Torrington man charged with cruelty in death of dog , CT

Source: rep-am.com, July 7, 2010

A Torrington man was charged with two counts of animal cruelty Tuesday evening after police said he burned one dog with boiling water and caused the death of a second dog.

Nathan Mosimann, 22, 42 Deruyter Drive, was released Tueday evening after he posted a $20,000 bond. His arrest marked the second time city police filed animal cruelty charges in the past week: Police announced July 1 that they had charged Jeffrey A. Dunlap, 46, 334 Goshen Road, after an investigator learned he hit his dog on the head with a mallet and shot it with a pellet gun.

Police said they were first alerted to Mosimann’s case on April 27, after one of Mosimann’s family members told police that Mosimann may have caused the death of his beagle Carly, who died at Mosimann’s home that day. Police were told that Carly was “lying on the floor, unable to get up and suffering a bloody mouth after Mosimann was with the dog,” Lt. Mike Emanuel said in a statement.

The dog was treated that day at a veterinarian for an ear infection and was told the dog had recently run away, but Emanuel said no x-rays were performed because of the cost. The dog died later that day.

An autopsy performed on the animal showed it had sufered a fractured skull and neck, which police say was caused by Mosimann. Police did not release details of how they believe Mosimann caused the injury.

During the course of the investigation, police learned Mosimann was suspected in the burning of another dog, named Teddy. Police said family members told them that Mosimann was home alone with Teddy and dropped boiling water on the dog, causing burns to 45 percent of its body.

Mosimann claimed the burning, which took place about eight months before Carly died, was an accident but did not report the burning for several days. It was unclear in the news release police provided whether Teddy was owned by Mosimann.

The HSUS Praises N.Y. Senate for Vote to Crack Down on Animal Fighting Boosters

Source: Media-Newswire.com – ALBANY, N.Y. — The Humane Society of the United States, on behalf of its more than 800,000 supporters in New York, commends the state Senate for unanimously passing S. 3926a, legislation to strengthen the state law against animal fighting.

A.6287b was introduced by Assemblyman Joseph Lentol, D-Brooklyn, and S. 3926a was introduced by Sen. Toby Stavisky, D-Flushing. These bills would provide misdemeanor penalties for spectators at these organized events. Presently, offenders can receive only a traffic ticket-style citation, which does not provide an adequate deterrent against chronic violators.

Spectators who attend animal fights do not stumble upon them accidentally. These criminal activities take place at clandestine locations.

“We commend Sen. Stavisky, and Assemblyman Lentol for championing these anti-crime bills,” said Patrick Kwan, New York state director for The Humane Society of the United States. “Now that the legislation passed in the Senate, we look forward to its passage in the Assembly.”

Facts:

Animal fighting spectators, with their admission fees and gambling wagers, fuel these undeniably cruel and criminal industries. Under current law, dogfighters or cockfighters can claim they were only present at an animal fight as spectators, thereby avoiding any meaningful punishment.
Law enforcement officials have documented a strong connection between animal fighting operations and narcotics distribution, illegal firearms and other illicit activities.
While dogfighting and cockfighting are felonies in New York, possessing animals for the purpose of fighting is only a misdemeanor, and attending an animal fight is just a traffic-ticket style violation.
New York has the nation’s fifth-weakest dogfighting laws, making it a magnet for spectators from surrounding states where penalties on spectators are significantly more severe.
According to news reports, in June 2008, authorities raided a Bronx, N.Y., building that housed a dogfighting ring. Seven people were arrested and two additional suspects fled from the scene during the raid. Of the seven who were arrested, four were New Jersey residents. New Jersey is currently ranked as having the nation’s strongest dogfighting law, punishing spectators with three to five years of imprisonment and/or a maximum $15,000 fine.

Family charged with animal cruelty – Remains of 43 cats & dogs found, Canada

Source: OttawaCitizen.com, June 30, 2010

An Aylmer woman and her two grown children are in custody after police raided their home and found the bodies on nearly four dozen cats and dogs buried in the backyard.

The threesome — a woman in her 60s and her daughter and son, both described as in their 40s — have been charged with cruelty to animals, Gatineau police said Tuesday.

Executing a search warrant, police, accompanied by Gatineau firefighters and animal control staff, arrived at the family’s home at 22 Roméo-Gendron Street, between Front Street and Eardley Road. at 10 a.m. In the backyard, they uncovered the buried remains of 43 cats and dogs in garbage bags. Another cat and a dog were found alive inside the house.

