Bayron Reyes Lopez, was taken to a hospital.

The owner of the miniature schnauzer later identified Lopez as her attacker, Walsh said. After being treated, Lopez was taken to county jail in Santa Ana and booked on suspicion of animal cruelty and other charges.
-- Ruben Vives

Source: http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2009/12/assailant-attacks-kills-orange-county-womans-mini-schnauzer-dog-.html

Wednesday, December 30, 2009

CA: More California Chihuahuas to be transported out of state for adoption in response to shelter glut

More California Chihuahuas to be transported out of state for adoption in response to shelter glut

December 30, 2009 |  1:42 pm
Chihuahua A local organization plans to transport 35 Chihuahuas  to new adoptive homes in Colorado this week. It's an increasingly popular solution to the overabundance of Chihuahuas in California animal shelters.

SpcaLA, a private rescue organization that operates adoption centers in Long Beach and Hawthorne, is the latest group to move adoptable Chihuahuas to other parts of the country where there are fewer small dogs to be found in animal shelters. 

Actress Katharine Heigl's foundation recently arranged the transport of nearly 70 Chihuahuas to a New Hampshire humane society, which found new homes for each of them almost immediately.  SpcaLA was able to afford to move the dogs thanks to a private donor, Leslie Capin, who recently won $1 million in Paw Nation's Cutest Dog Competition and decided to use the money to help pets in need.  Pet Airways, the animals-only airline that launched earlier this year, offered a discounted fare.  Their flight is scheduled to depart Thursday morning from Hawthorne Municipal Airport. A Denver-based rescue organization will arrange for them to be adopted in Colorado, where shelters are crammed with larger dogs but few small ones are available for adoption. 

Proponents of the plan to transport Chihuahuas to other states argue that doing so is a way of killing two birds with one stone.  "By moving the supply to the demand, we are negating the need for purchasing from an unscrupulous backyard breeder or puppy mill and reducing the current population of Chihuahuas" in California shelters, spcaLA President Madeline Bernstein explained. 

But some fear that dogs adopted in far-off states will not have a similar safety net to those adopted from local rescue organizations -- which typically provide ongoing support to new pet owners and will take back a previously adopted animal if things don't work out.  But Chihuahua-transport supporters believe that, by working with reputable rescue groups in the states to which the dogs are sent, they can ensure that adopters have knowledgeable local advisers to turn to if they need help with their new pets.

According to Kathy Davis, interim general manager of Los Angeles Animal Services, the city's municipal animal shelters take in more than 300 Chihuahuas each month.  Shelters in the San Francisco Bay Area report similar numbers, with many in the rescue community placing at least part of the blame for the number of owner-surrendered Chihuahuas on pop culture.  "We call it the Paris Hilton syndrome," Deb Campbell, a spokeswoman for the San Francisco animal care and control department, said in an interview with The Times' Maria L. La Ganga

RELATED:
Keep this pet living at home, thanks to your sponsorship. Yes, we can!
Shelter dogs turned stars in '101 Dalmatians' musical

-- Lindsay Barnett

Source:  http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/unleashed/2009/12/more-california-chihuahuas-to-be-transported-out-of-state-for-adoption-in-response-to-shelter-glut.html
Photo: Kenya, a male Chihuahua available for adoption through spcaLA.  Credit: spcaLA

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

AZ: Sheriff: 4 arrested in 3 separate animal abuse cases

Sheriff: 4 arrested in 3 separate animal abuse cases
Reported by: Deborah Stocks
Email: dstocks@abc15.com
Last Update: 5:20 pm

MESA, AZ -- Authorities say four people in Maricopa County have been arrested on charges of animal cruelty and neglect.

The Maricopa County Sheriff's Office says the arrests were made in three separate cases after detectives received information from separate sources.

Mesa residents Terrance Carrol, 54, and Debi Carrol, 41, were arrested on four counts of animal cruelty. Detectives made the arrests with the help of Alta Vista Animal Hospital, according to authorities.

Also arrested was Gila Bend resident Jeannetta Berry and Mesa resident Jorge Gonzales. Their ages were not released by officials.

Berry and Gonzales were also arrested on animal cruelty charges Tuesday.

Source: http://www.abc15.com/content/news/southeastvalley/mesa/story/Sheriff-4-arrested-in-3-separate-animal-abuse/k12Wf0z1VUWUfueiCXfftg.cspx

MD: Maryland one of the best states to be an animal abuser

Maryland one of the best states to be an animal abuser
December 29, 2009
Posted by Jill Rosen at 10:12AM

There are a lot of year-end wrap up lists out there, but this one has to be among the bleakest. The Animal Legal Defense Fund compiled its list of the states where it's not so bad to be an animal abuser, the places where the cruelty laws don't have teeth and an abuser might not be prosecuted.

The states are: Hawaii, Idaho, Kentucky, Mississippi, and North Dakota. The organization points to Kentucky as the single worst state in the nation for animal protection laws.

Maryland, by the way, is on the bottom tier. That's pretty bad. Pretty embarrassing, actually.

The report states: Why are these five states in the dog house when it comes to getting tough on animal abuse? The legislative weaknesses seen in the states at the bottom of the animal protection barrel include severely restricted or absent felony animal cruelty provisions, inadequate animal fighting provisions, and lack of restrictions on the future ownership of animals for those convicted of cruelty to animals.

Source: http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/features/mutts/blog/2009/12/the_best_states_to_be_an_anima.html

UK: Police Return Dog to Owner

UK: Police Return Dog to Owner

Pharr resident  Jhovanna Vesga reported her 7 month old English Bulldog puppy Chad missing on 12/17 and police returned him to her just 2 days later after saving him from a suspected dog fighting ring.

Chad is microchipped and registered with HelpmefindMYPET, a national pet recovery service with an 87% success rate in reuniting lost or stolen pets with their rightful owners. Helpmefindmypet provided Vesga with lost pet alert flyers and sent out an alert in a 50 mile radius of her home. A resident who received a flyer called and told her they knew who had her dog. She was offering a $1000 reward but the good Samaritan declined it, saying that he had kids himself.

Vesga confronted the person that was suspected of having the dog, and he denied it. She then contacted the police who approached the suspect and were able to get the puppy from him. Police returned Chad to Vesga on 12/19.

The puppy had infected bite wounds on his neck and it appears that the person that stole him may have been using him as a bait in an illegal dog fighting ring. Vesga said that the person who had him also had several other pit bull-type dogs present. Chad’s vet expects him to make a full recovery.

Vesga’s husband William is currently serving in Iraq and is relieved that his children’s dog is home safe for the holidays.

Source: http://www.themonitor.com/articles/return-33949-dog-owner.html

CO: Pit Bull Attacks Dad, Daughter In Douglas County

Pit Bull Attacks Dad, Daughter In Douglas County
Dec 29, 2009 12:47 pm US/Mountain
Reporting: Brooke Rogers

DOUGLAS COUNTY, Colo. (CBS4) - The Douglas County Sheriff's Department says charges will be filed against the owner of a pit bull that attacked two people over the weekend.

A woman and her father were attacked near Roxborough Park.  The attack happened Sunday morning when the daughter was walking a friend's dog on Ponderosa Trail near her parents' home. The pit bull attacked the dog and then bit her and her father.

"The daughter initially fended off the first dog attack," Deputy Attila Denes said. "She then called her father to help load the animal into a vehicle to take to the vet. At that point the pitbull resumed its attack and bit both of them."

The pit bull is now being quarantined at the Buddy Center in Castle Rock.  The daughter suffered a broken finger. Her father has puncture wounds.

There is no ban on pit bulls in Douglas County.

"There is a good possibility some charges will be filed, but at this point that hasn't been determined," said Denes.

The dog that was attacked by the pit bull was treated by a veterinarian and is back home.

