Showing posts with label afghan hound. Show all posts
Showing posts with label afghan hound. Show all posts

Thursday, February 8, 2018

California: "Akiba is home from from the vet after the Pit Bull attack"

CALIFORNIA -- Ginger Snap posted on Facebook January 20, 2018 ·

Akiba is home from from the vet after the Pit Bull attack at 700 Longview Pismo Heights. He’s in a lot of pain and shaking but it looks like he will heal.

 


Laura Ruema - Always the same from pit bulls! My little guy spent 3 days in the animal hospital, had X-rays, labs, and surgery and bandage changes for days...but he’s doing great. Hoping the same healing for yours!

Ginger Snap - Horrible! I’m so sorry. I’m glad he’s healing. We are so fortunate it wasn’t worse for Akiba. Luckily a neighbor knew how to get the dog to release before it caused much more damage.

Laura Ruema - Ginger Snap the owner actually stabbed his dog to release mine! So glad Akiba is doing well!

Ginger Snap - Laura Ruema, omg!!! Wow what a terrifying experience. I am so sorry



Laura Ruema - Ginger Snap don’t feel bad-my Rue is a warrior and so am I! People make fun of little dogs, but guess what? They are survivors and so are we! The pit bull that did this is dead....praying the same for you and yours! And thanks to our attack 😞 I found out how many times this happens every single day in this country and have joined the advocacy to protect other pets and children and other vulnerable individuals. So we are definitely going to win this one!

Diana Kassir - Call the police too (not just animal control), and get a 'police report'. Please do hold the owner accountable!!! I took the owner of the Pit bull (He killed my Afghan) to court and got my $6,000.00 vet bills & any expenses.

Ginger Snap - That is horrible. I made police report and animal control went to their house today. I am so sorry for your loss.

  
 
  
  
  
 
I think Rue is a Bichon Frise

Friday, August 22, 2014

Ohio: Dog groomer and former breeder Barbara Fogl convicted of animal neglect in Medina County

OHIO -- State v. Barbara Fogl, a case we prosecuted for the Medina County SPCA. Fogl was charged with multiple counts of neglect related to her care of 16 animals, including cats and Saluki, Afghan, and Lowchen breed dogs.

The animals were kept in deplorable conditions. A strong odor of feces and urine could be detected when standing outside of the home. Many of the dogs were kept in makeshift kennels, where they rested on concrete floors covered in filthy newspaper and other debris. 

The Afghan and Saluki breed dogs were in the worst condition. Those dogs had grooming issues, were underweight, and had untreated tumors and/or other veterinary conditions.


Fogl is a groomer and former breeder, who allegedly became overwhelmed by her own health conditions.

As part of a plea agreement, Fogl pleaded no contest to 3 counts of animal cruelty.

She is not permitted to own or keep any animals, other than two family dogs which were spayed as part of the agreement, for a period of 5 years. She was ordered to pay $600 in fines and $5,980.30 in restitution for the care of the animals. She is also subject to random, unannounced inspections to ensure the humane treatment of the remaining two animals in her care.

The animals have all recovered.


(Holland & Muirden, Attorneys at Law - August 21, 2014)

Sunday, April 14, 2013

3/16/13: Disgraced veterinarian gets probation in cruelty case

MICHIGAN -- An assistant professor in Michigan State University’s veterinary school has been sentenced to probation and ordered to pay more than $10,000 in restitution and costs in an animal neglect case.


 
Patricia Schenck, of Olive Township, pleaded no contest to a reduced misdemeanor charge of malicious destruction of personal property on Friday and was immediately sentenced by 65th District Court Judge Richard Wells, court officials said.

A no-contest plea is not a formal admission of guilt but is treated as a conviction.


She was charged with one felony animal neglect charge after police found 17 dogs and two cats in poor condition at her home in December.

One of the dogs was euthanized. The other animals were taken to shelters.

Schenck was suspended with pay from MSU’s College of Veterinary Medicine while the case was pending. Her current status with the university was not immediately clear Friday evening.

An attorney for Schenck did not immediately return a phone message seeking comment.


Schenck was placed on probation for two years and ordered to pay $8,000 to Animal Lodge, a kennel in St. Johns, $1,200 to the Capital Area Humane Society and $800 to a government agency to cover the cost of the animals’ care, the officials said.