Neighbors said police and animal control officers were wearing respirators and protective clothing when they entered the house. They expressed relief that authorities had acted after months of complaints. The house, they said, has been the scene of similar raids in the past, including one about two months ago in which numerous animals — “birds, ferrets, dogs, you name it,” as one neighbour put it — were taken away.

Neighbors said they regularly saw people dropping animals off at the house, and speculated that those who did so were looking for a quick way to get rid of unwanted pets without realizing what may await the animals.

Police did not release the names of those arrested, but said they were familiar with the family and had been to the house numerous times in the past.

Dog-Fighting DNA Database Breaks New Ground in Crackdown on Animal Cruelty

Source: PRNewswire.com, June 15, 2010

The nation’s first criminal dog-fighting DNA database has been established by the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA), The Humane Society of Missouri (HSMO) and the Louisiana SPCA (LA/SPCA), and will be maintained at the University of California, Davis (UC Davis) Veterinary Genetics Laboratory.  Known as the Canine CODIS (Combined DNA Index System), the database is designed to help the criminal justice system investigate and prosecute dog fighting cases and address the growing problem of dog fighting using 21st century technology.

“Dog fighting is a multi-million dollar criminal enterprise that leads to the cruel treatment and deaths of thousands of dogs nationwide every year,” said Tim Rickey, the ASPCA’s Senior Director of Field Investigation and Response. “This database is an unprecedented and vital component in the fight against animal cruelty and will allow us to strengthen cases against animal abusers and seek justice for their victims.”

Rickey, the former Animal Cruelty Task Force Director at HSMO, Kathryn Destreza, the ASPCA’s Southeast Regional Director, Field Investigation and Response and formerly Director of Humane Law Enforcement for the Louisiana SPCA, and Dr. Melinda Merck, the ASPCA’s Senior Director of Veterinary Forensic Sciences and the nation’s premier forensic veterinarian, collaborated to create the database, working with Dr. Randall Lockwood, the ASPCA’s Senior Vice President of Anti-Cruelty Initiatives and Training.

“This database will connect investigations across the country and internationally, creating multi-jurisdictional collaboration,” said Ms. Destreza, who presented on the Canine CODIS at the recent Veterinary Forensics Conference in Orlando, Fla. “It’s another tool we can use toward the elimination of dog fighting.”

Dr. Merck, who testifies as a forensic veterinary expert for animal cruelty cases around the country, added, “Juries expect forensic science to support the evidence that’s presented to them, and animal cruelty cases are no exception. This database breaks new ground in supplying that evidence for dog fighting investigations.”

The Canine CODIS contains individual DNA profiles from dogs that have been seized during dog-fighting investigations and from unidentified samples collected at suspected dog-fighting venues. The HSMO provided the 400 original and initial samples of dog DNA collected from dogs that were seized last July during the nation’s largest dog-fighting seizure ever, a multi-state raid led by Mr. Rickey that followed an 18-month investigation by federal and state agencies.

The database is similar to the FBI’s human CODIS, a computerized archive that stores DNA profiles from criminal offenders and crime scenes and is used in criminal and missing person investigations. DNA analysis and matching through the database will help law enforcement agencies to identify relationships between dogs, enabling investigators to establish connections between breeders, trainers, and dog-fight operators. Blood collected from dog fighting sites will also be searched against the Canine CODIS database to identify the source.

“The Veterinary Genetics Laboratory has one of the largest sample databases in the world,” said Beth Wictum, Director of the Forensics Unit of the Veterinary Genetics Laboratory in UC Davis’ School of Veterinary Medicine. “This is important for estimating the rarity of a DNA profile. The Canine CODIS database is unique because it includes many more DNA markers than are normally tested, and that provides greater power when calculating match probability or assigning parentage.”

“When these cases come to trial, it’s important to make your strongest case,” she adds. “DNA evidence not only establishes links between owners, breeders, and dog fighting sites, it tells a story. We can tie blood spatter on pit walls and clothing, or blood trails found outside of the pit, to a specific dog and tell his story for him. We become the voice for those victims.”

How the Canine CODIS Database Works

DNA samples from animals have been used in forensics investigations for over 15 years to help solve criminal investigations. In some cases, the animal may be related to the suspect, the victim or the crime scene.  In other cases, the animal itself is the victim or perpetrator.

In dog-fighting investigations, the dogs’ inner cheeks are swabbed to collect DNA in their saliva at the time they are seized.  These swab samples are then submitted to UC Davis Veterinary Genetics Laboratory for DNA testing. Law enforcement agencies also collect DNA at suspected dog-fighting venues in samples of blood, saliva, tissue, bones, teeth, feces and urine. These unidentified DNA samples can be submitted to the laboratory at UC Davis for analysis and archiving in the database.

