Texas Bulldog Owner Wins Verdict Against Hartz Mountain Pet Products

Source: ConsumerAffairs.com, Mar 9, 2010

A 72-year-old dog owner has won what may be a landmark decision against the country’s leading maker of pet care products and fueled the ongoing debate over the safety of topical flea and tick treatments.

A Texas jury awarded Frank Bowers $4,440.75 in the small claims court action he filed against Hartz Mountain Corporation. In this David-versus-Goliath court battle — believed to be the first small claims court action of its kind — Bowers alleged that Hartz Ultra Guard Pro Flea and Tick Drops caused the death of his beloved Olde English Bulldog, Diesel.

The six-member jury deliberated less than 30 minutes before reaching a unanimous decision in favor of Bowers, who was widely considered the underdog in the case.

“When the bailiff walked in the courtroom and said we have a unanimous decision, I nearly passed out,” said Bowers, who represented himself in the court action. “The jury said ‘we find Mr. Bowers’ integrity outweighed what was presented by (Hartz) attorney. He lost an animal of value and all costs he’s out are awarded to him.’”

“I just literally went numb,” Bowers added. “I caught up with three jurors in the hallway after the hearing. All I said to them was: ‘thank you, thank you, thank you.’ And they just said: ‘we did our job.’”

Hartz told ConsumerAffairs.com that it believed the case was “without merit,” but did not appeal because of the time and cost involved.

Sense of justice

For Bowers, the jury’s decision brings closure and a sense of justice to an emotional issue that started at 8:30pm on August 7, 2008. On that warm summer night in Texas, Bowers applied Hartz Ultra Guard Pro Flea and Tick Drops to the 14-month-old, 68-pound, Diesel.

“I nipped off the top of the tube and put it on his back,” Bowers recalled. “I precisely used it as directed – nothing more, nothing less than directed.” By early the next morning Diesel had become gravelly ill.

“I went to my garage to work and I smelled this odor from excretion,” Bowers said. “Diesel was laying on the floor. He was shaking and having spasms of some kind. And he was passing a horrible odor of diarrhea.” Bowers called his daughter, who told him to immediately take the ailing dog to the vet.

Diesel’s health continued its rapid decline during the ride to his vet’s office, Bowers said.

“He continued to have bowel movements on the way. When we got to the vet’s office, he couldn’t walk. They got one of those stainless steel tables and took him back to an exam room.”

The veterinarian asked Bowers a battery of questions about Diesel, including one that caught him off guard.

“The vet asked me if I’d put any flea treatment on him,” Bowers said. “And I said: ‘yes, last night.’ I told him what it was and went back to the store to get a tube to show him.”

The vet, he said, took one look at the Hartz Ultra Guard Pro Flea and Tick Drops and shook his head. “He said: ‘Oh, my God. He’s going to have kidney failure.’”

By 4 o’clock the next morning, Diesel’s kidneys had shut down.

“He was in total renal failure,” Bowers said. “The vet wanted permission to euthanize him. I said you know what’s best and I don’t want any animal to suffer. “I picked Diesel up around 7am and took him out in the country and buried him on my daughter’s 10 acres.”

This painful chapter in Bowers’ life happened in less than 35 hours – from the night he applied the flea and tick drops to the morning of Diesel’s death.

He wanted answers

Bowers wanted answers. He wanted to know why Diesel’s health deteriorated so quickly.

The plain-spoken Texan went straight to the source. He called Hartz.

“But they did not care to discuss this with me,” Bowers said of the company’s customer service representatives. “They insinuated that I did something wrong. “At that point, I said my dog is dead and I need you pay. It’s about $4,000.”

Hartz balked at his suggestion, Bowers said.

“They said we won’t pay that, sir. It’s a risk you take when you use our products. I asked for this person’s supervisor, but she hung up on me.”

Bowers then sent the company a letter about Diesel’s death.

“I got no response,” he said. “This irritated me. They acted like I didn’t exist.

“About two months later, someone (from Hartz) called me and told me it was my fault (that Diesel died) or neglect that caused the death and they were not responsible.”

