33 Dogs massacred after neighbors fued

Source: NZHerald.com.nz, Jan 28, 2010

SPCA staff who inspected bloody carcasses of 33 dogs after they were slaughtered in Northland earlier this week have been offered counselling.

The SPCA said it was still deciding what charges it would lay against two men who went onto Russell Hargreaves’ property near Wellsford north of Auckland and shot dead 33 of his 39 dogs.

SPCA executive director Bob Kerridge said what staff saw was a turn-around of what they stood for and they were very emotional.

“Abuse to animals is totally contrary to how they feel,” Mr Kerridge said today.

One of the men who shot the dogs ran a store advertising pet care.

Russell Mendoza and another man used a .22 calibre rifle and shotgun to shoot the dogs on Monday night, blaming one or more of them for the mauling death of Mr Mendoza’s fox terrier. The slaughter included 23 pups and 10 adult dogs.

Mr Hargreaves described the dogs as his family and said he was in shock.

Mr Mendoza refused to speak about the killings yesterday, but a friend said he was preparing a statement with his lawyer.

Mr Mendoza and his wife run Home & Garden Wellsford, which advertised pet care, but Mr Hargreaves said there was no logic to that if he was an animal lover.

SPCA investigator Sascha Keltie said the death scene was “not unlike a massacre”.

She said bullet entry and exit wounds on some of the dogs indicated they had not died instantly, and blood trails were consistent with an injured dog moving.

Six adult dog bodies were piled on top of one another as if they had been trying to protect themselves.

Mr Kerridge said 10 dog bodies had been taken to the SPCA for investigation and until reports on their deaths was completed, charges would not be laid.

He also said Mr Mendoza would be interviewed as part of the inquiry.

Mr Kerridge said the animals had been well looked after and neither the police, the SPCA nor the Rodney District Council had received any complaints about Mr Hargreaves’ dogs.

“They were very, very healthy, very well cared for animals.”

Woman is charged with slitting dog’s throat

Source: NJ.com, Jan 25, 2010

A Pennsylvania woman was charged with animal cruelty and a weapons offense after authorities said she slit a dog’s throat Sunday night during an argument with her fiancé.

Michele Milford, 35, of Scranton, Pa., was being held in the Monmouth County jail in Freehold in lieu of $10,000 bail, said Victor Buddy’’ Amato, chief animal cruelty officer for the Monmouth County SPCA.

Amato said Milford and her fiancé, who had both been drinking alcohol, argued during a party at his family’s Prospect Avenue home. During the dispute, she went into a laundry room and slit the throat twice of the family’s dog, a nearly two -year-old Jack Russell Terrier named Penelope, he said.

Amato said the wounds went from ear to ear on the dog.

While waiting for authorities, partygoers tried to slow the bleeding by pressing T-shirts and other items of clothing to the dog’s neck, he said.

The dog was rushed to the Red Bank Animal Hospital where she was scheduled to undergo surgery today.

Amato said Milford used a push knife, a two-inch blade with a T-handle designed to be grasped in a fist so the arrow-like blade protrudes from between the knuckles.

Amato said he did not know the reason for the argument.

“They had a heated discussion and the dog was the subject of the overflow,’’ Amato said. “The dog was brutalized and the dog had nothing to do with it.’’

The charges against Milford are fourth-degree indictable offenses. The animal cruelty charge would be upgraded to a third-degree offense, punishable by a possible jail sentence, if the dog dies from her injuries, Amato said.

100,000 seek harsh punishment for dog death

Source: jkct8.com, Jan 24, 2010

More than 100,000 people have signed an online petition calling for harsh punishment for a man accused of dragging a dog to death, the creator of a Facebook page called “Demand Justice for Buddy” said.

Thirty-7-year-old Steven Clay Romero, faces a federal animal cruelty charge after Buddy, a German shepherd mix, was found dead Dec. 30 in Colorado National Monument. His sister, 32-year-old Melissa Lockhart of Fruita faces felony theft charges for allegedly stealing the dog and telling Romero to get rid of him.

Gary Sherman, creator of the Facebook page, said more than 212,000 people across the United States and 111 other countries have joined his page, with about half signing the petition. Romero could face up to three years in a federal prison.

Man arrested for killing dog with botched at home surgery, FL

Source: CBS12.com, Jan 21, 2010

A 55-year-old man has been arrested on charges he performed surgery on a dog using glue and dental floss.

