Showing posts with label bleach. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bleach. Show all posts

Friday, June 9, 2017

United Kingdom: Chloe Cutler, unmarried, 24 years old with two children and pregnant with a 3rd, is told by judge 'I hope you care for your children better' but doesn't even order her to spend a single night in jail after she was found to have purposely abandoned her Rottweiler puppy to starve to death, with plans to secretly return and bury it "once it finally died"

UNITED KINGDOM -- A pregnant mother who starved her puppy to death so she could bury it in the back garden without anyone knowing has avoided prison.

Chloe Cutler, 24, chose to starve the little Rottweiler puppy "for months" while she prepared to move into a new residence and was allegedly told she could not have a pet at her new place.

Instead of taking the puppy to the shelter or putting an ad online to find it a new home, she chose to starve it to death.

The desperate animal became so thirsty it drank bleach from the toilet before suffering a long and painful death which was 'entirely avoidable', a court heard.


Horrified RSPCA officers found the dog's emaciated carcass hidden under a blanket when they raided Cutler's empty house in Newton Aycliffe, County Durham.

They also found three tins of dog food on a sideboard but Cutler had not opened a single one to help save the dying animal.

Prosecutor Kevin Campbell, for the RSPCA, said the dog endured a long death that was 'entirely avoidable'.

'When the RSPCA got into the property they found a very skinny Rottweiler carcass. It was sent off to the pathologist who said the dog died of starvation over many months.

'It could have been avoided had she have just given it some food. There were three tins of dog food on the side. The dog had also drank bleach from the toilet because it was so thirsty.'

Cutler, who already has two children, said she moved out of the house just before Christmas because she lost her electricity card.

She went to stay with her mother and could not take the dog because her mother already had animals.

Probation officer Jayne Todd said: 'She knew the dog was losing weight for about four weeks but CLAIMS could not afford vet care. She returned to the house and left the dog again fully aware of the dire condition it was in.

'She planned to return [after it finally starved to death] and then bury it in the garden thinking nobody else would need to know about it.'

Cutler admitted causing unnecessary suffering to an animal between December 23, 2016 and January 23, 2017.

NO JAIL TIME FOR THIS MONSTER

Magistrates reduced her sentence to 17 weeks because of her guilty plea and suspended it for 18 months. During sentencing a magistrate told Cutler he hoped she 'cared for her children better'.

She was also ordered to pay £360 legal costs and a £115 surcharge and was banned from keeping animals for life.

Cutler's defense attorney, Calum Terry, made excuses claiming she was 'a young girl struggling on her own with two young children' at the time.

He added: 'She takes full responsibility and has been upset since the very start of this. At the time, her priority was her young children.'

Maybe her priority should be BIRTH CONTROL and GETTING A JOB.

Nick Edgar, chair of the bench at Newton Aycliffe Magistrate’s Court, said: “I hope you are thoroughly ashamed of yourself, this is a particularly callous case.

“You stayed away from a property that you imprisoned this dog in hoping it would die so you could dispose of it. It’s absolutely terrible. I hope you’re caring for your children better than you cared for the dog.”

(Daily Mail - June 8, 2017)

Sunday, May 14, 2017

Texas: Zavier Humphrey, 18, accused of breaking into a home and torturing the owner's pit bull, dumping bleach, lighter fluid and other chemicals on her, blinding her

TEXAS -- When four men busted into a Mesquite home this week, the family’s dog was barking from inside her crate.

When she wouldn’t stop barking at the intruders, the burglars did the unthinkable.

She was locked inside her crate and couldn't get away
while they threw bleach, lighter fluid and cleaning
products into her face, blinding her

“We believe the suspects became angry with the dog, dumped bleach on the dog, and dumped on other household items around the house,” said Mesquite Police Department spokesman Lt. Brian Parrish.

According to a GoFundMe page set up to cover Laila’s vet bills, the chemicals caused ulcers on her dog's, leaving her nearly blind.