Bowers contacted a few attorneys to see if they’d take his case. “But none wished to be bothering Hartz as there was not enough money,” he said. The determined pet owner, however, didn’t give up or back down.

He took matters into his own hands and represented himself in court, specifically Small Claims Court, Precinct 3, in Travis County, Texas. Consumers in the Lone Star State can seek damages of up to $10,000 in their small claims court proceedings. Texas also allows jury trials in small claims court actions.

“I filed papers in small claims court,” said Bowers, who lives in Austin, Texas. “But the court called me a while later and said I needed to re-file my case because Hartz did not respond.”

Bowers filed his case again on July 28, 2009. “And this time, Hartz did respond to the court,” he said. “The court sent the company a registered and non-registered letter about my case. An attorney contacted the court and said she represented Hartz.”

The court wanted Bowers and Hartz to resolve the case through mediation. But that process wasn’t too productive, Bowers said.

“I looked at the girl (Hartz’ attorney) square in the eyes and said: ‘do you have a check for this amount — $4,400?’ She said no. I said ‘then this mediation is over. At this time, there is nothing to negotiate.’”

Bowers and Hartz’ attorney then went back and talked to the judge.

“The judge said we’ll have to reschedule for another appearance,” Bowers said. “But I told the judge that I wanted a trial by jury. She said that’s your privilege. The attorney (for Hartz) didn’t like it. She wanted to settle this between her and I.

“Here I am — 72-year-olds old. I have a high school education. I don’t have a law degree. But I still wanted a trial by jury. The judge asked me if I thought I could get a jury verdict in my favor and I said I wouldn’t be here if I didn’t.”

Day in court

Bowers’ day in court finally arrived on January 12, 2010.

Before the trial, each side had a chance to question a pool of potential jurors.

“I chose not to ask them any questions,” Bowers said. “But Hartz’ attorney kicked a few potential jurors off because they had pets. She also asked the jurors if they’d had any problems in the past with pet medications. She didn’t want any pet owners or people who had problems with pet medications on the jury. There were also no vets on the jury.”

In the end, a jury of three men and three women heard the case.

“The trial took less than two hours,” Bowers said. “I wasn’t able to tell the jury everything I wanted to.”

The judge, for example, wouldn’t allow Bowers to enter into evidence any of his Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) documents about the adverse reactions dogs and cats have experienced from topical flea and tick products. The vets he wanted to call as witnesses also couldn’t make it to court that day.

“I had no witnesses,” Bowers said. “I was riding the brass rail by myself.” And he was up against Hartz’ savvy attorney, who he learned had taken a special course on flea and tick products to prepare her for the case.

“Hartz had all kinds of statements about flea and tick products and they had everything notarized so it could be entered into evidence,” Bowers said. “I didn’t know I needed to do that (get documents notarized). Hartz had statements from their vets, too.”

During the trial, Hartz also cross-examined Bowers about Diesel’s death. He’s glad they did.

“That’s when I got in the information that they wouldn’t let me enter,” Bowers said. “I entered it by blurting it from the witness box. The attorney asked me a question like ‘how did I know it was Hartz that killed my animal?’ And I said Hartz has killed many other animals.

“The attorney was screaming to get me to shut up and I just kept talking,” Bowers added. “The judge then told me to shut up. At that point, I looked at the judge and said ‘I’m sorry.’ And then I looked at the jury and smiled.”

Used as directed?

Hartz’ attorney also suggested that Bowers didn’t apply the flea and tick drops as directed.

“They screamed that over and over,” Bowers said. “But I precisely used it as directed.”

Hartz and other makers of fleas and tick products often cite the misuse of these treatments for adverse reactions. Pet owners, they say, may put a flea and tick product intended for a dog on a cat. Or they may apply too much flea and tick product on their pets.

Last summer, the ASPCA’s Animal Poison Control Center also studied its data on topical flea and tick products. That study revealed the likelihood of severe adverse reactions was significantly less when dogs and cats were treated according to directions.