(© MMIX CBS Television Stations, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)

Source: http://cbs4denver.com/local/pitbull.attack.father.2.1395738.html

=================================

Douglas Co. pit bull seized after attacks
By Howard Pankratz
The Denver Post
Posted: 12/28/2009 04:10:17 PM MST
Updated: 12/28/2009 04:41:53 PM MST

A young pit bull was seized Sunday after it allegedly attacked a dog, a woman and her father in the Roxborough community.  The woman was walking in the 4600 block of Ponderosa Trail when the 8- to 10-month-old pit bull attacked her dog, a Hungarian hunting dog called a vizsla, said Joe Stafford, the field services manager for Douglas County Animal Services.

Stafford said that when the woman and her father intervened and attempted to load the vizsla into a vehicle, the pit bull attacked a second time, biting the woman on the thumb and her father on the hand and forearm.  Stafford said that his officers responded and apprehended the pit bull, which is now in quarantine.  He said that the injuries to the vizsla, the woman and her father were not life-threatening.

Stafford said the owner of the pit bull lives near Roxborough, but is currently out of town.  Stafford said charges will be filed, but just how severe they will be depend on the extent of the injuries inflicted by the pit bull.

He said that pit bulls are not banned in Douglas County and there was no previous history of problems with the pit bull.  Stafford said charges could be petty offenses such as "animal at large" or "failure to control a vicious animal."  A more serious charge could potentially be filed called "unlawful ownership of a dangerous dog."

Stafford said that Douglas County has about 180 dog bite cases a year and that less than 1 percent involve pit bulls. He said dog owners in Douglas County tend to be good owners and pit bulls living there are well-behaved.

Howard Pankratz: 303-954-1939 or hpankratz@denverpost.com

Read more: http://www.denverpost.com/ci_14082331#ixzz0b7lKBEBW

ND: Dog is abandoned - Three-legged dog is left at a local business


Dog is abandoned - Three-legged dog is left at a local business
By Nick Smith
Staff Writer
Published/Last Modified on Tuesday, December 29, 2009 10:35 AM CST

Employees at a Williston business returned to work after the holiday weekend to be greeted by an unexpected three-legged donation in its drop-off area.  An employee at The Wise Penny thrift store on West Broadway found a German Shorthaired Pointer behind the business Monday morning.

Bev Talian of the Opportunity Foundation and an employee at The Wise Penny said the dog sat in the store's caged-in area where donations are dropped off.  Talian said employee Crystal Davis first spotted the dog shortly after 8 a.m. while opening the store.  Talian isn't sure how long the dog had been there, but said he could have been placed in the cage any time between 5 p.m. on Thursday and 8 a.m. on Monday. "It was very thirsty and very hungry. We went out right away and got food and water for it," said Talian.

Talian said the dog is a male with three legs. Aside from it missing one leg, she said the dog was otherwise in fairly good health.  "Someone obviously took care of it when it lost its leg at some point in the past. It's healed and in good shape," said Talian.

Talian said she was shocked and very disappointed that someone would try to abandon a fairly healthy young dog by leaving it in a drop-off cage for donations.  She added the back area where donations are left isn't heated and the dog was subjected to cold temperatures for however long it was there.

Talian said she and employees at The Wise Penny spent Monday morning trying to warm the dog and feed him. She said they were trying to place calls to the Humane Society and local pet stores to see if anyone could take the dog.  Talian also said they hoped to be able to pass on the dog to a local entity by the end of the day so a new home could be found.  "It's a very good looking dog," said Talian.

This is the second time pets have been left at an area business in recent weeks. A few weeks ago, six puppies were left in a box outside of Williston's Pets N Stuff. Talian added a puppy was left at the thrift store the same day the puppies were left at Pets N Stuff.  She said it's cruel to be abandoning pets in the cold and people should drop them off somewhere safe like a pet store instead of being abandoned overnight.

Copyright © 2009 Williston Herald

Source: http://www.willistonherald.com/articles/2009/12/29/news/doc4b3a2db5a6817575049396.txt

OH: Animal Neglect Case in Columbiana County



OH: Animal Neglect Case in Columbiana County

Humane agents removed 15 dogs from a South Egypt Road residence in Salem township Tuesday morning. All were Australian Shepards that mostly lived in outdoor pens. This follows over a year of efforts by agents to get the owner to improve living conditions for the animals. Ten dogs were removed previously. The owner may face up to 15 charges of animal neglect. Police believe he was breeding the dogs. They will all be placed in foster care. The investigation remains ongoing.

More details here and on our broadcasts as they become available.

Source:  http://www.wytv.com/content/news/local/story/Animal-Neglect-Case-in-Columbiana-County/8dOvcTxpj0q_xf7VmAk-Rw.cspx

Canada: Staff return to Toronto Humane Society for first time since November raids

Staff return to Toronto Humane Society for first time since November raids
TORONTO — Toronto Humane Society staff re-entered the facility today for the first time since the animal shelter was raided last month.  However, the facility remains closed to the public and there is no word on when that will change.

The Ontario Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals searched the shelter in November and uncovered several alleged cases of animal neglect.
The society's former president, Tim Trow, and four senior employees were arrested and charged with animal cruelty.

THS president Bob Hambley says he is pleased the court has recognized that the "unending occupation of the THS had to stop."  He also says in a statement that staff are "very happy to be returning" to the facility to resume business operations.  Hambley adds that he will not deal with legal matters in the media but in the courts. A court action was filed last week by the Humane Society accusing the OSPCA of defamation, trespass and negligent investigation.

"This has been a difficult five weeks for all of us as we have been prevented from doing what we always strive to do, which is to treat sick, injured and abandoned animals," said Hambley.

"We look forward to updating everyone on when the THS will reopen to the public again and recommence adoptions.

OR: Pet Talk: Animal-protection laws put Oregon among top 5 states

Pet Talk: Animal-protection laws put Oregon among top 5 states

By Jacques Von Lunen, Special to The Oregon...

December 29, 2009, 4:18AM
puppy-mill-bill.JPGView full size THOMAS BOYD/ Tucker, a Chihuahua mix whose mother was rescued from a puppy mill, and owner Terri Rise attend a March 30 rally at the state Capitol in Salem in support of House Bill 2470. The law, which takes effect Friday, aims to stop puppy mills, in the words of demonstrators' signs. Anyone exploiting, neglecting or abusing animals will have an even harder time in Oregon come Friday.

A number of new animal laws will take effect Jan.1 in Oregon, which the Animal Legal Defense Fund ranks among the nation's top five states for going after animal abusers.

This year's legislative session debated 16 bills concerning animals, an unprecedented number. Some bills -- the umpteenth attempt to ban pit bulls, for example -- died on the vine. Some deal only with the finer points of enforcing animal law.

But six of the bills the governor signed are of direct concern to animal owners. Here's a look at the most profound changes.

Puppy mills

Surely the most controversial of the bills debated last spring was H.B. 2470, dubbed the puppy-mill bill. Hotly contested in public hearings, the final legislation didn't contain all the measures its proponents wanted to keep irresponsible breeders from churning out sick, unsocialized dogs.

But it put a number of restrictions on Oregon breeders, all designed to combat the conditions found in puppy mills.

Most controversially, the law limits the number of sexually intact dogs anyone can own. Breeders cannot have more than 50 of such dogs older than 2.

The law mandates the care dogs receive in a breeder's kennel. Dogs must get at least one hour of exercise a day. They must have enough room to turn, sit, stand and lie down without touching the walls or another dog. They can't be kept in stacked cages and they must have solid flooring.

The law requires breeders and sellers of dogs to maintain strict health records.

Within 15 days of a purchase, sellers must offer a refund or a replacement pup to owners whose dogs are diseased. Within one year of a purchase, buyers can get a refund or replacement for a dog with birth defects that limit its life.

Sellers must disclose a dog's origins, including how many litters the breeder sold the previous year. It remains to be seen how effective this law will be. Two states that have such laws show two possible outcomes.

Virginia, first in the nation to enact a similar law a year ago, has barely made use of the new tool, the Waynesboro News Virginian reported. One high-volume breeder was shut down this year, but authorities didn't use the puppy-mill law to bust him. Instead, he was accused of animal cruelty.

