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Ohio City Council Amends Vicious Dog Ordinance, A Win For The Pitties!

June 9, 2011 in Animal Control, Breed-Specific Legislation, Government, Legal News, News

Happy Hector the Pit Bull

Hector the Pit Bull says he's very happy about the news!

In a positive move toward ending the prejudice of BSL (breed specific legislation), Cleveland, Ohio’s City Council Public Safety Committee unanimously amended the city’s vicious dog ordinance. Under the new amendment, Pit Bulls have been removed from the vicious dog classification. There were also changes made to designate two categories for threatening dogs. The designations will be made based on an animal’s behavior, not its breed.

A “dangerous” dog will be considered a Level I Threat Dog, which is defined as a dog that chases or approaches a person in a menacing manner without provocation. It may also be defined as a dog that bites a person when it is not on its owner’s property. Unfortunately, a dog will also fall into this category if animal control has impounded it on three separate occasions for being unconstrained and uncontrolled while off its owner’s property. That means that even breeds like Chihuahuas and Poodles left to roam could be classified Level I. The changes in the ordinance strive to hold the dog’s owner responsible for the animal.

A “Vicious” dog will be considered a Level II Threat Dog, which is defined as a dog that causes serious injury or death to any person or domestic animal without provocation. In such an instance, the dog owner could be sentenced to up to 880 days in jail. This definition excludes dogs that seriously injure or kill a person or dog that is committing or attempting to commit trespass or other criminal offense on its owner’s property.

The decisions were made after lengthy testimony from Cleveland’s chief animal control officer, John Baird, and a number of animal rescue and welfare organizations, including a representative from the Cleveland APL. The changes were introduced by Councilman Matt Zone.

Chief Baird explained that it has become increasingly more difficult to identify Pit Bulls because of mixed breeds. “It is not fair to the residents and to responsible dog owners that we use one breed as a vicious dog. We are seeing that any dog can cause a problem,” he said.

Story by Elaine Furst for Dog Files

Maine Woman Kept 17 Pets In Hot Van, Charged With Cruelty

June 9, 2011 in Dog Safety, Inhumane Practices, Law Enforcement, Legal News, News

I know everyone has done it. Had your pups in the car while you quickly ran into the bank or to buy some milk from the local convenience store. But this year, the dog days pf summer are here early and it’s time to leave the hounds at home with the air conditioner on. I know they want to come with you, but it’s in their best interest to stay home while you do your errands. Please don’t leave you dog in your car for even a minute during the summer. To do so, could mean certain death to your furry loved ones.

– Kenn Bell, Dog Files Creator

A woman who kept 15 dogs and two cats in a van parked in the sun outside her motel room is being arraigned today on 17 counts of animal cruelty.

Margaret Nickerson-Malpher, 71, was arrested at a Motel 6 in Massachusetts after other guests reported to staff that they had seen a woman carrying what appeared to be a dead dog from her van into her room at around 1 p.m. Nickerson-Malpher had checked in at around 7 a.m., leaving the animals in the vehicle.

Police were notified and arrived on the scene only to find a dozen or so animals struggling to breathe inside the inferno-like van. One of the officers estimated the temperature inside the vehicle to be around 135º F. Three of the dogs were in critical condition, suffering from malnourishment and dehydration.

Inside the motel room, officers found a dog that had indeed died, presumably of heat stroke. The Board of Health and the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (MSPCA) were summoned. They spirited the three seriously ill dogs to a local animal hospital for emergency treatment.

The other dogs and the two cats were given water and treated with ice packs to bring down their body temperatures.

According to Tewksburg, Massachusetts Police Chief Timothy Sheehan, the woman told investigators she had left her summer residence in Topsfield, Maine, around 8 p.m. Monday. She was on her way back home to Sioux Falls, South Dakota, when she stopped at the motel to get some sleep.

Sheehan, however, contends that Maine State Police had been investigating Nickerson-Malpher for animal abuse and were preparing to seize her animals. Nor is this the first brush this woman has had with the law regarding her treatment—or perhaps stated more correctly, mistreatment—of animals.  In 2006, she was charged with animal cruelty, as a result of which 20 dogs and one cat were removed from her home. She was convicted in September of 2010 and sentenced to five years in jail. However, all but 10 days of the sentence was suspended and she was ordered to pay $13,000 in restitution.

During her sentencing, Nickerson-Malpher was also placed on probation for one year and forbidden from owning more than two dogs without permission from the court. Clearly, she is in violation of this order.

Beloved Dog’s Death Leads Family To Help Other Animals

June 8, 2011 in Adoption News, Charity, Inspirational, Lifestyle News, News

Cans for Stans

He wasn’t in their family for very long but the indelible mark he left on their hearts inspired them to help other needy animals.