When an agency submits a sample to the Veterinary Genetics Laboratory, the DNA is analyzed and the Canine CODIS database is then searched for corresponding DNA profiles. In the event the database search locates a match for the submitted DNA, the lab will notify both the agency that submitted the new sample and the agency that submitted the existing sample.  The Canine CODIS database is only available to law enforcement agencies; analysis is part of the cost of testing.

Dog Fighting Statistics

Although there are no official statistics, the ASPCA estimates that there are tens of thousands of people involved in dog fighting in the United States. Dog fighting is a federal crime, as well as a felony offense in all 50 U.S. states. For more information, visit http://www.aspcapro.org/dog-fighting-faq.php.

Reward offered – Dog Hanged in Philadelphia playground, PA

Source: Baltimore Sun, June 16, 2010

A $3,500 reward is being offered for information leading to the conviction of the person or persons responsible for the hanging death of a dog at a Philadelphia playground in the early morning hours of Tuesday, June 15, 2010.
A female, one-year-old, brown, pit-bull mix was found by a Humane Law Enforcement officer hanging from playground equipment at the Barrett Playground, at 8th and Duncannon Sts. in Philadelphia, PA 19120. The time of death is estimated to be in the early morning hours of Tuesday, June 15, 2010.

An investigation is underway, but the Pennsylvania SPCA needs the public’s help in gathering information about what happened to this dog.

Anyone with information should call the Pennsylvania SPCA’s toll-free, 24-hour cruelty hotline at 866.601.7722.

The initial $1,000 reward was increased after the Humane Society of the United States offered an additional $2,500 in reward money.

The staff here at the Pennsylvania SPCA has named the deceased dog Flora. If you would like to make a donation in her memory, or to find out how you can help other abused and neglected animals, please e-mail development@pspca.org.

Car accident reveals puppy mill – Santuary needs help, LA

Source: Reposted from The Examiner

Following a fatal car accident Friday, May 28th in Robert, Louisiana, law enforcement officials went to the home to inform the next of kin.

There they discovered a run-down house filled with stacked cages of puppies and dogs living in filthy conditions.

The St Francis Animal Sanctuary (SFAS) in Tylertown, Mississippi was called and has now removed over 100 animals from the property to their shelter.

Many of the dogs and puppies are miniature pinschers.

Pam Perez, SFAS President, says right now they need “hands to help.”

Perez says they are receiving thirty 10 by 10 kennels that will be set up in a two-acre play yard.

Their immediate need is for volunteers to help clean up the animals, get them fed and settled in and to begin socializing them.

Quoting from their email for help, Susan Lancaster, SFAS Administrative Director, says the most daunting aspect of this tragedy is the amount of care these animals will need in the upcoming weeks. None of the dogs seem to know what it’s really like to be a dog. They are all in dire need of socialization to people. Their whole lives were limited to one person and tiny, filthy wire cages. They are scared of people and new environments. Even going outside and walking on grass is terrifying to them right now. It’s a huge undertaking and we need all the volunteers we can get.”

Due to the amount of work involved, the phones at SFAS may not be answered throughout the Memorial weekend.

Please call Pam Perez’s cell number, 985-630-7627, if you would like to go to the sanctuary to help.

And, of course, monetary donations are always needed.

The sanctuary is located at:

97 Obed Magee Road
Tylertown, Mississippi

The dogs will all be up for adoption after proper time and care.

261 Dogs Seized From Polk City Couple, FL

Source: theledger.com, May 27, 2010

Deputies took custody of 261 dogs Thursday – the largest seizure in Polk County history – and arrested the owners of a Polk City non-profit dog rescue organization on animal cruelty charges.

Chuck and Diane O’Malley, who operate Mid-Florida Retriever Rescue Inc. at 15195 Angus Road were booked into the Polk County Jail with bail set at $130,500 each. Each was charged with 261 counts of animal cruelty.

Sheriff’s deputies were called anonymously Wednesday by someone who complained about the condition of the dogs and the environment they were living in, Polk Sheriff Grady Judd said.

“What we found was absolutely startling,” he said.

When agricultural and animal control deputies arrived at the home Wednesday, they were greeted by a herd of emaciated dogs inside and outside the house, officials said.

Judd said the deputies asked to check on the well-being of the dogs, and the O’Malleys were “very reluctant” to let them into the home.

When deputies entered, they were met by the stench of urine and feces, officials said. The smell was so pungent, some officers chose to wear gas masks or other coverings over their faces.