She also was assessed $1,450 in fines and costs and ordered to forfeit the animals.

(Lansing State Journal - Mar 15, 2013)

Earlier:

Thursday, February 7, 2013

Dogs rescued after alleged neglect by MSU vet

MICHIGAN -- Deep brown, watery eyes half full of hope and half full of terror stared up at psychology senior Kate Scanlon as she reached her hand through the bars of the kennel separating her from the Tibetan Spaniel named Cricket. But Cricket never moved closer.

Cricket’s timidness might stem from living with College of Veterinary Medicine assistant professor Patricia Schenck, who has been charged with felony neglect of 10 or more animals, Capital Area Humane Society President and CEO Julia Palmer said.



Four Tibetan Spaniels out of the 17 dogs taken from Schenck’s Clinton County residence, including Cricket, are up for adoption at the Capital Area Humane Society, 7095 W. Grand River Ave., in Lansing.

Clinton County Assistant Prosecutor Kevin Hayes previously said Schenck is scheduled for a pretrial conference and a trial in March.

“It’s heartbreaking,” Scanlon, a Humane Society volunteer, said. “Most dogs run to the side of the cage when you walk in — they’re all barking…These ones are more like ‘I don’t know how I feel about you.’”

Tibetan Spaniels Benny, 13, left, and Cricket,11, rest in their kennel
Feb. 6, 2013, at the Capital Area Humane Society.

Cricket, Benny, Pepsi and Striker as well as two Afghan Hounds from Eaton County — Honey and Shakti — are victims of reported local neglect cases involving veterinary experts.

Eaton County Senior Assistant Prosecutor Neil O’Brien said Honey and Shakti are two of seven dogs taken from Benson Elmwood Animal Hospital in Lansing, where one of their owners, Kathleen Williams, sometimes stayed. Williams pled guilty to a charge of animal neglect in late January.

Palmer said the society houses as many animals as possible, and the other animals involved in the cases are being housed elsewhere. One sick and elderly dog taken from Schenck’s residence was euthanized with her consent, and one Afghan Hound already has been adopted.


She said Williams’ and Schenck’s cases are similar in more than the professions of the dogs’ owners.

She said when the dogs were collected from their respective living conditions, both sets of dogs appeared to be slightly underfed, though this was more pronounced in the Afghan Hounds, and both had coats matted with feces. She said both cases appeared to be incidents where breeding was involved.

“In terms of demeanor — it’s what we see and expect from dogs like this,” Palmer said. “Typically they’re not wagging their tails. They’re not acting like happy dogs.”

Palmer said dogs that experience the level of neglect suspected in this case can be depressed, withdrawn, fearful and even aggressive.

However, Palmer said the timid dogs with sad eyes still are adoptable, and she hopes and expects they will be adopted in the next week or so.

Lansing resident Tammy Lobert pets Honey, an Afghan Hound on Feb. 6,
2013, at the Capital Area Humane Society. Honey was neglected by her
previous owner, along with six other Afghan Hounds, by Kathleen
Williams, a veterinarian at Benson Elmwood Animal Hospital.

Grand Ledge, Mich., resident John Bethell, who likes to stop by the society frequently to look at the dogs, said if he didn’t have so many pets already, he would consider adopting the dogs himself. He previously adopted a special needs dog that was abused. He said although they never forget their abuse, they can still make good pets.

“They have a great ability to forgive,” Bethell said.

(State News - Feb 6, 2013)

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Woman arrested in Portage hoarding case has previous convictions for animal cruelty

ILLINOIS -- The woman arrested Friday for keeping more than 50 animals in her Portage trailer had two previous convictions for animal cruelty.

Patricia Scott, 63, was convicted in 2006 of animal cruelty in a Valparaiso case involving 24 dogs and three cats.

Patricia Scott

The case came to light when a fire broke out Jan. 3, 2005, at Scott's home on Dumas Street. The day after the fire, an animal control officer went to the home and found numerous dogs in a vehicle and many more inside the house.

About a week later, Porter County police arrested Scott outside the Porter County Animal Shelter on Ind. 2, south of U.S. 30. Police said they discovered Scott about 1:40 a.m. outside the building holding a flashlight and hammer. She told police she had gone to the shelter during regular business hours to get her animals back.


