tagged w/ Animal Welfare News & Animal Welfare Videos
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Yet another case of failure to prosecute.
Recent case of 3 dogs found starved and frozen to death in Tuktoyaktuk another example why an Animal Protection Act is crucial in the Canadian North. These dogs were frozen to the ground.
Photo: 2 surviving dogsYet another case of failure to prosecute.
Recent case of 3 dogs found starved and... more
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The Save the Manatee Club said it could be an indirect result of boat strikes, habitat loss and other threats that have shortened the endangered mammals' life spans, reducing the number of experienced mothers bearing calves.
Katie Tripp, director of science and conservation for The Save the Manatee Club, said the state should consider whether the increase represents an emerging threat. In the difficult environment of America's fourth-largest state, she said manatees rarely reach their full 60-year life span. This means there are fewer experienced mothers.
"We know manatees are dying young," she said. "We know first-time mothers tend to be less successful."
No one knows how many manatees live in Florida, but aerial surveys generally count about 3,000.
Enormous resources have been devoted to protecting them, as scientists research red tide, police patrol for speeding boats and government agencies protect coastal habitats. Tripp said the 30-year protection effort preserves many of the environmental assets that originally drew people to Florida.
"When you protect manatees, you protect seagrass flats," she said. "When you protect manatees, you protect water quality. When you protect manatees, you protect springs. When you protect manatees, you protect all of coastal Florida."
The number of manatees killed by watercraft is a closely watched figure, invoked in debates over boating, environmental regulation and the impact of waterfront development. Last year watercraft killed 90, up from 73 the previous year but short of the record of 95 in 2002. In Broward County, they killed three, which is about average. But Palm Beach County saw six, a tie for the record.
Paul Davis, Palm Beach County's manatee coordinator, said he was surprised by the increase since the recession cut boat traffic, police increased water patrols and no manatees were killed by boats in the previous two years. He urged boaters to slow down, particularly in three manatee hot spots: the Loxahatchee-Jupiter Inlet, the Lake Worth Lagoon and Lake Wyman, in Boca Raton.
"We need to be concerned," he said. "We need to continue to monitor our enforcement and education efforts and hope it doesn't repeat the following year. If it does, then we're going to reevaluate what we're doing and see if we can do it better."The Save the Manatee Club said it could be an indirect result of boat strikes, habitat... more
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WildEarth Guardians protects and restores wildlife, wild rivers, and wild places in the American West.
Few taxpayers realize that we help fund an agency called “Wildlife Services,“ a branch of the U.S. Department of Agriculture that wages a dirty war on America’s wildlife.
Between 2004 and 2006, Wildlife Services killed over 6 million animals to protect agribusiness. The agency spends $100 million each year, and Wildlife Services’ job is to “eradicate” and “bring down” wolves, coyotes, mountain lions, bears, prairie dogs, and other wild animals.
In 2007, Wildlife Services killed 2.4 million animals, including 121,520 native carnivores such as coyotes, wolves, bobcats, cougars, badgers, and bears.
(Please note: These species face habitat loss in the wake of suburban sprawl, oil and gas drilling, logging, ski area expansions, and over hunting.)
WildEarth Guardians is holding Wildlife Services accountable by:
* Leading efforts to end shooting wildlife from aircraft, a reckless, life-threatening endeavor; http://www.goAGRO.org
* Asking the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to ban the two predator poisons--sodium cyanide and Compound 1080--in part, because Wildlife Services’ handling of these toxicants has harmed federally-protected species such as bald eagles, hurt people, killed pets, and they poses a national security threat. We are also helping Congressman Peter DeFazio in his efforts to ban these poisons through Congressional action.
* Demanding that Wildlife Services publicly account for its abysmal track record involving its mishandling of dangerous poisons, aircraft crashes during aerial gunning activities, and other operations.
Check out this article in the Men’s Journal about our work on the front-lines of this battle this battle against Wildlife Services. http://www.christopherketcham.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/12/Wildlife%20Services%20final%20version,%20layout%20for%20Mens%20Journal%20Enviro%20Affairs%20Column.pdfWildEarth Guardians protects and restores wildlife, wild rivers, and wild places in... more
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What is being done to help save the leatherback sea turtle from extinction.