William Ralph Jones Jr., of 5711 NE 7 Terrace, in Oakland Park, has been charged with two counts of felony animal abuse. If convicted, he faces 20 years in prison.

According to a police report, Jones was watching his friend’s two-year-old hound/retriever mix named Zoe because the friend, Danielle Vecchio, 55, wasn’t allowed to keep the dog at her home.

According to a police report, Zoe kept escaping from Jones’ back yard through a fence, and even cut herself one day. Jones repaired the cut using glue. But Zoe escaped again, re-opening the wound.

This time, Jones placed Zoe on the coffee table, and asked his room mate to give the dog a muscle relaxer. He then began stitching up the wound using dental floss and a needle. Zoe yelped and kicked to get away. So Jones soaked a cloth with Chloroform and put it on her muzzle. A short time later, Zoe stopped breathing.

Jones dropped off a lifeless Zoe at Vecchio’s home. The dog was wrapped in a white sheet and had a four inch cut on her chest. Vecchio called the police.

Obese Wis. Dog That Survived Freezing Slims Down

Source: wcco.com, Jan 23, 2010

A year after a “morbidly obese” dog froze to a Wisconsin sidewalk, the border collie mix has lost 40 pounds and is slowly returning to an active lifestyle.

Jiffy is still portly, but his owner says he’s finally moving “like a regular dog.”

The dog weighed about 120 pounds when he froze to the sidewalk in December 2008 in single-digit temperatures. His dense layers of fat probably helped him survive.

Afterward a court ordered Jiffy’s owner to give him up.

Patty and Peter Geise of Sheboygan Falls say when they adopted Jiffy, he could barely step over a 4-inch-high pipe. Even then he had to rest afterward.

The Sheboygan Press says now he walks a mile at a normal pace.

Patty Geise says it’s rewarding to see how much Jiffy has improved.

Palm Beach County dog finds 2-year-old in rubble of Haitian earthquake

Source: PalmBeachPost.net, Jan 21, 2010

International heroes are coming in all varieties in Haiti — even on four legs.

A black-and-white border collie named Blaze raised his snout into the air, searching for the scents of life amid the stench of death.

And then Blaze made a dedicated scramble over concrete rubble, weaving past twisted rebar and the remnants of someone else’s shattered life toward one of the few walls still standing in a row of decimated houses atop a mountain village in Port-au-Prince.

The dog pawed and sniffed and barked tirelessly at the wall as Steve Driscoll, his handler, came rushing.

Driscoll, a Palm Beach County firefighter and paramedic, shouted to the rest of the Miami-Dade County-based search crew that they had a survivor.

The crew punched a small hole in the 8-inch wall, shined a light and found a 2-year-old girl in a concrete bubble, in dusty jeans and mustard yellow shirt, barely conscious.

She had been entombed for six days. On Wednesday, she went home with her parents, barely a scratch on her.

“That dog performed a miracle,” said Louie Fernandez, a spokesman for Miami-Dade’s elite search-and-rescue team Task Force-1, in a phone call from Haiti. “The rescue of that little girl lifted the spirits of our whole team here.”

Even in the face of sobering numbers — tens of thousands dead — rescuers give thanks for small miracles like the one performed by a man and his dog.

Driscoll, 47, has seen his share of lives pulled from the jaws of death in his 19 years as a county firefighter and paramedic. He has seen the worst of tragedies as a FEMA-certified rescue dog handler and trainer for 12 years, working an 11-day stint in New Orleans following Hurricane Katrina.

But he and the 13 members of his search team had never seen anything like Blaze’s find on Monday. They applauded as the toddler was pulled out, given new life.

“I couldn’t believe it when I saw her,” Driscoll said. “It was a pretty overwhelming feeling. Every eye on those 13 was teary-eyed.”

Driscoll gets only a few minutes on a satellite phone every other day, but he used all of his time to call his wife of 16 years, Lori, a physician’s assistant back in Loxahatchee, to tell her the news about the little girl.

She laughed, choked up, as he told her hurriedly how their 8-year-old dog — he calls Blaze “intense” and she “driven” — barked immediately at the deceptive concrete wall.