“From the data we have collected, the adverse reactions tend to be mild, like skin sensations and stomach upset,” the ASPCA’s Dr. Steven Hansen said after the organization released its study. “We don’t have very many cases of true neurological issues when these products are properly used.”

Bowers, however, repeatedly told ConsumerAffairs.com that he used the Hartz flea and ticks drops as directed when he applied them to Diesel. He also told us the court didn’t give him the chance to cross-examine any of Hartz’ witnesses during the trial. “I wasn’t asked to,” he said. “I asked the judge why I could ask any questions and she said ‘that’s procedure.’”

The jury, however, wasn’t swayed by the witnesses or documents Hartz used in its defense.

After deliberating for less than 30 minutes, the jurors ruled in Bowers favor.

“I didn’t know what to think when I heard that,” he said, adding the $4,440 he won covers the cost of Diesel and the dog’s vet bills. “I was dumbfounded.”

Bowers is convinced the jury sided with him because of one issue that surfaced during the trial: whether the chemical Phenothrin, which is in Hartz Ultra Guard Flea and Tick Drops, is the same or similar to the chemical Permethrin. Bowers said he argued that, according to his “carnal knowledge,” those two are the same chemical compound.

“I kid you not, that is the thing that saved my case,” he said.

Hartz vehemently disputes that contention, saying those are completely different ingredients.

“The trade name for Phenothrin is Sumithrin,” the company’s spokeswoman, Anne Isenhower, told ConsumerAffairs.com. “Permethrin is a completely different ingredient that Hartz does not use in any of our on-animal products in the United States.”

Hartz also downplayed Bowers’ allegations and the jury’s decision. “This case was without merit and the allegations weren’t supported by evidence (presented in the trial),” said Isenhower, senior vice president, with GolinHarris, Hartz’ public relations firm. Hartz, however, did not appeal the jury’s decision because of the time and cost involved to pursue such action, Isenhower said.

Asked if Bowers’ case marked the first time a consumer has successfully sued Hartz over one of its topical flea and tick products, Isenhower said: “Yes, we believe so. We are not aware of any verdict against Hartz flea & tick drops.”

She had an identical comment when asked if Bowers’ case was the first small claims court victory against Hartz. “Yes, we believe so. We are not aware of any verdict against Hartz flea & tick drops.”

Safety defended

In spite of the jury’s decision, Isenhower defended the safety of Hartz flea and tick products.

“We’ve conducted extensive analysis of the adverse event reporting on our products as well as all topic treatments in the market,” she said. “Although Hartz is the leader in flea and tick retail sales, we are less than three percent of all adverse effects reported to the EPA in 2008 for topical dog flea and tick treatments.”

The safety of topical or “spot-on” flea and tick products has come under “intensified” scrutiny by the EPA for the past 11 months.

The agency started that probe last April, saying it had received more than 44,000 reports of adverse reactions associated with spot-on flea and tick products.

“Adverse reactions reported range from mild effects such as skin irritation to more serious effects such as seizures and, in some cases, the death of the pet,” the EPA said.

Data delayed

The agency told ConsumerAffairs.com that it planned to release its findings last fall. The EPA, however, has since delayed that release date.

“Due to the large amount of data and the complex technical issues associated with the review of the data, our report is not ready for public release,” the agency’s spokesman, Dale Kemery, told us in December 2009. “We anticipate publicly releasing the document in early 2010.”

The EPA will post its findings about topical flea and tick products, and any regulatory action it may take, on its Web site.

In the meantime, animal experts recommend pet owners consult their veterinarians about which flea and tick product to use on their dogs or cats.

Beware

Back in Texas, Bowers warns pet owners to be “earthly” aware of any topical flea and tick products they put on their animals.

“I think I’ll utilize just plain soap and water,” he said. “I use Head and Shoulders shampoo on my dogs now. I bathe them every time I see them scratching. “We used to get Myrtle Bush when I was a child growing up in Louisiana,” he added. “It was a natural killer of fleas.”