Pennsylvania, infamous for having many puppy mills, reports dramatic changes since a new law went on the books last fall. In Lancaster County alone, 52 kennels have either closed or announced they'll do so by the end of the year, the York Daily Record/Sunday News reported.

Source: http://www.oregonlive.com/pets/index.ssf/2009/12/pet_talk_animal-protection_law.html

Canada: Dogs rescued from illegal Taiwan meat factory

Canada: Dogs rescued from illegal Taiwan meat factory

Rescued in Taiwan, brought to Island

Vixen on a Christmas walk in Cowichan Bay, a world away from the illegal Taiwanese meat factory, where the chubby Siberian husky was being fattened up as a dinner entrée.
Vixen on a Christmas walk in Cowichan Bay, a world away from the illegal Taiwanese meat factory, where the chubby Siberian husky was being fattened up as a dinner entrée.
Photo Credit: Island Dogz Rescue, Courtesy

In her four years of life, Vixen has seen a lifetime of horror.  The chubby Siberian husky, now in foster care in Duncan, was being fattened up as a Taiwanese dinner delicacy when she was rescued from an illegal meat factory by an extreme group of Taiwan-based animal rescuers known as the Compassionate Mamas.

"It's hard to look at her and think they were going to eat her," said Gem Zolciak founder of Island Dogz Rescue, who is fostering Vixen.  The dog already has lost almost three kilograms and is now a relatively svelte 25 kg (55 pounds). Her hips and back are slowly recovering strength after being kept in a small cage.

Vixen is among three dogs brought to Vancouver Island from Taiwan by Island Dogz this month. They represent the first shipment from Taichung Universal Animal Protection Association, a no-kill shelter that takes in stray and abandoned dogs, including those rescued from meat factories.  At the shelter, six volunteers care for more than 1,000 dogs.

Eating dogs and cats has been discouraged in Taiwan for two decades. A 2001 law banned the killing of dogs for skin or meat. Legal loopholes were then closed by a 2004 law banning the sale of dogs as food, but underground markets still exist.  The laws are rarely enforced, said a spokeswoman for the Taichung group.

Some dogs are "farmed." Others are snatched off the street and stuffed into tiny cages until they are killed.  "Some people feel the adrenaline coursing through the body makes the meat taste better and the dogs are tortured before they are killed," Zolciak said.

Taichung group volunteer Johanna Quinn, who arranges dog shipments to rescue organizations in Canada, the U.S and Germany, said the Compassionate Mamas go on random, night-time raids when they hear of a factory and then turn the dogs over to rescue organizations.  Others go in undercover and buy the dogs, Quinn said.

In addition to Vixen, Mooch, a nine-year-old malamute cross, and Heidi, a nine-month-old mixed- breed puppy, are in foster care in the Cowichan Valley.  "I could bring 100 dogs here if I had the foster homes. We foster them before we adopt them out so we can assess their personalities," Zolciak said.

Dogs brought to Vancouver Island are checked by veterinarians and fully immunized. They are shipped from Taiwan in crates with canine amenities, usually accompanied by a human caregiver.

jlavoie@tc.canwest.com

Source: http://www.globaltvbc.com/entertainment/Dogs+rescued+from+illegal+Taiwan+meat+factory/2388894/story.html

UK: Warning after two dogs rescued from icy lakes

UK: Warning after two dogs rescued from icy lakes
By Steve Lloyd
December 29, 2009

DOG owners are being warned about the dangers of frozen water after two pets were rescued from area lakes.  The first rescue was on December 21 when fire fighters were called to a dog stuck in ice at Hawley Lake near Farnborough at 11.37am.  The border collie was being walked by her owners and had chased ducks across the frozen water.  She managed to scramble around 30 metres across the ice before loosing her footing, falling into the water and becoming trapped in the ice.

Fire engines from Yateley and Rushmoor were called to the lake, along with a multi-role vehicle containing specialist equipment and animal rescue kit.  Two fire fighters in special dry suits made their way out to the tired dog on two inflated ice-rescue paths.  Martin Walters of Hampshire Fire and Rescue Service said the dog was trapped in the water for around 20 minutes.  “She showed extraordinary endurance and the ongoing encouragement from the fire fighters must certainly have helped her in these treacherous conditions,” he added.

A similar incident happened on Christmas Eve at 11.21am when a male spaniel chased ducks onto an ice-covered Fleet Pond before falling through the water.  Fire fighters wearing protective clothing waded out around 20 metres to reach the dog.  A total of 18 fire fighters from Fleet and Rushmoor helped with the rescue.  Mr Walters added:  “The fire fighters have worked well in cold and perilous conditions.

“During the freezing weather it is important for owners to ensure their dogs are kept on leads at all times so that this kind of incident can be avoided.”  Hampshire Fire and Rescue Service is also warning people not to venture onto the ice or throw animals toys onto or near frozen water.


Source: http://www.gethampshire.co.uk/news/s/2063179_warning_after_two_dogs_rescued_from_icy_lakes

CT: Top Ten Crimes

CT: Top Ten Crimes

Cock-fighting and dog-fighting get more headlines, but a police raid in Shelton in July uncovers a much less well-known combination of animal abuse and betting, bird-fighting. 

Nineteen people, eight of them Danbury residents, are arrested on cruelty to animal and illegal gambling charges, nearly $8,000 in cash is seized, and some 150 saffron finches and canaries are confiscated in a case that puts the national spotlight on an activity virtually unknown previously.

Investigators believe the fights, which draw gamblers from Massachusetts, New York and New Jersey, as well as Connecticut, have been going on for years and also take place in Danbury.

Source: http://www.connpost.com/news/article/Top-10-crimes-300621.php

Monday, December 28, 2009

MO: Animal Welfare Groups Propose Ballot Measure to Tighten Rules for Missouri Dog Breeders

MO: Animal Welfare Groups Propose Ballot Measure to Tighten Rules for Missouri Dog Breeders
By Chris Blank
The Associated Press

JEFFERSON CITY | Several animal welfare groups are urging Missouri voters to adopt new rules for dog-breeders that cap the number of dogs, require rest periods after breeding and establish care requirements.

Under the proposal, dog-breeders could only have 50 breeding dogs and would be required to feed animals daily, provide annual veterinary care and not breed animals more than twice every 18 months. Breeders also would have to follow rules for the dogs’ living space and house animals indoors with unfettered access to an outdoor exercise yard.

The rules would apply to people with at least 10 dogs for breeding. Violators could be charged with a misdemeanor and face up to 15 days in jail and a $300 fine.

The Missouri secretary of state’s office Monday approved a ballot summary for two initiative petitions involving dog-breeding. That means supporters can begin collecting signatures for the 2010 ballot. They need about 100,000 signatures by May 2.

The dog-breeding ballot measure is backed by Missourians for the Protection of Dogs — a coalition comprised of the Humane Society of Missouri, Missouri Alliance for Animal Legislation, the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals and The Humane Society of the United States.

Critics said Monday they plan to challenge the petition in court and contend the proposal could harm dogs by creating the same set of rules without considering differences between breeds.

For example, opponents say exercise requirements could pose problems by forcing large dogs with thick coats to be outside during the summer and small dogs with thin coats to be outside during the winter. Also, the mandatory rest periods between litters could lead to dangerous infections.

If approved by voters, the new breeding rules would be called the “Puppy Mill Cruelty Prevention Act.” Animal groups say Missouri is a national leader in “puppy mills” with thousands of inhumane dog-breeding businesses.

Ginger Steinmetz, the executive director for the Missouri Alliance of Animal Legislation, said Missourians want dog-breeding laws strengthened. Steinmetz said Monday that some of the most important changes would be requiring a solid floor underneath dogs and barring the stacking of cages.

“This measure will mean less suffering for thousands of adult breeding dogs, which currently spend their entire lives in wire cages,” she said in a written statement. “As the leading puppy-producing state, Missouri should also lead the nation when it comes to the conditions under which puppies are bred for sale.”

Karen Strange, a leader for the Missouri Federation of Animal Owners that opposes the ballot measure, said Missouri’s existing laws are adequate and should be enforced. Strange said nearly every dog-breeder in the state would need to make changes to comply with the proposed rules and that capping the number of dogs inhibits ownership rights.