When she was told she could not get them back, she told police she returned to see them, and "if I could get up enough nerve, I would get them out of the shelter."

She was found guilty of trespassing and animal cruelty in separate trials. She was sentenced to 20 days in jail.

Scott also had a 1990 conviction for cruelty to animals.

On Friday, Scott was arrested on charges of cruelty to animals, and also resisting law enforcement and disorderly conduct when police came to her home on a complaint she was keeping animals caged in her home without food or water.

Most of animals taken from Scott's home were taken to the Hobart Humane Society.

Humane Society Director Brenda Slavik said the dogs were covered with feces. An Afghan had some type of skin condition and a Rottweiler-shepherd mix had some type of mange.


"But I've seen worse," she said.

About 14 cats were saved -- five or six have hair loss, all were covered in urine, and all are being treated with flea medication. She said males and females were kept in the same cages and none of the felines was spayed or neutered. She doesn't know if any of the females are pregnant.

Three French Lop rabbits taken from the home have hair missing and will need to be examined by a vet, Slavik said.
 


She said the sudden influx of about 20 animals has caused significant crowding at the Humane Society, and that 110 animals at the facility is "pushing it." There are currently about 140 now with the animals from Scott's home.

Slavik said the Humane Society must hold the animals for 10 days and then will begin to find homes for them.

Several snakes, rats and mice were taken to a local pet store.

(nwitimes.com - September 13, 2011)

Woman arrested in Portage hoarding case has previous convictions for animal cruelty

WASHINGTON -- The woman arrested Friday for keeping more than 50 animals in her Portage trailer had two previous convictions for animal cruelty.

Patricia Scott, 63, was convicted in 2006 of animal cruelty in a Valparaiso case involving 24 dogs and three cats.



The case came to light when a fire broke out Jan. 3, 2005, at Scott's home on Dumas Street. The day after the fire, an animal control officer went to the home and found numerous dogs in a vehicle and many more inside the house.

About a week later, Porter County police arrested Scott outside the Porter County Animal Shelter on Ind. 2, south of U.S. 30. Police said they discovered Scott about 1:40 a.m. outside the building holding a flashlight and hammer. She told police she had gone to the shelter during regular business hours to get her animals back.

When she was told she could not get them back, she told police she returned to see them, and "if I could get up enough nerve, I would get them out of the shelter."


She was found guilty of trespassing and animal cruelty in separate trials. She was sentenced to 20 days in jail.

Scott also had a 1990 conviction for cruelty to animals.

On Friday, Scott was arrested on charges of cruelty to animals, and also resisting law enforcement and disorderly conduct when police came to her home on a complaint she was keeping animals caged in her home without food or water.

Most of animals taken from Scott's home were taken to the Hobart Humane Society.

Humane Society Director Brenda Slavik said the dogs were covered with feces. An Afghan had some type of skin condition and a Rottweiler-shepherd mix had some type of mange.


"But I've seen worse," she said.

About 14 cats were saved -- five or six have hair loss, all were covered in urine, and all are being treated with flea medication. She said males and females were kept in the same cages and none of the felines was spayed or neutered. She doesn't know if any of the females are pregnant.

Three French Lop rabbits taken from the home have hair missing and will need to be examined by a vet, Slavik said.

She said the sudden influx of about 20 animals has caused significant crowding at the Humane Society, and that 110 animals at the facility is "pushing it."

There are currently about 140 now with the animals from Scott's home.


Slavik said the Humane Society must hold the animals for 10 days and then will begin to find homes for them.

Several snakes, rats and mice were taken to a local pet store.

(nwitimes.com - Sept 13 2011)

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

More than 50 dogs seized from home

NEW MEXICO -- Fifty-four dogs were rescued Monday morning from what is being described by animal-welfare advocates as a house of horrors in Ribera, N.M.

While most of the animals now in shelters in San Miguel and Santa Fe counties appear to be in good health, the living conditions in the mobile home were some of the worst imaginable, said Heather Ferguson of the Attorney General's Animal Cruelty Task Force, who called the home a "house of horrors."

"It's the most horrific animal hoarding I've ever seen," she said
Most of the home was coated in an inches-thick blanket of feces and in one room, waste slopping from a wall reached as high as three feet. Bags of trash and other items filled the home, which contained little more than broken couches and litter-filled tables and chairs.