Bowers is also keenly aware that his legal victory could have ripple effects in courtrooms across the country. He suspects his case may serve as a rallying call for other pet owners who’ve seen their dogs or cats suffer burns, blisters, seizures, neurological problems, or even die after using topical flea and tick products.

His case, he said, may open the floodgates for similar lawsuits nationwide.

“I think this case will make pet owners wonder why they have not gone forward with their cases in small claims court,” Bowers said. “And if they do, my advice to them if get a trial by jury; I would never accept a non-jury trial.”

The amount of money consumers can recover in small claims court varies by state. And some states do not allow trials by jury in small claims court. ConsumerAffairs.com has a comprehensive small claims court guide.

Queens Woman Charged With Beating Dog With Snow Shovel

Source: wpix.com, Mar 7, 2010

A Queens woman was caught on video beating her 11-month-old English bull dog with a snow shovel.

Maria Aguilar, 36, allegedly crippled the dog with her months of abuse. She was arrested and charged with animal cruelty and criminal possession of a weapon.

The dog, named Spike, suffered a hip fracture, a broken leg, three broken teeth and injuries to his ears. Doctors also say he’s virtually blind in his right eye as a result of his injuries.

The ASPCA visited Aguilar’s home last month after reports of a dog continuously crying. One neighborhood used a camera phone to tape the abuse.

Aguilar initially denied the abuse, but once the ASPCA showed her the video, she confessed to throwing Spike to the ground and then slamming him with a snow shovel.

According to reports, Aguilar’s husband had taken Spike to the vet 12 times in the last seven months.

ASPCA officials say Spike will likely suffer pain and lameness for the rest of his life in light of his injuries.

California Considers Tracking Animal Abusers Like Sex Offenders

Source: FoxNews.com, mar 5, 2010

The California state Legislature is considering a new proposal to establish a registry of names — similar to widely used sex offender databases — to track and make public the identities of people convicted of felony animal abuse.

Animal abusers would be tracked like sex offenders if California lawmakers have their way.

The state Legislature is considering a new proposal to establish a registry of names — similar to widely used sex offender databases — to track and make public the identities of people convicted of felony animal abuse.

The registry, which under the law would be posted on the Internet, wouldn’t just include names. The bill calls for photographs, home addresses, physical descriptions, criminal histories, known aliases and other details to be made public.

Supporters say it’s a way to notify communities and local police that animal abusers are living among them and to warn shelters to watch out for them if they try to adopt.

“In part, it’s an attempt to give law enforcement a heads up when people like this are in their communities, so they can cut off problems at the pass,” said Lisa Franzetta, spokeswoman for the Animal Legal Defense Fund, which is leading a national campaign to get states to establish the registries.

California Senate Majority Leader Dean Florez, who introduced the bill last month, was the first to take a crack at it, though Tennessee has considered something similar. Franzetta said lawmakers from six states have contacted the group to express interest in launching animal abuser databases.

Florez said the bill, which if passed would be the first of its kind, falls in line with other animal protection bills California has pursued. He said the registry is aimed at helping animal control officers do their jobs and animal shelters make sure abusers “don’t walk out with an animal they can torture.”

But not everybody in California, which also maintains a database of arsonists, thinks a brand new public database of unsavory persons is what the state needs, particularly given its budget troubles.

The tool is estimated to cost between $500,000 and $1 million to launch, and to pay for it, the bill calls for both fines on animal abusers and a new tax on pet food — in the neighborhood of a few cents per pound. That doesn’t sit well with the pet food lobby, since it argues the tax punishes the very people who are trying to help, not hurt, their animal friends.

“We generally don’t think that this is a very good proposal,” said Ed Rod, vice president of government affairs for the American Pet Products Associations, though he called the idea a worthy goal.

“Making one group of people, the pet owners, pay for something that’s going to benefit everyone doesn’t seem fair,” Rod said. “It’s not pet owners in general who are abusing the animals. They’re trying to take care of the animals.”

The Fresno Bee published an editorial in opposition to the bill Friday, saying the new “state bureaucracy” would be funded by an “unfair tax” on pet owners.

