Upstream | December 29, 2011 | 8 comments

Animal Rescue Group in Crisis Mode After Coldheartedly Euthanizing a Cat

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EthicalVegan
CBS News...

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December 28, 2011 11:31 PM



Rescue group in crisis mode after cat euthanized


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In a Wednesday, Dec. 21, 2011 photo, Daniel Dockery is pictured at his job in Phoenix, Ariz. Dockery's 9-month-old cat Scruffy, was euthanized recently by the Arizona Humane Society not because of her wounds but because Dockery couldn't immediately pay for her treatment. He had been searching for Scruffy for three weeks ago and learned of her fate Tuesday, Dec. 27.
(Charlie Leight,AP Photo/The Arizona Republic)
(AP)


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PHOENIX - Animal lovers threatened to pull donations to an animal rescue group and the public flooded the agency with scathing comments and calls after a man's cat was euthanized when he couldn't afford its medical care, prompting the Arizona Humane Society to go into damage-control mode Wednesday.

The group has hired a publicist, removed dozens of comments on its Facebook page and directed a team of five volunteers to respond to the overwhelming calls and emails it has received since The Arizona Republic published a weekend story about Daniel Dockery and his 9-month-old cat, Scruffy.

Dockery, a 49-year-old recovering heroin addict, told the Phoenix newspaper that he took Scruffy to a Humane Society center on Dec. 8 because she had a cut from a barbed-wire fence, an injury that he described as non-life-threatening. The agency said it would cost $400 to treat Scruffy, money he didn't have.

The Humane Society cited policy when it declined to accept a credit card over the phone from Dockery's mother in Michigan or to wait for her to wire the money. The staff said if he signed papers surrendering the cat, Scruffy would be treated and put in foster care, he said.

Instead, Scruffy was euthanized several hours later.

Dockery told the Republic that he was devastated.

"Now I've got to think about how I failed that beautiful animal," Dockery said. "I failed her. ... That's so wrong. There was no reason for her not to be treated."

He described the cat as helping him stay off drugs for more than a year, the longest he had ever been clean. He hand-fed the feline before she opened her eyes at 4 days old, giving her fresh tuna and letting her sleep on his pillow.

Stacy Pearson, who was hired by the agency specifically to deal with media questions about the cat, said Dockery's case has led to two changes. The Arizona Humane Society has set up an account, funded through donations, that would cover the costs of emergency treatment of animals whose owners need a day or two to come up with money for payments. And the group is now accepting credit card payments by phone, Pearson said.

Dozens of scathing comments have since inundated the group's Facebook page, with animal lovers demanding to know why the cat was put down. Pearson said angry comments were removed because of their content: One called for the staff to be euthanized, while another said what happened to Scruffy was murder.

Pearson said Scruffy was put down over a number of reasons, including Dockery's lack of immediate funds, a lack of veterinarians to treat her and what Pearson described as a very serious cut on Scruffy from her abdomen to her knee that went to the muscle.

She said the Arizona Humane Society at the time didn't accept credit card payments over the phone because of possible fraud and can't treat pets with only a promise from owners that they can pay the next day. She said staff had every intention of getting Scruffy the help she needed but the number of animals requiring help at the group's second-chance clinic was too much for the resources available.

If Dockery had been able to pay, Scruffy would have been treated at the facility where he brought her, Pearson said.

"There was no malicious intent to take Scruffy away from her father," Pearson said. "Pulling funding is only going to make a problem like this worse."

On Facebook, where only the agency's executive director is allowed to post comments now, Guy Collison wrote that "Scruffy's story is heartbreaking, and underscores the worst-case-scenario of need eclipsing resources available." He said that his agency has always done what's best for animals.

In less than an hour after his statement was posted, more than 100 people responded, with most slamming the agency and some defending it as doing the best it can with available resources.

Pearson said the group told Dockery on Tuesday that when he's ready for another pet, he could come in and pick one out, but he declined, telling them: "No thanks."



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http://i.i.com.com/cnwk.1d/i/tim/2011/12/28/111221-euthanized_cat-AP111221077774...

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8 comments // Animal Rescue Group in Crisis Mode After Coldheartedly Euthanizing a Cat

  • MarkAssBuster
    • -1
      MarkAssBuster  
    • That is just sick. They should've donated it to their local SE Asian restaurant.
      I can still taste the delicious Vietnamese dish I ate a few months back that consisted of cat.