“What this measure does is one-size-fits-all,” she said. “There is a huge difference between a Chihuahua and a Great Dane, and one size does not fit all.”

The secretary of state’s office on Monday also approved ballot summaries for several versions of an initiative petition to limit an earnings tax on those who work in cities such as St. Louis and Kansas City but live elsewhere.

According to a cost estimate prepared for the ballot measure, Kansas City expects to collect $199 million from its earning tax this year and St. Louis has budgeted $141 million.

Posted on Mon, Dec. 28, 2009 04:35 PM

Source: http://www.kansascity.com/news/politics/story/1653334.html

AR: Alleged Dog Attack Leaves Trumann Woman Scarred

AR: Alleged Dog Attack Leaves Trumann Woman Scarred
Posted: Dec 28, 2009
by Stan Morris e-mail | Twitter

TRUMANN, AR (KAIT) - A Trumann woman says she experienced one of the scariest moments of her life on the night before Christmas. That's when she describes a horrible dog attack that left her knee torn completely open.

Ollie Lawless says she heard cries for help. When she opened the door, a woman and her small child stood asking for help. The child had been attacked by a dog, according to animal control. They asked Lawless to use her phone to dial 911, so she let them in as she describes.  But the door wasn't pulled shut and moments later, Lawless says the same dog that attacked the girl charged into her home and went directly for her. She says she was sitting down when the dog latched its jaws into her knee, tearing it open.  "I was sitting in the chair over there and he just started attacking," said Ollie Lawless.

She is angry not just due to the attack but because she says she reported the dog to the city multiple times and it was allowed to remain free. She describes the dog as being aggressive toward children on many occasions but says it remained at the home, outside on a chain.

Trumann City Employee Billy Ray Williams, who is one of the individuals who has animal control responsibilities, says he had gone to the pit bull owner's home before. "I have been out to talk to the people about putting their dog up," he said, but he adds that they did not heed his warnings.  Region 8 News could not get a comment on the incident from anyone in the home where the dog lived.

But Ollie Lawless's stance on the incident is crystal clear, "I think the dog should have been dead because we have called the dog pound numerous times about this dog."

©2009 KAIT All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Source: http://www.kait8.com/Global/story.asp?S=11739218

AZ: Glendale Police Kill 2 Pit Bulls

AZ: Glendale Police Kill 2 Pit Bulls
By Dustine Gardiner
December 28, 2009 6:07PM
The Arizona Republic

Glendale police shot and killed two pit bulls Monday after the dogs tried to attack a boy and the officers.

Police responded to a dog attack call in the neighborhood near 71st and Orangewood avenues at about 4 p.m. Residents said that the dogs had been chasing a juvenile on a bicycle.

Once on the scene, officers found the dogs to be similarly aggressive and shot them out of self defense, said Detective Mark Lankford, a spokesman for Glendale police.  One of the dogs was run over.  "The dog survived (being run down) and was still aggressive, so he (the officer) got out and shot it," Lankford said.  Lankford said the owner of the dogs has previously been cited for letting the animals loose.

Source: http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/2009/12/28/20091228gl-pitbulls1228.html

MA: COMPLAINTS PART OF KENNEL BUSINESS

Pet peeves
COMPLAINTS PART OF KENNEL BUSINESS

Picture
Dr. Susan B. Gillham left and animal assistant Rebecca Keddy tend to David Barsoum's French bulldog Abigail. Mr. Barsoum alleges Laughlin Kennels sold him a sick puppy. (T&G Staff Photos/DAN GOULD)


Picture
Robert Fink, left, his wife, Bridggette, and employees Manuel Hamlin and Christopher Basiul play with some dogs at Laughlin Kennels.
Enlarge photo
Picture

OXFORD —  David Barsoum of Westboro alleges Laughlin Kennel sold him a sick puppy.

He is one of a number of people who have complained about getting sick pets from the kennel on Larned Road during the 17 years it has been in business.

The owners of the kennel say the business has been targeted through the years by activists and critics who suggest they run a “puppy mill.” Robert and Bridggette Fink say they have been responsive to Mr. Barsoum's complaint.

Michael Cahill, director of the Division of Animal Health for the state Department of Agricultural Resources, finds no fault with Laughlin Kennel. He said it is a successful business, selling as many as 30 to 40 puppies a week, according to the store owners. With that volume of sales, Mr. Cahill said, some customers will be unhappy.

“When you're dealing with … animals, there are unforeseen circumstances and you can run into problems that you wouldn't necessarily be aware were present at the time of sale,” Mr. Cahill said. “Because they do such a large number of animals, regardless of the circumstances, a certain percentage of them may have a problem.”

If the animal looks healthy as it goes out the door — and has a valid health certificate from a veterinarian — a store can't be faulted, Mr. Cahill said.

As for Mr. Barsoum, he bought the puppy Oct. 7 for $2,034 and said he has spent $2,500 in veterinary bills as of earlier this month. He wants reimbursement for the expenses and suggested a scathing article be written by Christmas — so that a child wouldn't wind up with a sick dog as a present.

The Finks offer a different story line:

“Sometime in the next month or so, somebody is going to buy a dog,” Mr. Fink said. “After they buy it, it will become ill. They will get a vet bill. They won't like that. They'll think I should pay it. I won't pay it.”

The store gives a standard 14-day health guarantee. The customer signs a contract that says the animal is in good health to the best of the store's knowledge. But if a vet finds something wrong within two weeks of the sale, the customer can return it for a full refund or replacement animal.

Mrs. Fink said it is less expensive for her store to take care of a dog if it's returned. Otherwise, they have no control over what vet is chosen, or the vet's competence, decision-making and style.

Just as you wouldn't return a sick child, Mr. Barsoum argues, you wouldn't return a sick dog.

Mr. Cahill agrees, saying dissatisfied customers usually won't return a sick dog to a store. People get attached to the animal, unlike, for example, a defective appliance, he said. Unfortunately, however, the same rule applies: Returning the animal is the only recourse.

The real problem, Mr. Cahill said, is “how do you set up sort of a foolproof warranty so that it benefits the animals and it allows the store to continue to operate?”

Mr. Fink points to a line in the company's standard contract that says Laughlin Kennel doesn't pay vet bills.

“Return the dog for a refund and we'll take care of it,” Mr. Fink said. “If you want it back, we'll resell it to you. In the meantime, it has to be our dog. I can't take care of somebody else's dog.”

For 4 percent of the puppy's cost, the kennel offers a one-year guaranty. It will replace the puppy if there's something physically wrong with the animal that it disqualifies it as a pet — such as hip dysplasia or a heart murmur. Mr. Barsoum opted against that protection.

A letter from Mr. Barsoum's veterinarian, Dr. Susan B. Gillham of Westboro, said his French bulldog, Abigail, had shipping fever.

During an Oct. 14 examination, seven days after Mr. Barsoum bought the dog, the puppy was found to have serous nasal discharge and was given amoxicillin. Mr. Barsoum said Abigail will have permanent lung scarring.

Several more vet visits followed. On Dec. 14, the puppy's white blood cell count was elevated and her doses of medicine were increased, Mr. Barsoum said.

Mrs. Fink said Mr. Barsoum's veterinarian treated Abigail no differently than hers would have, but “we would have started (treatment) much sooner.”“He's going to keep (the puppy) and make us pay his vet bills,” Mr. Fink said. “That's not my agreement with him. That's not the agreement the state makes me make. That's not the law.”

Mr. Fink says fewer than 1 percent of his customers are dissatisfied..

“We do a lot to avoid selling sick dogs,” Mr. Fink said. “It's like a day care. There will be respiratory infections going around.”

The store has 11 rooms for the dogs. Fresh air is funneled into each one, and stale air goes out, Mr. Fink said. The Finks showed the area to a reporter, although it is off-limits to customers. Mrs. Fink said a shipment of dogs stays together as long as possible, which cuts down on cross-contamination.

The store has an A-minus rating with the Better Business Bureau. Over the last three years, the bureau has received 16 complaints.