“We also question the registry’s effectiveness. We would rather see the penalties and fines substantially increased on those convicted of animal cruelty,” the paper wrote. “We have no problem with private groups creating registries. … But we oppose another state bureaucracy.”

Florez, though, said that once launched, the registry would probably only have one employee attached to it and an annual cost of $60,000 to $70,000.

“We don’t see this moving into some kind of large bureaucracy,” he said.

Franzetta said that the database would only be to flag the worst offenders, like people who hoard hundreds of animals under poor conditions or “sadistic animal torturers” who pick up their prey at shelters. She said recidivism for felony offenders is high and that animal abuse can be a gateway to more egregious crimes — she said communities should know “who’s living among them” just like they can with sex offenders.

“The same logic applies,” she said.

House votes to ban surgical dog ‘debarking’, MA

Source: BostonHerald.com, Mar 4, 2010

The Massachusetts House has voted overwhelmingly to ban the surgical “debarking” or silencing of dogs or cats.

By a 150-1 vote, the House on Wednesday approved the bill with prohibits the devocalization of dogs and cats unless a licensed veterinarian certifies that the procedure is medically necessary to relieve an illness, disease or injury.

Animal rights groups pushed for the bill, saying the practice amounts to animal cruelty and poses only risks to the pets.

Some dog owners opt for the procedure as a last ditch effort to try to quiet chronically barking dogs.

The bill now heads to the Senate.

DeKalb felon caught with 25 starving, scarred dogs outside Macon, GA

Source: ajc.com, Feb 17, 2010

The sheriff in Washington County outside Macon arrested a man Wednesday who kept 25 emaciated and scarred dogs chained to tires, axles and posts on a sprawling hunting property.

Investigators found another 27 buried dog carcasses, and the sheriff said there could be others.

“We think these dogs were involved in dog fighting, and we think they were used for other dogs to practice with,” Sheriff Thomas Smith told the AJC. “It was awful.”

Thomas said his agency arrested Billy Taylor Jr., 52, and charged him with possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. “There will be many counts of cruelty to animals,” the sheriff added.

Taylor was renting the property where the dogs were found, which is on Ohoopee Church Road in Oconee, the sheriff said. He said Taylor ’s prior felony conviction was for forgery in DeKalb County in 1998.

The sheriff’s office began investigating the cruelty case about four months ago and called on the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals for help several weeks ago.

The dogs were victims of cruelty and “horrible” conditions, Tim Rickey, the senior director of field investigations at ASPCA, said in a written statement. The organization took the survivors to an undisclosed shelter where they were being treated by ASPCA veterinarians with help from the University of Florida’s Center for Forensic Medicine.

Rickey said the dogs had “battle scars” and were starved for human attention. They were suffering from untreated injures, respiratory problems and open wounds, and were shivering when they were rescued, the ASPCA said.

Thomas said the dogs were a mix of several breeds, including pit bull, chow and German Shepherd. They were tied down by thick “logging chains,” so they would gain strength by dragging their anchors around, he said. They were living out in the open, amongst the trees. “I don’t know how they made it through the snow,” he said, referring to last week’s snowfall.

The sheriff said he hopes to see other people besides Taylor charged in connection with the case. “We’re hoping he will cooperate” with the investigation, the sheriff said. “But he’s not cooperating right now.”

Maryland Mulls Ban on Sale of Dogs Less Than 9 Months Old

Source: PetProductNews.com, Feb 12, 2010

Maryland legislators have introduced a bill that would prohibit retail pet stores from selling dogs that are less than nine months old in age. A hearing for the measure, Senate Bill 505, is scheduled to go before the Senate Finance Committee on Feb. 18.

As introduced, SB 505 defines a “retail pet store” as a “for profit establishment open to the public that sells or offers for sale domestic animals to be kept as household pets.”

If approved, Maryland pet stores would not be allowed to display, sell, deliver, offer for sale or adoption, barter, auction, give away, transfer or dispose of a dog less than nine months old.