    • 5 months ago
  • Eck0
  • Joeydee44
    • +1
      Joeydee44  
    • I remember many years ago my brother and his girlfriend took a litter of kittens to the CT Humane Society hoping to find a home for them. They changed their minds and went back the same day to retrieve the kittens but they had already been put down. If you care about keeping animals alive, the Humane Society is not the best place to bring them.

    • 5 months ago
  • EthicalVegan
    • +2
      EthicalVegan  
    • Joeydee44:

      Tremendously sad, but no surprise to those of us involved in animal rescue, etc.

      Unless a so-called shelter (I prefer the word "pound," because they're usually so horrific) is certified as a no-kill shelter, I guarantee that cats, kittens, dogs, puppies, rabbits, baby bunnies, birds, reptiles, etc., will be killed ("euthanized" is too kind a word for what these pounds do), and it's usually right away.

      I always advise -- PLEAD WITH -- people to never, EVER take any living being to any pound!

      One of the twists with pounds (for instance, both in the City of Los Angeles and the County of Los Angeles) is that a well-intentioned person brings in an animal. The person expresses to the counter person that she doesn't want anything "bad" to happen to the animal. So if she pushes her concerns, the counter person will advise her that if the animal isn't adopted in ten (10) days, then that counter person will call the individual to tell her that.

      Of course, that's not even close to the damn truth. These pound people have neither the time, the money, the energy, nor the PASSION to do such things.

      So the bottom line is: when the individual does NOT receive such a phone call after ten days, she's thinking in her heart that all is well, that the poor animal was, in fact, adopted, and now is in her new forever home.

      That is NOT the case. Never has been. Usually any and all animals (unless microchipped, etc.) are killed almost immediately. Certainly by the time three days have passed, those drop-offs are dead and tossed into the dead animals pile out back.

      When a litter of kittens is found, chances are the mother is nearby, but hiding. So, instead of rounding up her precious little babies and turning them into a kill station, we suggest that the individual locate a feral and stray cat organization who can lend out as many humane traps as are necessary. Here in the "greater" Los Angeles area, there are many such organizations, such as Stray Cat Alliance, who will lend out humane traps, along with showing the individual how to set them up.

      When the MOTHER and her babies have been trapped overnight, the individual now can bring the whole family (and maybe even the father, because I always set out one extra humane trap, because the father hopefully will come around, too) to a free or low-cost spay/neuter clinic.

      Again, in Los Angeles, there's the wonderful organization, FixNation (in Burbank) that will take all the humanely-trapped cats and kittens (they MUST be in humane traps), and they'll spay/neuter every one of them, examine them, give them their shots and meds, whatever else may be necessary, and then late afternoon, the original individual can pick up the entire family and then return them to where she initially found them.

      This is known as TNR (trap, neuter, release), and it is the ONLY solution for our cat over-population problem.

      Needless to say, that individual can also try to find forever homes for these beautiful little beings, but if all else fails, at least they can live out their lives together, but not procreate.

      Hopefully, that same individual will help out in that situation by providing them with fresh food and water. Many neighbors -- finding out just how successful TNR is -- will pitch in and take turns feeding such fixed cats. This is an excellent project for schools, as well. And, of course, businesses can easily do this.

      So again, spread the word, people.... Never, never, never take any animal to ANY pound, unless you understand that, more likely than not, you've just given a death sentence to these darlings.

    • 5 months ago
  • Joeydee44
    • +1
      Joeydee44  
    • EthicalVegan:

      Thanks for your thoughtful reply. We had a feral cat hanging around our yard earlier this year that we were feeding, we wanted to take him in for care. I called the animal control cops who turned out to be useless and then borrowed a Have-a-Heart trap from a shelter but he was gone before I could set it out and we haven't seen him since.

    • 5 months ago
  • good_stuff
    • +1
      good_stuff  
    • It is crazy how these humane societies function. If you give us your pet to sell for a $100 donation, then we'll give it the $400 surgery. What is their incentive for that? Did they think this guy was abusive? They get more donationed money for nice animals that have a good sob story behind them...

      If I were him, I would have given them the cat so he could get the surgery; then come back to adopt it in a few days when I had the $100 donation ready. What are the chances of a full grown cat fresh out of surgery being adopted within a day or two?

    • 5 months ago
  • redglitterx
    • +2
      redglitterx  
    • these "humane" groups are a scam, they kill for profit - theres many, many no kill shelters that struggle to care for animals, and these murderers didnt even give this man a day to find the money

      and ill bet that woman they hired to do public relations, cost a hell of a lot more than the operation would have... anyone who has ever donated to this group should be outraged, this is how they waste the publics money

    • 5 months ago
  • EthicalVegan
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