Source:  http://www.telegram.com/article/20091228/NEWS/912280349/1101

MO: Puppy Mill Broker Caught in Insecticide Scam

Puppy Mill Broker Caught in Insecticide Scam

The U.S. Environment Protection Agency (EPA) has announced that Hunte Kennel Systems and Animal Care Inc., a division of Hunte Corporation, the largest U.S. wholesaler-distributor, and also an international broker, of puppies, has agreed to pay a $56,632 civil penalty.

Hunte is paying the penalty to settle charges the company illegally sold an insecticide meant for use on cows and pigs as a flea and tick treatment for dogs. Hunte is said to have repackaged and relabeled the insecticide, Prolate/Lintox-HD, and sold it under the name Paramite.

This scam is said to have violated the federal Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act.

The Hunte Corporation breeds and raises puppies and also buys puppies from puppy mills and sells them to pet stores including to the notorious Petland and has been named as a co-conspirator in a scheme to sell sick puppies from puppy mills to the public.  The puppies that even Hunte believes are not well enough or in good enough condition for sale to pet stores are sold thru newspaper ads, the internet or at flea markets. Hunte also sells puppies for research and sends them to other countries for other uses.

Go here for a look at the USDA's many citations of Hunte for violations of the Animal Welfare Act regulations. (Look at the Breeder and Dealer categories, under H for Hunte Corporation and T for  The Hunte Corporation.) 

Take a look here at an investigation of Hunte Corporation by the Companion Animal Protection Society.

In 2003 Hunte was cited by the Missouri Dept. of Natural Resources for dumping dead puppies on its property in violation of the state Clean Water and Waste Management law.

In 2006 60 puppies were killed in a truck fire, and in 2007 94 puppies were jeopardized in another truck fire.  The puppies were caged in Hunte trucks transporting them to pet stores for sale. Hunte trucks have been caught without air conditioning in the summer and with no windows.

Go here and here for information about franchisees that have brought suit in Ohio for what they claim are Petland and Hunte's sleazy, fraudulent business practices.  

Hunte boasts tens of millions of dollars in revenues each year from the sale of 90,000 or more puppies as well as pet supplies such as the faked "flea and tick treatment" for dogs. The company's headquarters is located in Goodman, Missouri, and it is there that Hunte has its facility for puppies. Puppy mills are a big business in Missouri, and the very agency charged with regulating breeders and dealers like Hunte, the USDA, has approved millions in Rural Development loans for the company in the past decade to expand its business. The business that profits from the misery of dogs trapped in puppy mills or bred and sold for research or worse.    


Source: http://www.animallawcoalition.com/companion-animal-breeding/article/1126

Canada: Pugs and kisses and cuddles, too

Pugs and kisses and cuddles, too


Moka loves to cuddle up to Angus, who seems to be  taking this new closeness in stride.


Moka loves to cuddle up to Angus, who seems to be taking this new closeness in stride.

She has bulgy eyes, a wrinkly face, a curly tail, and weighs just six kilograms.Her name is Moka and she has brought us pugs and kisses for Christmas.
Moka is our new family member, a one-year-old pug born in a local rescue shelter's foster home.  She is simply an awesome little dog -- so sweet-natured, energetic and fun-loving. There's no end to how long she will let you cuddle her or how many kisses she will try to give. I have never seen a dog so overcome with joy at all times.

She has made Angus, our huge eight-year-old Rottweiler-cross who is also from a rescue shelter, into her personal heat source. Anytime he lies down, Moka burrows into his enormous side and makes a cosy little nest against his stomach. Sometimes, she brings her chew toy and props it against his front paws while she gnaws on it. With him, just like all of us, Moka can pretty much do whatever she wants.

Moka's life started in a U.S. puppy mill. Her mom, malnourished and suffering from an eye injury, was rescued by a Winnipeg group and fostered locally by a loving couple. Moka was adopted for an elderly man by his grandchildren to keep him company.  Last summer, when the he fell seriously ill and was unable to care for his little dog, whom he named Pug, his extended family struggled with what to do for her.

The family, all full to bursting with their own pets, shared her among each other for more than a month.  Fortunately, I happened into the story at this point through a series of coincidences that we all came to agree showed this little dog was meant to be with our family. Knowing their dad/grandfather was fortunately recovering, but not able to look after her with his new health concerns, his family allowed us to adopt her.

I will always remember the look on my 15-year-old daughter's face when we put this little dog into her arms four months ago. Only weeks before, she had been begging us for a pug puppy, something she'd wanted and researched for years. We had resisted the huge job of raising a baby dog.  But this little dog -- not a baby anymore, and needing us as much as we needed her -- was a perfect fit. She bonded instantly with our oldest daughter and, no exaggeration, changed her teenaged life.

We count Moka among the many things we have to be thankful for this season. We hope you can join us in our Pennies From Heaven campaign to bring gifts and hampers to the homes of other families. Families receiving hampers from the Christmas Cheer Board who mention their four-legged family members also receive something for their Christmas dinners.

ashley.prest@freepress.mb.ca
Source: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/local/pugs-and-kisses-and-cuddles-too-80192442.html

Russia: Quarantine Introduced in Moscow After Rabid Dog Attack

Russia: Quarantine Introduced in Moscow After Rabid Dog Attack
Published 28 December, 2009, 12:57

Authorities have implemented quarantine in the south-east of Moscow after a rabid dog attacked at least 40 people, eight of whom have been taken to hospital.

The animal was terrorizing local residents from December 13 to 23 and was later found dead in the district. The area has been disinfected.

All people whom the dog bit have been vaccinated against rabies.

Authorities say all stray dogs in the area are being caught and locals have been advised to have their pets vaccinated.

Source: http://rt.com/Top_News/2009-12-28/rabid-dog-attack-moscow.html

TX: $5,000 reward offered in Oak Cliff animal cruelty case

TX: $5,000 reward offered in Oak Cliff animal cruelty case
9:18 AM Mon, Dec 28, 2009
Roy Appleton/Reporter


The kitten's body was found Dec. 16 along a fence near Westmoreland Road south of Clarendon in west Oak Cliff.  Her right eye had been gouged out, a rusted coat hanger was wrapped around her right front paw. A veterinarian later concluded the gray and white, shorthair tabby had likely died from a body blow.

The SPCA of Texas is offering a $5,000 reward for information that leads to the arrest and conviction of the sicko(s) in this case.  This isn't a first for such cruelty -- or for such an offer from the SPCA of Texas.  "I don't believe we've ever had the opportunity to pay the money," said Maura Davies, a spokeswoman for the Dallas-based group. "We just hope this is the one."

In this case, contact Dallas police detective Bruce D'Ostroph at 214-671-0633.

In general, report suspected animal abuse or cruelty at 214-742-7722 or visit www.spca.org/abuse.

Source: http://oakcliffblog.dallasnews.com/archives/2009/12/5000-reward-offered-in-oak-cli.html

CA: Surprising Spot for a Holiday Wonderland: Los Angeles Pet Memorial Park in Calabasas

Surprising spot for a holiday wonderland: Los Angeles Pet Memorial Park in Calabasas

December 28, 2009 | 10:08 am
Pets' tombstones and headstones are decorated for Christmas and Hanukkah season 
at the Los Angeles Pet Memorial Park in Calabasas, Calif.
The messages of love aren't just carved in stone at Los Angeles Pet Memorial Park. This time of year, they're embellished in bold splashes of red and green.
For nearly five weeks every Christmas and Hanukkah season, this final resting place for the four-legged and famous suspends lawn mowing and weed-whacking so people can decorate. Up pop miniature Christmas trees, poinsettias, flowered garlands, photographs of beloved pets and tiny pet-shaped statuettes in even tinier Santa hats.
"We decorate the graves because they are in our hearts. It feels like they are still with us," said Marvin Rouillard, 69, of Winnetka.
The character actor and his partner have visited the park, nestled on 10 hillside acres 30 miles northwest of downtown Los Angeles, every Sunday since their 14-year-old golden retriever, Baron, died in 1986. As they added cats Missy, Snow and Runt, the decorations became more elaborate. This year, he has a garland around the grave sites, several small trees and wreaths made out of bells.
"We used to put up 7-foot trees with all the ornaments," he said, "but no matter how we tried to anchor it all down, the winds would blow them away."


