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New Jersey Pets May Be Protected As Domestic Abuse Cases

May 11, 2011 in Dog Safety, Endangerment, Government, Inhumane Practices, News

Thanks to New Jersey’s Assembly Judiciary Committee, family pets in the state may get some legal protection in domestic violence cases.

The Committee has advanced legislation allowing judges to extend restraining orders against those accused of abuse to cover family pets.

Chief Victor Amato of the Monmouth County, New Jersey SPCA said some victims of domestic abuse won’t leave home because they want to make sure their pet isn’t harmed.

“When there are restraining orders and the wife leaves and the animal stays, the husband can take his vengeance out on the animal because maybe the animal was more devoted to the wife,” Amato said. “She was maybe the caregiver of the animal. The wife will go back knowing that he’s not taking care of her property. So she’ll put herself back into an abusive situation.”

Animal rights advocates support the legislation. Kathleen Schatzmann, the state director for the Humane Society, said abusers often use those pets to coerce their victims.

“Forty-eight percent of abusive families, where the animal is being abused, those women will not leave because the animal is going to be staying behind,” Schatzmann said. “They know there will be repercussions to their leaving, severe violence, often death to the animal.”

The legislation, that’s modeled after a recently enacted law in Maine, is still awaiting action in the state Senate.

Story By Elaine Furst For Dog Files

Hero Pit Bull Saves Family From Fire But No Apartments Will Rent To Them

May 11, 2011 in Breed-Specific Legislation, Heroics, Inhumane Practices, News, Pit Bull

Hero Pit Bull Diamond

Diamond is this family’s very best friend.

Diamond’s owner, Darryl Steen, and his two daughters were asleep in their Hayward, California apartment on October 24 when the 15-month old Pit Bull started barking. The apartment was on fire.

“She means everything to me. If it hadn’t been for this dog, me and my girls wouldn’t be alive,” Steen said.

Steen grabbed his 9-year-old daughter Darahne and dropped her to safety out of a second story window. He said he couldn’t find his 16-year-old daughter, Sierra, who was hiding under a mattress in her father’s room. But Diamond had found her, said firefighters who spotted the gray-and-white Pit Bull on the mattress shielding Sierra.

Steen and Sierra were hospitalized for weeks with burns, and had to have skin grafts. Diamond spent six weeks at a pet hospital, being treated for burns and smoke inhalation.

The bill was over $5,500 but people were so generous and there were so many donations, some money had to be sent back, Steen said.

And on Wednesday, Diamond received the ultimate award when the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Los Angeles presented her with their 29th annual National Hero Dog award.

For 29 years the spcaLA has been recognizing the heroic efforts of a dog that is not formally trained for rescue or law enforcement. With her title, Diamond gets a plaque, dog food for a year, airfare to and from Los Angeles and hotel accommodations for her and her family.

Steen and his daughters meanwhile, are now living with his sister in Hayward, California while Diamond is staying with their other relatives because they haven’t been able to find an affordable apartment that will take the dog.

Some people worry that she weighs nearly 50 pounds while others are concerned about her breed, he said. But Steen, who will be able to return to his job at a warehouse in June, won’t give Diamond up, so he keeps looking.

He hopes the award helps the apartment search: “Hopefully it will, and I’ll be able to get a decent place with my dog.”

But yet for all her heroics, Diamond isn’t without an Achilles’ heel.

“She likes the dog park and playing with me and the girls. But she doesn’t like cats. She is scared of cats,” Steen said.

Story By Elaine Furst For Dog Files

Famed Forensic Anthropologist Assisting In Whistler Sled Dog Massacre Exhumations

May 11, 2011 in Law Enforcement, News, Tragedy, Working Dogs, World

He is the famed forensic anthropologist who once worked on the notorious Green River serial killings of young women around the Seattle area in the early 1980s. Now Dr. Bill Haglund is heading the exhumation work at the mass grave of the Whistler sled dogs.

Haglund, who was contracted by the SPCA, says that when the exhumations began last week, the first three days were spent clearing off  ”hundreds of wooden dog house boxes and debris” on top of the mass grave. However, SPCA spokesperson Marcie Moriarty revealed on Sunday that 52 bodies of the allegedly 100 sled dogs owned by Outdoor Adventures had been found so far. Digging is expected to continue until Tuesday

Former Outdoor Adventures general manager of the sled dog division, Bob Fawcett, had admitted in a compensation claim to Work Safe British Columbia he killed as many as 100 sled dogs and as a result suffered post-traumatic stress disorder. That report claimed he had to put down the dogs under order by his employer because business had slumped after the Olympics. Outdoor Adventures owner Joey Houssian has admitted while he knew Fawcett was to euthanize some of the older and unhealthy dogs he was unaware of the numbers of dogs killed or details of the gruesome slaughter, as described in the workers’ compensation report. He has also insisted the claim the dogs were put down because of a business slowdown is simply not true.

When asked whether the dogs were placed carefully in the grave by Fawcett to at least give the dogs a proper burial, Moriarty simply laughed.

Her only response was “I’m very much looking forward to when this goes to trial. Right now I can’t say anything about the evidence but I’d love to,” she said.

Story By Elaine Furst For Dog Files

The Unchaining of Joshua: Inspirational Video

May 10, 2011 in Dog Rescue, Dog Safety, Endangerment, Inspirational, News

Joshua

Rescue group, Dogs Deserve Better doing what they do best, freeing dogs to live happier lives! Enjoy!

Do Dog Files Good Deed For 2nd Week Of May, Win $200 For Shelter Of Your Choice!