The family did not want to speak on camera out of fear of retaliation. However, a post seeking the public’s help to find the burglars was shared more than 17 times on Facebook.

Two days later, thanks to a crime stoppers tip, Mesquite police arrested two of the suspects connected with the case, police said.


Eighteen-year-olds, Zavier Humphrey and Jacob Hernandez, of Dallas, have both been charged with burglary. Humphrey has also been charged with animal cruelty. Police are still looking for two more people.

“In my career, I haven’t seen something like this that’s seemed this mean,” Parrish said.

The burglars also ransacked the home, throwing food around the kitchen, and stole electronics, according to police. The investigation continues.

The good news is that their GoFundMe reached - and surpassed - its goal within 24 hours.

GoFundMe: Laila's medical bill
$2,470 of $1,000 goal
Raised by 85 people in 23 hours
Erika Ortiz Parra  MESQUITE, TX
On May 3rd our house was burglarized by a group of young men who destroyed our home and stole most of our belongings.


The thieves poured bleach, lighter fluid and other cleaning chemicals on our family dogs' eyes and entire body. 

We took them to the vet our chihuahua was fine but our pit bull suffered the most damage in her eyes. The chemicals caused cornea ulcers that cover 80% of her eyes. 

They're doing everything possible to save the little sight she has left. We have to continue her medical care so they can save the last 20% vision she has.

We don't care for our material belongings we just want our pets to get better. We are only asking for  some of her  future medical bills and medicine. Thank you in advance and anything will help.


CHILDREN AND ADOLESCENTS WHO ENJOY TORTURING ANIMALS
According to pet-abuse.com, animal abusers are five times more likely to commit violent crimes than non-abusers and violent childhood and adolescent offenders against animals are likely to repeat the criminal behavior as they become adults. Studies have shown that most serial killers tortured animals as children/teens.




ARREST INFO:
Full Name: Zavier Humphrey
City: Dallas, Texas
Gender: Male
Race: Black
Birthdate: 06/15/1998
Arrest Age: 18
Arrest Date: 05/06/2017
Arrest Time: 4:30 AM
Arrest location: Dallas County, Texas
Total Bond: $6000
Charges
#1 BURGLARY OF HABITATION. BOND: $2500
#2 BURGLARY OF HABITATION. BOND: $2500
#3 Cruelty to Non-Livestock Animals: Fail to prov. BOND: $1000

 

(WFAA - May 5, 2017)

Sunday, May 1, 2016

Massachusetts: Guilty of pouring bleach on small dog and letting her suffer with chemical burns, Judge Philip Contant lets Jennifer Gingras walk out a free woman

MASSACHUSETTS --  A former city woman escaped jail time Thursday after she was found guilty of a charge of cruelty to an animal brought by the city’s animal control officer.

Jennifer Gingras, 36, 275 Main St., #402, Holyoke, was found guilty of the felony by Judge Philip Contant after a long delayed bench trial and was sentenced to incarceration for a one year term in the house of correction, suspended, with probation for two years and a host of lesser sanctions.


The case began Jan. 24, 2014, after a city resident complained to police that his girlfriend had poured a bottle of bleach on his crated dog, Gigit, a 14-year-old Jack Russell terrier, and left the dog in the crate on his bleach-soaked bedding all day.

Westfield Police Officer Luis Morales had responded to the original call and referred the case to Ken Frazer, then the city’s director of animal control operations.

Frazer’s investigation found that Gingras and her then boyfriend, Jarrod Clark of Union Street, had “fought many times about the dog and that the dog had bitten Gingras.” He said “every chance she had, she kicked it or molested it in some way”.

Clark’s mother, Dianne Patitucci of New York gave a similar account shortly after Frazer filed a criminal complaint against Gingras alleging cruelty to an animal.

Patitucci said that shortly after Gingras moved in with her son the previous November she began “a quest to have my son ‘get rid’ of Gigit”.

She said that Gingras was abusive to Gigit but said that, in an attempt to mollify her, her son had agreed to keep Gigit in a crate when he was not at home.