The rule would not apply to breeders; a publicly- or privately-operated humane society or nonprofit animal adoption organization; or an adoption event operated by a humane society or nonprofit animal adoption organization out of or in connection with a retail pet store.

Violators would be subject to a $500 fine for the first offense and $1,000 for each subsequent offense.

If approved, the measure would take effect on Oct. 1, 2010.

95 Dogs Found At Mississippi Puppy Mill

Source: wreg.com,Feb 4, 2010

A tip led investigators to a rural home where they discovered one of the worst puppy mills they’ve ever seen.

A Mississippi couple faces dozens of misdemeanor counts of Animal Cruelty. Investigators with the Marshall County Sheriff’s Office and the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals found 95 dogs living in what they call “deplorable conditions” early Thursday. Animal experts say the type of matted hair found on some of the dogs took years to grow. It’s proof, they say, of neglect and abuse of 95 dogs found on the property. Investigators think the operation had gone on for a while, even though neighbors say they never suspected anything. It’s possible the couple took in animals, but then just had too many to care for. At some point, authorities say they started to breed more — for profit.

“I think she’s probably a very nice person and she’s trying to help these animals out,” says Mary Champlin who lives next door.

Neighbors watch in shock, as one by one the animals are tagged and evaluated. Most have disease and malnutrition. Marshall County Prosecutor Shirley Byers says she found carcasses all over the property, skeletal remains inside pens, and a pile of ash where she thinks the homeowners disposed of dead animals.

“It’s very difficult and very time consuming to take care of 100 animals. If you don’t have a staff… this is typically what you end up with,” says Tim Rickey with the ASPCA.

It’s possible they just had too many dogs to handle, but it’s the females that prove to investigators the problem goes beyond hoarding.

“She was a breeder,” says Kelley Wier with the American Humane Association as she holds an adult Chihuahua. “You can clearly see the teats, they’re elongated, so she’s been bred more than once.”

As the workers with the AHA trim lumps of matted hair from a shivering dog, they place it in bags that will entered into evidence that will eventually help charge the couple with animal abuse. The prosecutor says the Sheriff’s office knew of a problem back in 2008, but nothing happened. Byers says the woman responsible used to work at the Sheriff’s office, and her husband is the Assistant County Coroner. Charges could come in the next week.

In the meantime, the neglected dogs will stay at the Marshall County Humane Society Clinic in Byhalia. They are not up for adoption until the court process gets underway, however cash donations are needed to help care for the animals. Contact the Marshall County Humane Society Clinic, the American Humane Association at www.americanhumane.org or the ASPCA at www.aspca.org.

RI man charged with operating on his own dog

Source: Associated Press, Feb 5, 2010

A Rhode Island man who says he couldn’t afford veterinary care for his dog has been charged with illegally operating on the pet.

Alan MacQuattie recently removed a cyst from the leg of his 14-year-old Labrador mix. The dog was operated on again by professionals to deal with an infection from the first surgery.

MacQuattie, 63, who says he is disabled and living on Social Security, said Friday he used local anesthetic to operate on the cyst and removed it on his own since he doesn’t have money for a veterinarian.

“In the economy as it is right now, especially in Rhode Island, who in the hell is going to give you a little extra helping hand?” he said.

E.J. Finocchio, a veterinarian and president of the Rhode Island Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, called the surgery a “heinous crime.”

He said the procedure was medically unnecessary since the cyst was benign and did not appear to be hurting the dog, though MacQuattie said she was irritated by it.

“The dog was not suffering, the dog was not in pain,” Finocchio said. “We know that from the nature of the cyst and the condition of the dog that we looked at.”

Finocchio said the procedure would probably have cost less than $200, and that his organization could have helped foot the bill.

Court records show MacQuattie pleaded no contest last week to misdemeanor charges of animal cruelty and unauthorized practice of veterinary medicine. He was also ordered to make restitution but was allowed to keep the dog. He said he doesn’t believe he did anything wrong.

“My trying to help an animal, I don’t believe it’s animal cruelty,” MacQuattie said.

The surgery was first reported by WPRI-TV.

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