May 10, 2011 in Dog Files News, Good Deeds, Inspirational, News

Want to win $200 for the shelter of your choice? I am so excited about this week’s Good Deed! Read on and find out how!

The Good Deed

Go to Tonic and in less than 400 words, tell us a story about how your dog has changed your life for the better and upload a photo of you with your dog.

If we reach our goal of 100 people doing the deed and submitting a story, Tonic will pick a winner and donate $200 to the animal shelter of the winner’s choice. So, don’t forget to include the shelter, city and state you’d want to be the recipient of the prize should you win.

Plus, the winner and two runner-ups will have their story and photo published on the Dog Files!

This deed is easy for me. If I never adopted my hound Max, the Dog Files and everyone it has affected would have never come to be. I owe it all to Max!

So what are you waiting for? Go to Tonic, do a good deed and have a chance to win $200 for the shelter of your choice!

Here’s the link: Dog Files/Tonic Good Deed

Hug your pups,
Kenn, Max & Remy

Leona Helmsley’s Trust Is Not Going To The Dogs

May 10, 2011 in Celebrity, Charity, Legal News, News

leona helmsley

A note to all animal loving millionaires and billionaires… give your money to animal charities before you die. Just sayin’.

– Kenn

She was known as New York City’s “Queen of Mean“. Yet she had a real soft spot for dogs.

When Leona Helmsley, the woman who managed the most prestigious addresses in New York City including the Empire State Building, died in 2007, the Helmsley Foundation provided for a part of her $450 million estate to benefit animal welfare.

To date, only $100,000 has been distributed to animal welfare organizations.

Helmsley’s mission statement directed funds to be given “to purposes related to the care of dogs.” The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, the Humane Society of the United States, Maddie’s Fund, and other groups say the low amount is against the wishes of Helmsley’s mission statement and what she would have wanted. Wayne Pacelle, president of the HSUS stated the money distributed so far was “a trifling amount and contrary to Leona Helmsley’s personal intentions.”

Maddie’s Fund president, Rich Aranzino stated, “The money has the potential to change everything for man’s best friend.”

Manhattan Surrogate Court Judge Nora Anderson struck down the requests of the animal organizations to be involved in the distribution of the funds, and said they had no standing to intervene in the estate’s decision as to how the money was distributed, and that the trustees have sole discretion. Judge Anderson ruled that Helmsley didn’t designate a specific amount and technically the trustees have not violated any of the provisions.

When Helmsley died, the 87 year-old left her white Maltese dog, labeled by the media as “a rich bitch”, a trust fund of $12 million and directed that the notoriously nasty little dog be cared for by two of her relatives. A judge however, reduced the trust fund to $2 million and both relatives refused to take custody of the dog.

The dog, named Trouble, now lives in Florida with one of Helmsley’s past employees.

The animal welfare organizations meanwhile, have stated they will continue to fight.

Story By Elaine Furst For Dog Files

Associated Humane Society Wants “Miracle Dog” Patrick Moved To Rescue Zoo

May 10, 2011 in Animal Control, Dog Safety, News

Patrick the Miracle Dog

Patrick, the horribly emaciated pit bull whose close-to-death body was found in a trash bag in the garbage chute of a 22-story apartment building in Newark, New Jersey this past March, may be moved to an animal refuge when his recovery is completed. Yet there appears to be fierce opposition to this proposed move.

The Associated Humane Societies claimed in a 40-page motion filed in New Jersey Superior Court this week that it has legal ownership of Patrick and that they want to place him in the Popcorn Park Zoo located in Forked River, New Jersey. The Zoo is a refuge for farm, wild, and domestic animals who have had bad lives and it is here where they are socialized, rehabbed, and sometimes adopted out. People pay admission to see the 200 or so animals who call the zoo their home. Patrick would be moved to the dog & cat shelter, not the zoo section.

The AHS however, seems to be the only entity that wants Patrick pulled from the vet’s. Last month a judge decreed that Patrick should remain at Garden State Veterinary Specialists in Tinton Falls, New Jersey while the animal cruelty and abandonment case against his former owner proceeds. The AHS’s legal motion seeks to overturn this judgment.

The city of Newark, New Jersey is also against the AHS’s request to move Patrick to the Popcorn Park Zoo. Officials want him to remain at the vet’s until he is ready to be adopted to a forever home.

“It’s the city’s position that it is not in Patrick’s best interests for him to be turned over to Associated, and we have notified both Associated and the court of that fact,” a city official stated..

The AHS claims Patrick is theirs to do with as they please.

“Patrick is no different than any other stray or abandoned picked up in Newark or any other city — once he was rescued by AHS, he became the property of AHS,” the motion reads. “AHS did not surrender possession or control of Patrick, but merely turned the dog over to GSVS for treatment, with the expectation that Patrick would be returned to AHS once his medical condition improved and he was able to be released.”

Jack Russell Terrier Nurses Abandoned Kittens: Heartwarming Video

May 10, 2011 in Fun Videos, Inspirational, News

Who says cats and dogs don’t get along!

Annabelle, a 3-year-old Jack Russell terrier mix from Pennsylvania, just had two puppies. Then a family friend found a couple of abandoned kittens and brought them to Annabelle’s home.

Within no time, Annabelle was nursing the kittens just like they were her own.

“Within an hour, she was letting them nurse from her, and she was cleaning them,” said Annabelle’s owner Kristie Sharar.

Sharar says she’s actually more protective of the kittens than her own puppies. In fact, she often even carries them around in her mouth.