Gingras had reported that the crated dog had bitten her and Patitucci said that the bite, which caused Gigit to be quarantined, occurred while the dog was in his crate and Gingras had stuck a finger inside after tormenting him.

Gingras was arraigned on the charge in Westfield District Court on June 25, 2014 and released on her personal recognizance. She exercised her option for a jury trial and, in September, a trial date was set for March 16, 2015, but she failed to appear, reporting through her lawyer that she was recovering from a case of pneumonia.

Gingras also failed to appear for a trial date on Aug. 19 but came to court on Nov. 17 when she changed her mind about a jury trial, choosing to have the case heard by a judge in a bench trial.

Her trial began that day, before Contant, but it was not completed that day and the case was again continued, twice, before the bench trial resumed on Thursday.

Then, Gingras vacillated and tendered a plea.


She was willing to acknowledge that a case could be presented sufficient to warrant a guilty finding for the crime if Contant would agree to continue the case without a finding with probation.

The finding is a frequent outcome for criminal cases which allows a defendant to escape a guilty finding and the criminal record which follows a conviction.

Gingras’ lawyer, Thomas D. Whitney of Amherst recounted his client’s many and serious medical issues which included two herniated discs, two miscarriages, possible cervical cancer and an anxiety disorder and said that the plea was tendered because of his client’s “inability” to testify on her own behalf due to her condition.

He asked that the case be continued without a finding with probation for two years. He also asked that the $90 victim/witness fee and the $50 monthly probation service fees be waived so that Gingras, with the assistance of her fiancee, could make payments on the $1,722.70 restitution the victims were due.

The Commonwealth, in the person of Assistant District Attorney Magali Montes, countered with a recommendation of a two year sentence in the house of correction with six months to be served direct and the balance suspended with probation for two years. Montes proposed that Gingras pay both the victim/witness and probation service fees and make the restitution asked for. In addition Montes asked that the judge prohibit her from abusing animals and order that she not work or volunteer for any organization involved in the care of animals. She also recommended that Gingras be required to undergo a psychiatric evaluation and be ordered to comply with any recommended treatment.

The court’s Probation Department concurred with the Commonwealth’s proposal.

However Contant did not accept either proposal and said that, if he were to rule then, “I would be inclined to go with a guilty finding with a one year sentence to the house of correction with, 60 days direct and the balance suspended with one year (probation) and a $800 fine and a $200 surfine” as well as the victim/witness fee and the monthly probation service fee. “And I would adopt the conditions the Commonwealth had recommended” he said

Gingras elected to withdraw her tender of plea and the trial continued.

Dr. Renee E. Slowick testified that she had treated Gigit on the day of the incident and reported that the dog was in shock when she examined the 16.7 pound dog which reeked of bleach in her clinic at Montgomery Road Animal Hospital.

The veterinarian said that a morphine derivative painkiller was administered to control the dog’s “considerable pain” and he was washed with “copious amounts of saline (solution)” before he was stabilized.


Slowick said the dog received “severe chemical burns to all four feet, legs, the front part of his chest and his face.” She said both eyes were inflamed but right eye was obviously more seriously injured.

Gigit returned for further treatment “at least five or six times for the issue of the right eye” she said. “I believe the right eye took the brunt of the bleach and I was not able to save that eye.”

Montes referenced the investigation by the city’s Animal Control department and presented a scenario in which Gingras was at odds with her boyfriend over the dog and wanted to have it removed from the household.

Animal Control Officer Kerri Francis testified that she went to the couple’s apartment to inform them of the terms of quarantine after Gingras was bitten by the crated dog. She testified that the woman was surprised and dismayed when she realized that Gigit was not going to be removed but was instead going to be quarantined in the couple’s home.

When Montes asked Francis what Gingras’ demeanor had been when she realized that the ACO was not going to remove the dog from the household Francis replied “Pissed off – can I say that?”