Stanley, an 11-year old German Shepherd from Cheshire, Massachusetts who died in April, inspired his owners Debbie and Jim Wojtaszek, to create “Cans For Stans,” a can and bottle drive to benefit two local animal shelters.

The Wojtaszeks adopted the dog last September from the Eleanor Sonsini Animal Shelter in Pittsfield, Massachusetts.

According to Debbie, they knew that Stanley wasn’t going to be around for a long time, but nonetheless the dog instantly became a member of the family.

“We fell head-over-heels in love with him,” she said.

The “old-timer” was gentle and loving, she said. And, despite his age, was full of life.

“Nobody told him he was old,” said Debbie. “He was so energetic. He’d chase a ball until your arm would fall off.”

Stanley’s death left a “gaping emptiness” in the family.”

“I needed to do something,” said Debbie. And she did.

Saturday, Debbie and Jim were out in front of their local Petco in Pittsfield, Massachusetts collecting cans, bottles and donations.

Around 50 people, many of whom they didn’t know, donated either money or dropped off cans and bottles, she said. In the end, they received around $200 in donations.

The items they collected will be recycled with all the proceeds going to sponsor older pet adoptions at two animal shelters in Pittsfield, Massachusetts — the Berkshire Humane Society and the Eleanor Sonsini Animal Shelter.

The money will help provide the animals medical care so that they will be more adoptable, she said.

The Wojtaszeks, who are planning to adopt another older dog at some point, will be continuing to do can and bottle pick-ups for the next few weeks as they consider their next step, which may include monthly pick-ups.

“I think Stanley would approve,” Debbie said.

For further information, call the Wojtaszeks at (413) 743-3836.

Story by Elaine Furst for Dog Files

Massachusetts Dog Rescued After Three Days Trapped In Tornado Rubble

June 8, 2011 in Dog Rescue, Environment, Heroics, News, Tragedy

Tornado Dog

Adrianna Carabetta, 7, of Munson holding her puppy Shadow.

In a town still reeling from the devastation and destruction caused by Wednesday’s tornado, one bright spot emerged Saturday morning.

A dog that had been sucked out of its owner’s home in Monson, Massachusetts by the tornado and trapped in the rubble of a nearby home for three days, was rescued.

“It emerged, literally, all fur and four legs, in the arms of a Massachusetts State Police trooper who crawled under the rubble of a collapsed house after neighbors heard a puppy’s call for help,” said Massachusetts State Police spokesman David Procopio.

Trooper Brian Pearl was on patrol about 8 a.m., when he turned into the hardest hit area of the town and a woman started waving him down.

“She said, ‘We found a dog hiding or trapped under a collapsed roof,’” Pearl said. “You could hear the dog barking, but you couldn’t see it. He was way, way, way under there.”

“He climbed into and under the rubble on his hands and knees toward the sounds,” Procopio said. “There, under the remnants of a home that had collapsed Wednesday evening, he saw the dog.

After three unsuccessful attempts, he snagged the dog and pulled it to him and then out of the rubble to safety. It was a puppy, a dark brown Sharpei-Chow mix.

Remarkably, as word of the rescue spread, a couple from a nearby street came to tell Pearl they had been searching for their Sharpei-Chow mix, Shadow, who they said had been sucked out of their home by the tornado.

“Audrey Carabetta told Trooper Pearl that she and her family searched everywhere for Shadow and posted pictures online, all with negative results. The family thought he had died,” Procopio said.

The puppy was a gift to the Carabetta’s daughter, Adrianna, 7, who had been battling cancer for the last two years. Adrianna is now in remission.

Shadow was hungry and tired, but not hurt. “It was very gratifying,” Pearl said.

The Carabetta’s and Shadow are now staying with family.

Story by Elaine Furst for Dog Files

New iPhone App Lets You Download Your Own Virtual Dog

June 8, 2011 in Entertainment, Gadgets, Internet, News, Products

Cube Dog

Does your child want a dog but not ready for the responsibility of taking of care of one? Then why not download one on your iPhone.

Thanks to podotree you can now download your very own Cube Dog on your iOS devices.

What sets this virtual pet game apart is the ability to customize your dog. From its color to its nose, eyes, ears, feet, body and head – you can make the Cube Dog look any way you want it to.

In addition to being able to play with your Cube Dog in the virtual game world, you can even snap pictures with your camera of the dog in real world locations like your desk, your hand, your bed – anywhere you can think of. The Cube Dog can even be rotated so that it can be seen at any angle.

Definitely an app that will please your own children or the child in you – head over to the Apple App Store to download Cube Dog for free.

