Sunday, December 14, 2014

Arleta couple charged, accused of hoarding nearly 100 dogs

CALIFORNIA -- Dogs with highly contagious illnesses left to fend for themselves. Others trapped in crowded cages that were stacked like cargo boxes..

Some of the dogs were so racked with life-threatening ulcers they dragged their limbs.

The animals were among 97 dogs rescued by animal control officers this summer inside a single-family home in Arleta.


 
On Friday, City Atty. Mike Feuer announced that he had filed animal cruelty and neglect charges against a couple who was supposed to be taking care of the dogs.

"No humane society should allow conditions like we allege these animals were housed in to persist," he said. "This is not how one treats cherished companions."

The case is the third animal cruelty complaint filed by the city attorney's office in less than three weeks.


Authorities say Christianna Billman Hartwell Coppola and her boyfriend, George Katcher, both 39, adopted the dogs from local animal shelters, then solicited donations from the public to help pay for the animals' care.

But Feuer said the funds never went to the dogs, who instead lived in "utterly deplorable conditions."

The dogs were finally rescued after neighbors complained about foul odors and the condition of the home and animals.

Animal control officers had to make two trips in June and one in July to rescue the animals.


Feces and urine were scattered throughout the home. There wasn't enough food and water to feed all the dogs, authorities said.

"The officers said they could smell the stench of what was inside this house from 100 feet away," Feuer said.

They found towels soaked in urine. Coppola was also covered in feces, authorities said.

Several dogs, he said, were emaciated and suffered from intestinal parasites, mange, heartworm and upper respiratory infections.

At least one dog had swollen ears and infected paws because it was left standing in feces and urine.
The dogs will be adoptable once they heal from their ailments, said Brenda Barnette, general manager for the city's Animal Services department.

(Los Angeles Times - Nov 7, 2014)

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