Francis was willing to accept “upset” when Montes suggested it as a suitable synonym and said “she kinda got upset and turned to Jarrod and said ‘It’s either me or the dog’.”

Whitney attempted to present as a defense a scenario in which Gingras, after preparing to clean the dog’s crate, left an open bottle of bleach on the blanket which covered the wire cage in which Gigit was confined.

His questions of the witnesses, and his remarks to the bench, were aimed at highlighting the possibility that the open bottle of bleach that Gingras said she left atop Gigit’s crate was accidentally overturned when the crate was jostled by the dog moving inside.

Despite Whitney’s earlier claim that Gingras was incapable, due to her medical concerns, of testifying in her defense she took the stand.

Under Whitney’s questioning she testified that, although she did not feed the dog or otherwise care for him (“That was his job”) she had decided that morning to clean the dog’s cage before she was interrupted by a phone call summoning her to an unscheduled shift at her workplace.

Although she was asked, she did not explain how she was going to physically remove the dog – which she had previously said had bitten her – so she could clean the crate but said that she had left the opened bottle of bleach atop the dog’s crate when she left after being unexpectedly called in to work.

In her closing statement Montes rejected the possibility that the dog’s injuries were accidental.


Montes suggested instead that the assault on Gigit was the final act of Gingras’ campaign to have Gigit removed. “She just didn’t want the dog, they had fought about the dog, she believed that the dog was going to be taken and it didn’t happen so she took the matter into her own hands” Montes said.

“She left the dog for dead, covered in bleach, soaked” she said.

Whitney’s defense that the dog’s injuries were accidental did not succeed with Contant either who said “The Commonwealth has proven the defendant is guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.”

In response to Contant’s offer to hear from the parties regarding his disposition of the case Montes reiterated her earlier recommendation which included six months jail time for the defendant.

Whitney said, “If the court intends to impose a suspended sentence we’d have no objection to that but actual jail time is rather pointless.”

He cited her record pointing out that she had previously only been charged with operating a motor vehicle under the influence of alcohol but did acknowledge that she is currently the defendant of an unresolved charge unrelated to the bleach incident.

He said she has a “a series of medical things that are going to occur and once she gets those out of the way she’ll be able to work and pay the restitution on this thing.”

“I think it’s a burden on society to put her in jail for any period of time” Whitney said.

After hearing from both attorneys Contant said “I’m going to sentence the defendant to one year in the house of correction” and did not falter when Gingras’ fiance, seated in the front row, said audibly “You’re *&^% kidding me”. 

As court officers spoke with the man, Judge Contant went on to say that he was suspending the jail term.

He said that, while Gingras would not necessarily serve time in jail, the one year sentence “would be hanging over her head” while she was on probation for two years.

He also imposed an $800 fine, a $200 surfine, the victim/witness fee, the probation service fee and ordered her to pay $1,722.70 in restitution.

In addition he adopted the conditions recommended by the Commonwealth regarding her contact with animals and her mental health.

Contant also ordered Gingras to refrain from any threats or violence toward Clark or Gigit.

However, Clark said that Gigit, who would have been 17-years-old in June, had passed away recently, apparently due to complications of his advanced age.

Although the case is finally resolved, Gingras has not concluded her business in the district court.


Her absence from a hearing in December was due to complications arising from her arrest by Agawam police on a charge of larceny of property valued more than $250.

In that case, Gingras is accused of repeatedly stealing a debit card belonging to her step grandfather and using it 15 times totaling about $1,200 at local merchants including a day spa, a Chinese restaurant and a grocery store as well as for online services at iTunes, Netflix and Amazon.

She was arraigned Feb. 17 and released on her personal recognizance pending a June 10 court appearance.

However, since the alleged crimes occurred before she was placed on probation on Thursday, a conviction in that case will not constitute a probation violation.

(WWLP - April 18, 2016)

California: Willie Bee Turner to serve 3 years for burning pet alive in January 2015

CALIFORNIA -- Willie Bee Turner drenched his puppy with bleach. He then tossed it off of a balcony railing, but it survived.