Once inside, the dogs in the home stampeded the deputies, Judd said. And some were unfriendly, biting the deputies several times and forcing them back outside.

The O’Malleys agreed to bring the dogs out one at a time for inspection.

After viewing 117 dogs, the O’Malleys were advised by their lawyer, whose name was not immediately available, to make the deputies get a search warrant if they wanted to inspect more, the Sheriff’s Office said.

When they did, the deputies found a 3,000-square-foot home that appeared to have been severely damaged by the presence of so many dogs, according to the Sheriff’s Office.

The bed in the master bedroom was so tattered, springs in the mattress were exposed. Sheriff’s officials said furniture was piled up, along with numerous dog cages, and dirt and feces were on the walls and floors.

“If they wanted to live in that house that’s their business,” Judd said. “The house wasn’t fit for humans or dogs.”

According to its website, Mid-Florida Retriever Rescue is a nonprofit organization that places “purebred Labrador retrievers and other working dogs in loving, permanent homes.”

The dogs seized between Wednesday night and early Thursday were of a variety of breeds and were being examined by veterinarians. By Thursday afternoon, about 100 of the dogs had been examined. None were euthanized.

One dog died while deputies were seizing the animals.

Dr. Joseph Ertel said all the dogs were infested with fleas, and most had some form of dermatitis. Others were found to have hookworm or whipworm or were in need of dental care.

Many of the dogs appeared to be severely underfed and had lost significant muscle mass.

“We are treating everything we are finding,” Ertel said. “If this continued, they would lose their life.”

The case was shocking for animal control deputies, who knew the couple from their work with the rescue group and numerous adoptions of animals from the animal control facility.

A man who said in an e-mail to The Ledger that he has fostered dogs for the O’Malleys defended the couple.

David Lundeen said in the e-mail that while he was surprised at the number of dogs found at the home, the couple’s hearts were in the right place.

“These are good people, with good intentions, who have helped rescue and place hundreds of dogs a year throughout Central Florida,” Lundeen wrote.

He said the dogs he fostered had received veterinary care.

“I know they have worked tirelessly to care for and feed the dogs they had in their possession,” Lundeen’s e-mail said.

Judd said the seizure of 261 dogs is having an impact on the county animal control facility. Donations of blankets or food by the public can help.

Sheriff’s Office lawyers will prepare court documents to take possession of the animals.

Adoptions of the animals won’t happen until a judge rules on the custody of the dogs in the case. But Judd said there are many other dogs at the facility that can be adopted now and are in need of homes.

Undercover Sting Leads to Dog Fighting Arrest, VA

Source:  wset.com, May 26, 2010

Bedford County authorities say they’ve dealt a huge blow to a national dog fighting ring by locking up one of its top breeders.

The Bedford County Sheriff’s Office announced Wednesday that they arrested Jeffrey Denny, 36, of North Carolina in an undercover sting at the Exxon in Montvale Monday night.

Denny was there to sell a female pit bull and planned on driving to Charleston, West Virginia to sell another dog, authorities say.

He has been charged with two counts of transporting animals for the purpose of fighting.

Investigators say Denny has delivered dogs all over the country, and they believe he’s responsible for hundreds of dog fighting deaths.

The good news is the two dogs taken from him are now in an animal shelter, saved from a life of violence.

Deputies say he has a reputation for breeding good fighting pit bulls.

“Mr. Denny is a nationally known and admitted dog fighter,” Bedford County Sheriff Mike Brown said. “He’s acknowledged that he’s sold hundreds of game-bred dogs throughout the United States.”

Investigators seized Denny’s mini-van, rigged to transport multiple dogs. These dogs were going for $900 apiece. The business of dog fighting is reported to be a multi-million dollar industry.

“And not too many of them put in 1099s to the IRS,” Brown said with a laugh.

The US Humane Society says they’ve had Denny at the top of their watch list for months.


“He’s been a long-standing breeder of dogs that are for the purpose of fighting,” US Humane Society Cruelty Investigator Chris Schindler said.


They’re certain word of his arrest will get around.

“It’s this effort that’s going to send a ripple effect cross the country to other animal fighters that this crime is not going to be tolerated,” Schindler said.

And they say the goal is to save the lives of dogs.

“Save possibly hundreds and hundreds of other dogs from being maimed and killed in the most gruesome way,” Brown said.

Authorities in Randolph County, North Carolina also seized 16 pit bulls from Denny’s home. They’ve charged him with 16 counts of dog fighting and 11 counts of cruelty to animals.

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