Jay Kessler decorates his dog's tombstone for Hanukkah at the Los Angeles Pet 
Memorial Park in Calabasas, Calif. There are plenty of celebrity residents buried in the 81-year-old cemetery -- Hopalong Cassidy's horse Topper, Petey the dog from "Our Gang," Humphrey Bogart's dog Boots and Charlie Chaplin's cat Scout.
Other stars who have buried their pets at the park include Steven Spielberg, Bob Newhart, Diana Ross, Tori Spelling, William Shatner, Rudolph Valentino and Lauren Bacall.
Rain put a damper on decorations this year, but the park is still ablaze with color. Years when there is no rain, the park turns into a fairyland, with flowers, trees, cards, pinwheels, wreaths, wind chimes and toys galore, said David Stiller, president of the cemetery's board of directors.
There are only two rules: You can't go beyond the boundaries of your pet's grave, and no candles.
Some 30,000 pets are buried here -- pet lizards and salamanders, birds, ferrets and goats, pigs, chimps, horses and even a lion. But 90% are dogs and cats, Stiller said -- including three of his own.
The tombstones and headstones express more than names and dates. They convey feelings too. For example, a message for one pet: "My love, my beauty, my goofy-goof, my best friend, sweet brother. My heart aches so deeply without you.You will be with me for all eternity. Loving. I love you so very much. Mommy."
Marvin Rouillard, 69, decorates his pets' tombstones for Christmas at the Los 
Angeles Pet Memorial Park in Calabasas, Calif. Patrice Kiedaisch, a dog fancier from Simi Valley, has four dogs -- Duffy, Lily, Tristan and Jake -- at the cemetery. "They are really kind there. They give your animals a lot of respect. And you feel taken care of."
The tradition of decorating the graveyard at Christmas makes sense because people grow especially lonely at the holidays, said Stephanie LaFarge, senior director of counseling services for ASPCA Animal Health Services in Urbana, Ill.
"Pet cemeteries tend to be utterly beautiful, joyful places. I don't know what it is -- the markings on the gravestones or the pictures or something," she said.
When Rouillard's pets were alive, Christmases were crazy with toys and play. "It's lonelier now," he said.
He used to have lots of neighbors at the cemetery, but some have passed away, and others have moved. One went to Texas to get married.
"Every once in while, she will write and ask me to check on her little boy. I send her a picture," Stiller said.
But Rouillard still comes every week, rain or shine.

"They are our kids, our little furry children," he said. "They never ask for anything, they never lie to you. Their love is unconditional."
-- Associated Press

The headstone for Rudolph's Valentino dog, Kabar, at the Los Angeles Pet Memorial Park in Calabasas, Calif.

Photos, from top: Headstones are decorated for Christmas and Hanukkah at the Los Angeles Pet Memorial Park in Calabasas. Jay Kessler decorates his dog's tombstone for Hanukkah.  Marvin Rouillard decorates his pets' grave sites for Christmas.  The headstone for Rudolph's Valentino dog, Kabar. Credit: Damian Dovarganes / Associated Press

Source

NAT'L: This week belongs to Cesar

NAT'L: This week belongs to Cesar
By Ellen Gray
Philadelphia Daily News
Daily News TV Critic
DOG WHISPERER: CESAR GOES DOWN UNDER. 8 tonight, National Geographic Channel.

NEVER GOT around to sending out holiday cards?  There's still time if you want to mark "Dog Whisperer Week," which kicks off tonight on National Geographic Channel with "Cesar Goes Down Under," the first of two episodes in which celebrity trainer Cesar Millan travels to Australia to work his pack-leader magic in a whole new hemisphere.

Cable television's been going to the dogs for a while now, and between "Dog Whisperer" and "DogTown," the National Geographic Channel might be vying with Animal Planet to become Canine Central.

Certainly it is this week, as "Dog Whisperer" reruns dominate National Geo's prime-time schedule and may even point up some distinctions between American and Australian dog-lovers.

Turns out the Aussies are pretty submissive, at least when it comes to Millan, whose show airs Down Under, too.

Where many of the show's U.S.-based episodes follow what I like to think of as the "Supernanny" model - unruly children, parents in denial, smug outsider who has to force parents to confront their own shortcomings - both "Cesar Goes Down Under" and next week's "Cesar in Oz" feature dog owners who already assume it's their fault.

"Absolutely, I know, it's me," agrees the owner of Jack, a 150-pound French mastiff that seems likely to swallow one of her friends whole, as Millan assures her that whatever's going on with Jack, she's the one causing it.

And then there's Astro, an Australian red cattle dog in next week's episode, whose owner describes him as "enthusiastic."

Which is a nice way of saying that the dog pretty much never stops barking (and has even encouraged her placid other dog, George, a border collie mix, to kick up a fuss, too).

"I'd like to know what I'm doing wrong to promote this behavior," she tells us at one point. "I know it has to be me, but I do believe Astro's special."

Not, of course, too special for Millan.

Millan's preaching to the converted when he meets with Paul, a fitness trainer with four dogs, one of them an excitable Great Dane named Willow.

Though Paul's clearly a devoted student of the "Dog Whisperer's" techniques, he is, of course, doing them all wrong, as Millan quickly demonstrates.

But then every episode of the show does warn viewers not to "attempt these techniques yourself without consulting a professional."

For those who might occasionally tire of the "Dog Whisperer's" unending smugness, there's a nice scene in which Paul runs him up and down a steep sand dune that for some reason has been dubbed "The Mexican," briefly rendering him too exhausted to say much of anything.

Some dogs, though, suffer with owners much, much worse than those who tend to seek Millan's counsel.

Starting Friday, a new season of "DogTown" (10 p.m., National Geographic Channel) revisits some of the dogs rescued from now-Eagle Michael Vick's notorious Bad Newz Kennels and other survivors of the underworld of dog fighting.

The sad-eyed Cherry, thought to have possibly been used as a "bait dog" in Vick's operation, can't be adopted until he overcomes his fear of people, while Georgia, a former dogfighting champion, has a chance to become a "spokesdog" for rehabilitated fight dogs, but only if she can overcome a tendency to go into attack mode whenever another dog enters her sight line.

It turns out to be a hopeful way to begin the new year. *

Send e-mail to graye@phillynews.com.

Source: http://www.philly.com/philly/entertainment/20091228_Ellen_Gray__This_week_belongs_to_Cesar.html

Australia: Police return seized dogs

Australia: Police return seized dogs
Article from: The Courier-Mail
Jeremy Pierce
December 28, 2009 11:00pm

THREE dogs rescued by police from a locked car at a Gold Coast theme park have been returned to their owner - even though she is now facing animal cruelty charges.

The small cross-breed dogs were found locked inside a sedan in the Sea World car park on Sunday afternoon while their owners enjoyed a day at the theme park.

The windows of the car had been wound down slightly and there was a small bowl of water, but the dogs appeared to be in a distressed state and had been locked inside for several hours.

A concerned on-looker called police, who freed the pets and took them to the Gold Coast City Council pound at Labrador to recover.

However, later in the day their owner, who allegedly assaulted a television cameraman when confronted over allegations of animal cruelty, turned up at the pound and was reunited with her pets.

RSPCA spokesman Michael Beatty said it was highly doubtful the pets would have been returned to the woman if they had been taken to an RSPCA shelter.

"It would have been at our discretion, so we would have been able to hold on to them instead of giving them straight back to her," he said.

"Unfortunately, the council doesn't have that power, so they are obliged to return the animals."

A 33-year-old woman from Cobram, Victoria, and a 47-year-old man from Peterhead, South Australia, were each charged with three counts of animal cruelty over the incident and are due to appear in Southport Magistrates Court on January 27.

The woman was also charged with common assault, wilful damage and stealing in relation to the alleged incident involving the cameraman.