The next night, he locked the puppy in a portable pet kennel, carried it from the apartment building where he stayed with friends across the street and set the animal and cart ablaze on the sidewalk, burning the weeks-old Chihuahua alive.


For this, Turner, 21, of Oakland, was sentenced Friday in Sacramento Superior Court to three years and eight months in state prison for animal cruelty causing death, animal cruelty and arson for setting the caramel-colored pup he named Angel Star alight in January 2015. Superior Court Judge Lawrence Brown called the crime “an unspeakable affront to societal norms.”

“There is a darkness in the defendant,” Brown said from the bench as an impassive Turner looked on. Brown said he thought about the case again earlier that morning as he walked his own dog before work.

A Sacramento County jury convicted Turner in March of abusing and killing the 8-week-old Chihuahua mix. The dog’s charred remains were found outside a Masonic Lodge on Becerra Way near Marconi Avenue early Jan. 22, 2015. Turner was arrested that February.

Prosecutors said Angel Star defecated on the floor of the Marconi Avenue apartment where Turner stayed Jan. 20, 2015, and received a soaking of bleach as punishment. Witnesses saw the dog limping and smelling of bleach and alcohol the following day, prosecutors sad. The cruelty escalated from there, prosecutors said, culminating in the grisly fire outside the Masonic Lodge in the minutes after midnight Jan. 22, 2015.

A passing motorist saw the blaze and called 911.

Firefighters, then a community, were shocked by what was found. Tips from the public led to Turner’s arrest.

Turner cannot own a pet for 10 years. He will be registered as a lifetime arson offender and will no longer be allowed to own or possess a firearm.

But the term – Turner has already served more than a year in Sacramento County custody – frustrated animal advocates and Deputy District Attorney Hilary Bagley, who chafed at the limits of present sentencing guidelines. Numerous others wrote letters to the court expressing outrage. Brown acknowledged the correspondence from the bench.

“This is a piddly sentence for such a heinous crime,” Bagley told the judge, saying she was disappointed in Turner’s statement to county probation officials that he “takes responsibility for the things he did not do.”

 

“Significant introspection for this type of crime is needed,” Bagley said. “Clearly, that hasn’t happened.”

“The results of this grotesque case of cruelty – the outcome of three years, eight months for the tossing off a balcony, dousing with bleach and the setting of this monster’s puppy on fire hardly does justice to this little life,” said Placerville-area animal advocate Jennifer Canady, a regular presence at Turner’s trial, after Friday’s sentencing hearing.


Lawmakers, too, have pushed for changes to the cruelty statutes, but the effort remains an uphill battle.

State Sen. Jeff Stone, R-Temecula, who represents Riverside County, recently lost a bid to double the sentences for animal cruelty crimes. The legislation, Senate Bill 1395, proposed by a high school student in his district, failed to move out of the Senate’s Public Safety Committee.

“There’s no consequence for treating an animal in this way,” Stone said Friday. “We shouldn’t have to have a horrific event like this for something to happen.”

(Sacramento Bee - April 29, 2016)

Earlier:

Saturday, March 5, 2016

California: Jury convicts Northern California man Willie Turner of burning 8-week-old puppy alive

CALIFORNIA -- A 21-year-old man was convicted Thursday of killing his 8-week-old puppy by burning it to death, authorities said.

A Sacramento jury found Willie Bee Turner guilty of felony counts of maliciously killing an animal and animal abuse as well as two counts of arson, according to the Sacramento County district attorney's office.


In late January 2015, the Oakland resident brought his female Chihuahua-mix puppy to a friend's apartment in the Arden-Arcade area of Sacramento, prosecutors said. When the young dog defecated in the apartment, he became outraged, prosecutors said.

"Turner told the animal she had 'betrayed' him and began excessive discipline," according to the district attorney's office.