Story by Elaine Furst for Dog Files

Beloved Dog’s Death Leads Family To Help Other Animals

June 8, 2011 in Adoption News, Charity, Inspirational, Lifestyle News, News

Cans for Stans

He wasn’t in their family for very long but the indelible mark he left on their hearts inspired them to help other needy animals.

Stanley, an 11-year old German Shepherd from Cheshire, Massachusetts who died in April, inspired his owners Debbie and Jim Wojtaszek, to create “Cans For Stans,” a can and bottle drive to benefit two local animal shelters.

The Wojtaszeks adopted the dog last September from the Eleanor Sonsini Animal Shelter in Pittsfield, Massachusetts.

According to Debbie, they knew that Stanley wasn’t going to be around for a long time, but nonetheless the dog instantly became a member of the family.

“We fell head-over-heels in love with him,” she said.

The “old-timer” was gentle and loving, she said. And, despite his age, was full of life.

“Nobody told him he was old,” said Debbie. “He was so energetic. He’d chase a ball until your arm would fall off.”

Stanley’s death left a “gaping emptiness” in the family.”

“I needed to do something,” said Debbie. And she did.

Saturday, Debbie and Jim were out in front of their local Petco in Pittsfield, Massachusetts collecting cans, bottles and donations.

Around 50 people, many of whom they didn’t know, donated either money or dropped off cans and bottles, she said. In the end, they received around $200 in donations.

The items they collected will be recycled with all the proceeds going to sponsor older pet adoptions at two animal shelters in Pittsfield, Massachusetts — the Berkshire Humane Society and the Eleanor Sonsini Animal Shelter.

The money will help provide the animals medical care so that they will be more adoptable, she said.

The Wojtaszeks, who are planning to adopt another older dog at some point, will be continuing to do can and bottle pick-ups for the next few weeks as they consider their next step, which may include monthly pick-ups.

“I think Stanley would approve,” Debbie said.

For further information, call the Wojtaszeks at (413) 743-3836.

Story by Elaine Furst for Dog Files

Thanks To Facebook And Craigslist, A Lost Dog Is Found

June 7, 2011 in Dog Rescue, Heroics, Internet, Missing, News, Websites

Missing Lucy

Facebook has been blamed for many hours of wasted time and stalking. But what about finding a lost dog?

The story started when Lucy, a Golden Retriever, went missing in Minnesota. A truck driver found the dog on the side of the road and picked her up. Nobody knew who she belonged to, and so the truck driver took her along as a travel companion, ending up in Indiana.

Meanwhile, Amber Yaw, Lucy‘s owner, posted a lost ad on Facebook. At the same time, the truck driver posted an ad on Craigslist. Eventually a connection was made and the owners traveled to Indiana and retrieved their lost dog.

As Patti Yaw, Amber’s mother says, “Had we not had the internet, had Amber not done what she did, had the person who found her not put it on Craigslist… all of these different things had to work together.”

Story by Elaine Furst for Dog Files

Lost Dog Made Incredible 1,200 Mile Journey

June 7, 2011 in Agility, Inspirational, Missing, News

Buster 1200 Miles

When Buster disappeared from his home in Colorado, his owner spent hours agonizing over his fate.

But despite thinking about all the different possibilities, including that her beloved Labrador Retriever had been stolen or eaten by a lion, Samantha Squires could never have imagined what really happened to him.

Yet miraculously, six months after Buster Brown vanished from his home in Boulder, Colorado he was found – an astonishing 1,200 miles away in Salinas, California.

“I have no idea how he would have made it to Salinas,’ Squires said. ‘I’ve never even heard of it before.’

Squires had given up hope of ever seeing her best friend again, when she received a letter from an animal shelter.

Someone found the intrepid pooch wondering the streets of Salinas and took him to the shelter where the staff scanned him for a microchip.

The shelter called all the phone numbers listed for the dog, but unfortunately, they were all disconnected.

In a final bid to find his owner, the shelter wrote a letter to his last known address saying that they had until May 31 to contact the shelter or the dog would be placed up for adoption.

Late in the afternoon on May 31, a tearful Squires rang the shelter saying she was his owner.

Buster and Squires were reunited after he was flown back from San Francisco, California to Denver, Colorado.

No one knows how the adventurous dog made his way 1,200 miles across country.

Cindy Burnham, a representative of the animal shelter said they had, ‘no idea how he got here’. ‘He’s the only one who knows. We’re asking him but he’s not telling us.’

A delighted Squires said that Buster ‘looks quite a lot older and quite a lot fatter’.

But she is overjoyed to be reunited with her canine companion.

‘He was with me 24/7,’ she said. ‘He slept with me, ate with me, we ran together, everything.’

Story by Elaine Furst for Dog Files