On the same day and just a few hundred metres down the road, a 32-year-old from Rydalmere, NSW, allegedly locked his dog in a car outside a hotel on Seaworld Drive.

Police will allege that the vehicle's windows were all closed and the dog was unattended for about one hour.

The man is due to appear in Southport Magistrates Court on January 18 on one count of animal cruelty.

Gold Coast City Council's animal control unit could not be contacted.

Source: http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/story/0,,26532883-3102,00.html

FL: End of a long journey former ‘bait dog’ Pokey adjusting to people, pets in foster home

End of a long journey former ‘bait dog’ Pokey adjusting to people, pets in foster home
By RICHARD DYMOND - rdymond@bradenton.com

EAST MANATEE — One day, more than a year ago, a skinny, frightened pit bull tip-toed out of the woods behind the 12 Oaks Plaza at State Road 70 and Interstate 75 and froze under the gaze of a hairdresser on her break from nearby Supercuts.  Who knows why, but at that very moment a connection was forged between the skittish 2-year-old dog — eventually named Poke — and Kristen Pondillo, the hairdresser.

Try as she might, Pondillo and others could not get close enough to Poke to capture her so she could get medical care.  When anyone got close in fact, Poke would run back into the woods where, it is assumed, she lived a homeless existence, hidden under trees, nursing her wounds from abuse.

Undeterred, Pondillo and her fellow cosmetologists at Supercuts, including Caroline Nylan, Carolyn Bologna and Angela Cedeno, fed Poke dry food daily out of a Tupperware bowl in the hope that one day the dog would surrender to compassionate humans.  The signal for feeding was a whistle from Pondillo and the dog would poke its head out of the woods and come running, thereby earning her name.  It got to the point where Poke would take food from Pondillo’s hand. But the dog still would not let the hairdresser pet her.

On holidays, when the shop was closed, Pondillo came to the woods, whistled, and Poke came running to get fed.  The women of Supercuts, who fed the dog on Pondillo’s days off, called many animal services and organizations, but because Poke was so skittish, no one felt comfortable helping.

But Pondillo didn’t give up.

She enlisted Manatee Sheriff’s Office Deputy Tim Eason, who routinely handles animal cases. Numerous times, Eason tried to shoot a dart with a tranquilizer into Poke, but every time he pulled up in his car, the dog sensed something was different and ran into the woods.

One day, six months ago, Poke came out of the woods with her collar completely imbedded in her neck. Her neck was split open.  A sense of urgency gripped Pondillo and a scheme was hatched.  Pondillo went out one day and Eason parked away and cautiously walked up behind the dog.  Either Poke had an off moment or she was ready for help. A dart found its mark and before she could retreat to the woods, she fell, knocked out by the anesthesia.

Mary Anne McDevitt, of Bradenton-based Safe Haven Animal Rescue of Florida, chokes up when she talks about the dog. She eventually joined with UnderDog Rescue to help get medical assistance.  Poke’s teeth had been filed down and the nerves exposed, McDevitt said. She was, in the dog fighting world, a “bait dog,” McDevitt said.

A bait dog is a dog chosen to encourage other young dogs to fight. They gnawed on Poke and the dog’s teeth were filed down so that she could not retaliate.   Someone donated $1,500 so the first round of dental care could be performed, eliminating the pain the dog was in, McDevitt said.  Poke still has more than $1,500 worth of dental work that needs to be done, McDevitt said.

Two weeks ago, Carla Hebert, of Lakewood Ranch, agreed to foster Poke until she finds a forever family, McDevitt said. Hebert has renamed her Pokey.  “She started out as timid and shy, afraid of people and other animals,” Hebert said. “Now, she is a low maintenance dog that plays well with most other dogs and is housebroken. She takes time to get used to people, but once she does, she will play. I saw her playing with her reflection in the mirror the other day.”

About a month ago, when Pokey was in the animal hospital for treatment, Pondillo went to see her. Pondillo stood far away and whistled.  Pokey lifted her head and looked all around.  Pondillo tried to approach her but Pokey was not ready and backed up. Pondillo realized the dog still needed time. What broke Pondillo’s heart is that she couldn’t adopt Poke.  “I wanted her really bad,” Pondillo said. “But I live in a small townhouse with no real place for her to run and it wouldn’t be fair to her.”

When Pondillo got the news that Poke had found a foster mom, she said she was beyond happy. Even though she couldn’t foster the dog, she felt as if she had.  “We all felt peaceful about it,” Pondillo said. “We were all thrilled and so happy. We had all felt she would die in the woods.”

Those interested in adopting Pokey are requested to contact McDevitt at (941) 224-0307 or (941) 742-3972.

Richard Dymond, Herald reporter, can be reached at 748-0411, ext. 6686.
Source: http://www.bradenton.com/news/local/story/1939446.html

ID: Few animal welfare laws keep Idaho in the doghouse

Few animal welfare laws keep Idaho in the doghouse

For the fourth year in a row, the state's among the very worst in an Animal Legal Defense Fund ranking.
BY KATY MOELLER - kmoeller@idahostatesman.com

Copyright: © 2009 Idaho Statesman

Published: 12/28/09


Boise animal welfare advocate Virginia Hemingway says some state legislators are glad when Idaho rates poorly regarding animal protection laws.  "One told me, 'I'm proud we're on those lists. It shows Idaho is a state that protects individuals' rights,' " said Hemingway, founder of the group Stop Torturing Our Pets. "They are blindfolded about what's happening to the animals."

That's why it's important for Idahoans who want the state to become a leader in animal protection to write, call or visit their state legislators, said Jeff Rosenthal, executive director of the private, non-profit Idaho Humane Society in Boise.  "Things won't change until the public gets involved in letting lawmakers know that they want animal cruelty taken seriously in their community," Rosenthal said.

"That's what changed everything for drunk-driving enforcement," he said. "It used to be swept under the table. It took MADD to change that. They demanded prosecutors take it seriously."

Stephan Otto, a Portland-based spokesman for the Animal Legal Defense Fund, said it's often a series of well-publicized cases of egregious abuse that galvanizes the public. As an example, he cited the recent case of a dog in Cascade whose throat was cut, allegedly the cruel result of a dispute between neighbors.  Robert Roby, a 48-year-old Cascade man, was originally charged with four misdemeanors: animal cruelty, malicious injury to property, disturbing the peace and trespass.  "The laws have not caught up with society's values," Otto said.

Because of the value of the dog and the cost of injuries in the Cascade case, Valley County Prosecutor Matt Williams was able to add a charge of felony grand theft and upgrade the malicious injury to property to a felony (damage exceeding $1,000).

But Idaho animal welfare advocates say they feel frustrated. While neighboring Oregon is ranked fourth best in animal protection in the country by the Animal Legal Defense Fund, Idaho ranks the fourth worst.

Rosenthal said some in agriculture and animal husbandry are the most opposed to added penalties, including a felony offense for repeat offenders and the most serious cases.  "There's a lot of baseless fear. They say, 'Oh god, we absolutely can't have those cruelty laws or we won't have ranching and farming, and you won't be able to breed or even own a dog,'" Rosenthal said.

Idaho is one of four states left in the country without a felony animal abuse statute - and that's what Idaho animal protection advocates are promoting.  But it's just one reason why the state ranks so low. Idaho also loses points for having no restrictions on ownership or possession of animals following a conviction or for the lack of a requirement of mental health evaluation and counseling for repeat offenders.

Idaho has passed two major animal welfare measures in the past five years: Dogfighting is a felony crime, and there's a forfeiture/bond law that puts the cost of care for animals that have been seized on the owner - if they don't post bond, the animals may be adopted out.  The Idaho Humane Society wrote the drafts of those bills and lobbied for passage. They've been working for eight years to get a felony animal abuse law passed.

Hemingway has been pushing the past three years for a felony animal abuse law that targets repeat abusers and the most serious offenders. She believes Idaho will eventually add it, even if it's the last state in the country to do it.  "I may be dead by then," she joked. "You get to a point where you've been banging your head on the wall."  As with any legislation, one word can stall, even kill, the bill.