Witnesses saw Turner pour bleach cleanser on the dog, prosecutors said. The witnesses placed the puppy in a neighbor's animal crate.

 
 

Turner snatched the animal crate and carried it across the street, setting fire to the bedding inside as well as the puppy, prosecutors said.

“It was a small dog, in a small crate that was burned beyond belief,” Sacramento Metropolitan Fire Capt. Michele Eidam told the Sacramento Bee after the animal's death. “It’s horrible.”

A county veterinarian testified that the young dog was alive before it was charred by flames.

Turner is scheduled to be sentenced on April 15. He faces up to four years and four months in state prison.

(LA Times - March 3, 2016)

Earlier:

Saturday, May 9, 2015

Sea lions poisoned at Pacific Marine Mammal Center in Laguna Beach

CALIFORNIA -- The search is on for whoever poisoned sea lions being treated at the Pacific Marine Mammal Center in Laguna Beach.

Laguna Beach police say someone poured large amounts of chlorine into a salt water holding pool, injuring sea lions - some of which were ready for release.

More than 400 sea lion pups have been rescued this year alone by Pacific Marine Mammal Center. Most were brought in because they were malnourished and needed to be nursed back to health.



 
It was the first attack at the nonprofit center in its over 40-year history. Detectives believe the suspect entered the center between 8 p.m. April 27 and 6 a.m. April 28.

The injured sea lions pups are considered evidence in an ongoing criminal investigation.

"The injury was what is known as a corneal ulceration of the eye," said Keith Matassa, former director of the Pacific Marine Mammal Center. "It's due to chemicals burning the eyes."


Police are not saying how the suspect broke into the facility, only that they poured a large amount of chlorine into the water filtration system where 17 sea lion pups were already being rehabbed.

"It's hard for all of us. Our volunteers and staff have taken these animals from near death and rehabbed them back and gotten them ready to go back in the wild, and to have this happen right before they're ready for release, it's shaken the staff," Matassa said.


Eight pups have healed, but seven still need continued treatment and will be kept for at least four more weeks

Police are reviewing surveillance video from the property and nearby properties in an effort to identify the suspect and bring him or her to justice.

The Marine Mammal Center has hired a security guard overnight as a result. They do hope these animals will make a full recovery and be able to be release.


The suspect can expect to face animal cruelty charges, which carries a $20,000 fine and a year in prison.

Anyone with information is urged to call Laguna Beach detectives at (949) 497-0377 or the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) hotline at (800) 853-1964.

(KGO-TV Bay Area - May 6, 2015)

Friday, October 10, 2014

Santa Cruz chef quits over alleged animal cruelty incident

CALIFORNIA --The Santa Cruz County Animal Shelter is investigating claims that a pizza restaurant owner ordered an employee to kill a baby opossum on Saturday, according to Rebecca Dmytryk of Wildlife Emergency Service.

Dany Pena, 35, of Santa Cruz was formerly head chef at South Beach Pizza Company in Santa Cruz.


He says he came into work Saturday, and found two employees standing next to a garbage can with the baby opossum inside. The employees had been told to kill the animal by pouring bleach on it, according to Pena.

"I immediately freaked out," Pena said. "It was a baby, and the sweetest looking guy on the planet."

Pena said he tried to wash the animal off, but when it did not appear to help, he drove it to a nearby wild animal rescue center, where it died an hour later.

Pena also quit his job before driving the animal to the rescue center.

"The lack of remorse they had about this act of cruelty led me to quit. None of God's creatures should be treated in this manner," Pena said.

South Beach Pizza Company representatives have not returned calls requesting comment on this incident.

(KTVU - Oct. 5, 2014)

Wednesday, May 28, 2014

Sulphur woman shaken by cat cruelty

LOUISIANA-- A Sulphur woman is badly shaken after finding a tortured neighborhood cat outside her door.

Sulphur Animal Control investigators are asking for the public's help in the case.

"I pray they do catch this person. A portion of me wishes that they could go through the same thing that poor cat did, 'cause that was wrong," said Sharita Clement of Sulphur.