Lori’s mind went to their watchful family pet, one of fewer than 100 dogs in America to achieve FEMA’s highest level of certification, and recalls the puppy that herded the couple’s two daughters, now 6 and 9, around their living room.

“He watches out for everybody,” she said.

The guys at Fire Station 22 can attest to that. Blaze comes to work with Driscoll on every shift. He runs on the firehouse’s treadmill, and the other firefighters take turns playing hide-and-seek, climbing ladders and squeezing into cabinets, daring Blaze to find them.

“The dog’s amazing,” said Capt. Robert Cusell, one of the shift commanders. “You have to see it to believe it.”

And that dedication reminds them of Driscoll. The former high school football player and world-class water skier still holds the academy’s record for doing more than 2,700 continuous sit-ups.

Officially, Palm Beach County Fire Rescue doesn’t have a K-9 search and rescue program. And the “higher-ups” don’t know that Blaze works every shift at Station 22 and sleeps in his own crate, Battalion Chief Nigel Baker said.

“But I’ll personally vouch for him,” Baker said. “That dog’s family.”

Woman with 40 pets pleads guilty to causing animal distress

Source: EdmontonJournal.com, Jan 22, 2010

An Edmonton woman who kept more than 40 cats and dogs in filthy stacked cages pleaded guilty Thursday to causing animals to be in distress.

May Poon agreed to pay a $5,000 fine and she cannot own a pet for the rest of her life, defence lawyer Michael Sparks said.

The animals were discovered in April by a maintenance man working at Poon’s west-end home near 172nd Street and 60th Avenue.

Crown prosecutor Christian Lim said outside court that the man followed a powerful stench to a barricaded room.

In the room he found 42 cats and small dogs stacked in tiny cages, their coats caked with feces and urine.

The dogs were all small breeds, such as pomeranians, toy poodles and chihuahuas. Most of the cats were Siamese. There were three kittens.

The Humane Society seized all of the animals and spent more than $20,000 bringing them back to health.

Lim said veterinarians treated various infections, such as ear mites, and they removed 121 teeth from the animals. Seventy-one of those teeth came from just four dogs.

Veterinarians also discovered that one of the dogs had been pregnant, but that the puppies had died in her womb and begun to rot. All of the dogs made a full recovery and were later adopted. Initial reports suggested Poon was operating a puppy mill, but she denied that allegation.

Sparks said the animals had free reign of the house and were well cared for until the basement sewer backed up and Poon was forced to cage them.

Lim said the woman was running a “breeding operation,” and that a strict fine was necessary to deter others from raising animals in such conditions.

Edmonton Humane Society spokeswoman Shawna Randolf said the organization is pleased with the outcome.

“We really feel that this sends a strong message that puppy mills will not be tolerated, not by us and not by the court system, and that’s essential because we do believe that there are others out there,” she said. “A puppy mill is a commercial breeding facility where the owner is putting greed before the necessities of the animal.”

“This was a puppy mill, absolutely.”

FDA says Merrick Beef Filet Squares Dog Treats May Contain Salmonella

Source: AnimalRadio.com, Jan 21, 2010

While there has been no recall yet, the U. S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is warning consumers that Merrick Beef Filet Squares for dogs may be contaminated with Salmonella.

The food is distributed by Merrick Pet Care with a package date of ‘Best By 111911.’ The treats come in a 10 oz. green and red plastic bag. The ‘Best By‘ date is printed on a part of the bag that is torn off when it’s opened. The FDA suggests consumers who are unable to read the ‘Best By‘ date – discontinue use of the product to be safe.

Salmonella can be spread between pets and people. Humans can become infected simply by holding the pet-food. Pet guardians should wash their hands immediately after holding any pet-treat or food.

No illnesses have been reported, however the FDA is warning pet-guardians that already have the questionable pet-treat ‘not to handle or feed them to their pets.’

Last December, Merrick Beef Filet Squares had tested positive for Salmonella. A follow-up inspection found problems with the packaging and manufacturing processes.

If you have the treat, you should dispose of it by securing them in the trash, away from prying animal noses.

You should see your doctor if you get any of these symptoms:
Vomiting, diarrhea, cramping or fever.

Untreated, Salmonella can cause endocarditis, arthritis and urinary problems.

You should get your pet to the vet if you see any of these symptoms:
Lethargy, diarrhea, vomiting, fever, decreased appetite.

Infected pets can infect other humans or pets.

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