Water from a bathtub tap had been left on over the weekend, flooding the home. The residence will likely be condemned, Ferguson said county authorities told her.

There were signs that some of the dogs, mostly terrier-mixes, were eating dead dogs, said Ferguson and Bill Hutchison, communications manager with the Santa Fe Animal Shelter & Humane Society. Body parts of dogs were found throughout the house, and the bodies of at least 10 dogs were found scattered around the home.

Lyle Roof, 67, the owner of the home, said he relinquished control of the animals Sunday evening from his hospital bed at Christus St. Vincent Regional Medical Center. Roof said he has kidney problems and was suffering renal failure when he was transferred to the Santa Fe hospital from Alta Vista Regional Hospital in Las Vegas, N.M.

Roof said he tried his best to care for the animals but his medical condition took a turn for the worse about six weeks ago and he had no one to help him care for himself or the dogs. Most of the dogs, which he said he never counted, were offspring of two dogs he bought about a decade ago. He also cared for several dogs that were abandoned on his six-acre property, on the Interstate 25 frontage road near Santa Ana Road.

His home is not far from last year's hoarding case in which 67 Afghan hounds were rescued.

"I got sick and it just got out of control," Roof said in a telephone interview from the hospital. "I couldn't get out of there. I just hope all the dogs find homes. They're all good, sweet dogs."

A neighbor, Rick Kingsbury, was one of the first to alert police about the case. Kingsbury said he came home late Saturday and found about 20 dogs on his porch and property.

Kingsbury, who lives about a quarter-mile away across a mesa, said he suspected the dogs belonged to his neighbor, whom he didn't really know. Kingsbury said he's heard dogs barking from the property, and drove over to investigate.

At the property, Kingsbury said he found a large group of dogs, the doors of the home open, the television on and water flowing from the bathroom.

He called the state police, and eventually an officer came out, and the two walked through the home with a flashlight.

"I thought there might be a dead body in there," Kingsbury said. "It was totally trashed."

The state Attorney General's Office and San Miguel County Animal Control served a search warrant at the home early Monday, said State Police Lt. Eric Garcia. State police were at the site to provide security, he said.

Teams from the shelter, the Santa Fe County Animal Services and San Miguel Animal Services were on the scene Monday to help rescue the animals. Four of the animals needed medical attention, but most were healthy.

One frightened dog bit two of the shelter workers, and Hutchison broke his foot when he slipped trying to corral a loose dog. One worker needed stitches for the bite, while the other shelter worker's wound was dressed and bandaged.

The dog will be quarantined for 10 days, but Hutchison said the dog appeared to be healthy.

The San Miguel shelter took a dozen dogs, while others are being looked after in Santa Fe. A team of shelter workers using towels carefully pulled the dogs out of the vans and vehicles used in the rescue and placed them in holding kennels.

Aside from the four dogs that needed immediate medical attention, the others are being provided with comfort and food. The shelter hopes to find people who could help foster the dogs until they're ready for adoption.

In spite of the dogs' circumstances, they are remarkably social, Hutchinson said, and should make great pets.

Roof said he always provided for his dogs and is supportive of the shelter. He tried to spay and neuter his animals, but the cost became too much of a burden.

When his illness became too much late last week, Roof said he called a former girlfriend in Texas for help. She drove over and took him to the hospital. As for the squalor in which he lived, Roof said he imagines that people will make him out as a bad person.

"If they ever get sick, then they'll know," Roof said Monday evening. "Partner, I always took care of those dogs. I had stacks of 50-pound bags of dog food for them."

He also built sheds for the dogs on the property, he said. The mobile home will be torn down, Roof said, and he hopes to find new shelter with the help of friends and family.

Kingsbury, the neighbor, said it was simply a difficult situation and he hopes people don't judge Roof too harshly.

"It's just sad that we don't know our neighbors anymore," he said.

Ferguson said it's important that people tip off authorities if they believe hoarding is taking place.

Providing food for a person who keeps a large number of animals only enables that person, she said.

Ferguson said she will encourage authorities to charge Roof with animal neglect charges as a way of making sure he won't get in the same situation again.

(The New Mexican - June 1, 2009)