Clement says the image of the tortured cat won't leave her mind. She heard a thud early Thursday morning and then discovered the tabby, known as Caramel, struggling inside a garbage bag outside her window. She ripped the bag open.


"I couldn't do anything to save it, because I'm pregnant and knew what I smelled was bleach, and it was so blue I already knew it was going to have to be put down," said Clement.

Clement says she used to work for a vet and would help save animals. She can't imagine why someone would do such a thing.

"I don't know. They're just sick people," she said.

Sulphur Animal Control officials say they know through their training that there is a cycle of violence that usually starts with animals and ends with people.

"There is a connection between animal abuse and people abuse, but the people abuse is so wide and so broad there's no way for me to say specifically what type of person could have done this other than that the two are definitely related," said Grady Hungerford, Sulphur animal cruelty investigator.

Hungerford says sometimes animal cruelty is intended to hurt a person.

"Get back at say, an ex-wife, for example, or if they're having problems with someone else. We have seen that happen where people will abuse these folks' animals," said Hungerford.

They are still investigating what was done to the cat.

"The only thing that we can actually confirm is that the animal had bleach water in its lungs, and it appears it had been drowned or possibly suffocated," said Hungerford.

The animal was euthanized by a certified technician, due to the extent of its injuries. Caramel was a stray, yet Clement says he was sweet and belonged to the neighborhood. She makes this plea:

"Whoever did this come forward, 'cause it's wrong," said Clement.

Anyone who saw anything that might help solve the case is urged to call Sulphur Police or Sulphur Animal Control, which is part of the police department. The numbers are 527-4550 or 527-4577.

(KPLC-TV - May 23, 2014)

Saturday, February 15, 2014

Men face jail in boiling water, hammer attacks on dogs

MICHIGAN -- A Bay City man told authorities he did not know what to do after spilling hot water on his pet schnauzer. So he took the dog outside and ran it over twice, killing it, authorities said.

Aaron Bellor, 22, has been charged with animal cruelty, which carries a possible four-year prison sentence for a conviction, according to the Bay County Sheriff’s Office. Bellor’s case is one of two bizarre animal cruelty cases the sheriff’s office has been investigating.


Bellor’s dog, named Sassy, had been given to him by friends or family because they could no longer keep it, according to Bay County Sheriff’s Lt. Jim Chlebowski.

Bellor told authorities he was making grits with boiling water around Jan. 22 and inadvertently knocked the pan over on his Schnauzer Sassy, scalding it. Supposedly not knowing what to do, he left his house with the injured dog and drove from Bay City to neighboring Portsmouth Township, Chlebowski said.

Once he arrived, he put the dog down, and ran the pooch over with his car. As the dog laid there still breathing, the 22-year-old finished the job by running over the dog one more time. Bay County Sheriff’s Lt. Jim Chlebowski said that it didn't look like the dog's injuries were too severe and that a veterinarian would have been able to treat it. This all could have been avoided.

Bellor is accused of dropping the dog on the ground and then running it over with his car. When he realized that the dog was not dead, he ran it over a second time, Chlebowski said, noting that the dog’s injuries from the boiling water were not too severe.

“If he’d have taken the dog to the veterinarian, the dog could have been treated,” Chlebowski said.
Bellor told a number of people he was sorry he killed the dog, Chlebowski said.

In an unrelated case, Derek Keyes, 50, also of Bay City, is charged with animal cruelty and faces a potential 15-year sentence because he is a felon. He was also on probation Feb. 8 when, Chlebowski said, he attacked his roommate’s pit bull with a hammer.


Keyes, who was highly intoxicated, was upset that his roommate had not paid the rent, so he dumped detergent into his roommate’s fish tank, killing the fish, and then took the pit bull, named Lizzy, into the basement and hit it repeatedly with a hammer, Chlebowski said.

The pit bull is expected to survive.

(Detroit Free Press - Feb 12, 2014)