Last year, "it was the word 'neglect,' " Hemingway said. "There was a person who wanted the word neglect taken out of our definition of torture."  She's hoping for better success in the legislative session that begins in January.

Lisa Kauffman, Idaho state director of the Humane Society of the United States (not affiliated with the Idaho Humane Society), said her organization is most interested in seeing a felony animal cruelty law and a felony penalty for cockfighting.

She said a recent dispute over an injured dog and her puppies in Jefferson County points out the need for a better definition of neglect and abandonment. In that case, Northwest Animal Companions Executive Director Troy Jackson was charged with felony grand theft for taking the dog and pups to get veterinary care.  "Idaho is always close to or the last state to enact proactive laws on most major issues. For once, I'd like to see us get ahead of the game in this area," Kauffman said.

Rosenthal said Idaho needs better animal protection laws, but that's not all.  "I've said this ad nauseam - it doesn't matter what's written on paper if we don't have law enforcement that's willing or able to enforce the laws," Rosenthal said. "It doesn't make a bit of difference."

Katy Moeller: 377-6413

Source: http://www.idahostatesman.com/102/story/1022596.html

NJ: N.J. lawmakers propose charging dog-fighting organizers under anti-racketeering laws

N.J. lawmakers propose charging dog-fighting organizers under anti-racketeering laws

By The Star-Ledger Continuous News Desk

December 28, 2009, 7:09PM
nj-dog-fighting.jpg 
John O'Boyle / The Star-Ledger
May 2007 photo of a pitbull at the Liberty Humane Society in Jersey City. The dog was dropped off by an owner who said it did not have the temperament for dog fighting.

TRENTON -- Two New Jersey state senators have proposed a bill that would charge leaders of dog-fighting rings under anti-racketeering (RICO) statutes, according to a report by the Philadelphia Inquirer.

Under the proposed law by Sens. Van Drew (D-Cape May) and Thomas Kean Jr. (R-Union), organizers of dog fighting could face up to 20 years in prison, in cases where violence or guns were involved, the report said. New Jersey would be able to seize profits or property gained from dog fighting, according to the report.

The two senators have also proposed a bill for restraining orders that would protect pets in domestic disputes, the report said.

Source: http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2009/12/nj_lawmakers_propose_bill_that.html 

====================================

Tougher dog-fighting laws proposed in NJ
By Jonathan Tamari
INQUIRER TRENTON BUREAU

The leaders of New Jersey dog-fighting rings could be charged under the same anti-racketeering laws used to prosecute mobsters under a bill proposed by two state senators.

If prosecuted under the state's anti-racketeering (RICO) statute, organizers of dog-fighting networks could face tough new penalties - up to 20 years in prison - in cases where violence or guns were involved. The state also could seize profits or property gained from dog fighting, a penalty that animal-rights groups see as an important deterrent.

"You can judge a society by the way it treats its most vulnerable," said Sen. Jeff Van Drew (D., Cape May), a sponsor of the bill. "Those that abuse animals in this way, in this severe way, are often individuals that go on to commit heinous acts against adults and children."

Van Drew and Thomas Kean Jr. (R., Union), another sponsor of the legislation, also have proposed a bill that would let judges issue restraining orders to protect pets in domestic disputes.  While dog fighting already is illegal in New Jersey, the proposed bill would make the state the fourth in the country to bring leaders of dog-fighting rings under RICO statutes, according to the Senate Republican office. Oregon, Utah and Virginia have similar laws.

With gambling and other illegal profits tied to dog-fighting networks, Kean said it makes sense to charge the leading offenders under the laws that most famously exist to combat organized crime.  "The RICO charges are really the only true statute that exists that hits the depth and breadth of these dog-fighting rings," Kean said.

Under current state laws, dog fighting carries a penalty of three to five years in prison, a fine of up to $15,000, or both. The range of penalties is the same whether the person gambles on or hosts a fight, or is an active organizer who keeps and trains the dogs.  The existing penalties would remain for people who own or train fighting dogs, permit dog fights on their property or bet on dog fights.

Under the Senators' plan, a dog-fighting organizer or financier would face much stiffer sentences: five to 10 years in prison, a fine of up to $150,000, or both. Because being a leader could trigger the state's RICO laws, the penalty would grow if the organizer was convicted of a violent offense or gun crime in connection with dog fighting.

The state also could seize the profits garnered by dog-fighting leaders.  "You've made a half-million dollars and bought a real nice house? . . . The government can take that away from you," said John Goodwin, manager of animal-fighting issues for the Humane Society of the United States. The threat of such losses, "can be a very effective tool," he said.

Laws to combat dog fighting have gained momentum since the 2007 conviction of National Football League star Michael Vick, now a backup quarterback for the Eagles.

Goodwin said that 29 dog-fighting laws have been approved since that case wrapped up: one on the federal level, one in Washington, D.C., and 27 in state legislatures.

Matt Stanton, a spokesman for the New Jersey Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, said dog-fighting cases in the state have remained relatively steady - 30 to 40 per year - but he suspects that publicity surrounding the crime has driven some organizations deeper underground.

Any steps to toughen dog-fighting laws is helpful, he said, though he noted that the intensity of prosecution varies. Some local police and prosecutors don't crack down on animal cruelty as hard as other crimes, Stanton said, while "others understand it's a big problem."

Van Drew and Kean's bill pertaining to restraining orders in domestic disputes also is aimed at protecting animals.  The lawmakers and animal-rights spokesmen said that pets make easy targets in family conflicts. Violence against animals, they added, often spills over into other areas.  "If somebody's going to beat up an animal, they don't have a problem throwing their fists around," Stanton said.

Thirteen states, Washington, D.C., and Puerto Rico allow for these types of restraining orders, according to the Senate GOP.

Both the dog-fighting and restraining-order bills were recently introduced, making it unlikely that they will be approved before Jan. 12, when the current legislative session ends and a new one begins. Kean said introducing the proposals will help set the stage for passage in the next session.

Source: http://www.philly.com/philly/news/breaking/80232552.html

Sunday, December 27, 2009

NJ: Five Kids Attacked by Bulldogs in NJ

Five Kids Attacked by Bulldogs in NJ
Posted by Paul Napoli
December 27, 2009 12:45 AM

Two American bulldogs attacked five neighborhood children in Winslow, NJ on Monday.  Police say the two dogs escaped their owner’s backyard. Four children, ages 9-12, played outside of their home in the 100 block of Villanova Court in the Sicklerville section of the township when the dogs approached. The frightened children ran inside the house, but the dogs pursued them and managed to get inside.

14-year-old Brandon Quann heard screaming and ran to their aid of his young siblings and a relative, fighting the dogs off with a shovel. Quaan then ran outside the house, luring the dogs away, suffering the dogs attack on his arms and legs until the dog’s owner arrived and subdued the animals.

The bulldogs’ owners, Jean and Sherri Cruz of Melwood Court, surrendered the dogs to authorities, who euthanized the two bulldogs after Monday’s attack. The dogs will undergo rabies testing.  The Cruzes face a fine of up to $1,000 or 90 days in jail for the municipal offense, according to municipal official.

Winslow Police Capt. Robert Boisvert said these same dogs broke out of their fence and bit a township man as he tried to protect his grandchildren on November 27.  Brandon Quann was admitted the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia for treatment of multiple puncture wounds on the hands and legs.

Personal injuries resulting from dog bites are categorized as general negligence injuries. Dog bite cases can be complex depending on the severity of the injuries sustained. Dog bite injury claims can take into account medical bills, lost wages, the costs of future plastic surgery and other medical care, pain and suffering, and mental health counseling should the victim develop a need for it. If you or a loved one is the victim of a dog attack, call Napoli Bern Ripka, LLP today at 888-529-4669. Only an experienced attorney can help you determine if your claim has merit and, if so, recover the compensation you deserve.

Source: http://newyorkcity.injuryboard.com/miscellaneous/five-kids-attacked-by-bulldogs-in-nj.aspx?googleid=276168