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OCEANICA Tv - Sea Turtle Campaign
WARNING! THIS VIDEO CONTAINS DISTURBING FOOTAGE OF SEA TURTLES BEING BUTCHERED ALIVE
Sea Turtle Video: http://www.oceanica-tv.com/petition_tortue_en.php
SEE HOW YOU CAN HELP: http://www.sos-seaturtles.ch/
Even for those of you who may not be 'into' animal rights or welfare, NO CREATURE ON THIS PLANET SHOULD SUFFER BY THE HANDS OF HUMANS LIKE THIS.
Please be aware that 100's of 1000's of ENDANGERED sea turtles are killed each year in Bali. THIS IS NOT to feed the poor. The shells are turned into tourist souvenirs & the meat is sold to the privileged of affluent societies.OCEANICA Tv - Sea Turtle Campaign
WARNING! THIS VIDEO CONTAINS DISTURBING FOOTAGE... more
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The Island of Bali in Indonesia has been the hub of the sea turtle trade for two decades. The buyers of turtle meat, shells and eggs are mainly found in the Asian markets as well as in Indonesia itself. Turtle meat and eggs are not going to feed the poor, instead they are a privilege of affluent societies. Turtle shell is being used for jewelry and ornaments, all unnecessary objects, for which hundreds of thousands of turtles have to lose their lives.
All eight species of sea turtles are threatened with extinction and therefore strictly protected by CITES, the Convention of International Trade of Endangered Species. Nevertheless, the number of animals - who have inhabited our oceans for over 150 million years - is constantly declining. Until four years ago, in Bali alone, an average of 25,000 sea turtles a year were brutally cut out of their shells alive!
As a result of several action and campaigns by Indonesian and European animal welfare organizations, this number has dropped to around 3000 a year.
However, in view of sea turtles being threatened with extinction, every single life is important in order to preserve the population.
Please tell your friends about the terrible threat to these magnificent reptiles which have inhabited our oceans for over 150 million years!
Please read the petition that will be given personally to the Governor of Bali Drs. I Dewa Made Beratha, by the ProFauna Organisation Indonesia and representative of SOS.Seaturtles: http://www.oceanica-tv.com/petition_tortue_en.php
Read all the facts and watch videos: http://www.sos-seaturtles.ch/turtle.htm
Info on local conservation efforts: http://www.balifoods.com/news/turtle/index.htmlThe Island of Bali in Indonesia has been the hub of the sea turtle trade for two... more
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Please watch the Center for Biological Diversity's newly released television ads about saving the polar bear.
Polar bears are dying and will soon be wiped out entirely if we don’t take immediate action to curb global warming.
Please sign the petition below and pass it on to a friend.
With your help we’ll reach our goal to get 50,000 signatures below and send a strong message to President Obama in the first 100 days of his presidency.
Global warming is rapidly melting the sea ice polar bears depend on. Accounts of bears starving and drowning are on the rise as they are forced to swim farther and farther to reach the solid ice they need for hunting and resting. Some bears are even turning to cannibalism in a desperate search for food. Those trapped on land hundreds of miles from the nearest ice are often shot as they wander, starving, near villages.
And, as if things weren’t bad enough already, pollution from oil and gas drilling threatens to destroy what’s left of the polar bear’s disappearing habitat.
If current trends continue, two thirds of all polar bears — including all bears in Alaska — will be extinct by 2050, and the rest of the species will be gone forever by the end of the century.
But we can save them by joining together to take immediate action. The science is clear. We know what needs to be done — we just need to build the political support to make it happen.
Please help us gather 50,000 signatures on the petition below in President Obama’s first 100 days to encourage him to rein in global warming and save the polar bear.Please watch the Center for Biological Diversity's newly released television ads... more
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Saturday's Albuquerque Journal ran a story noting the extreme challenges facing the Mexican gray wolf (the common name for the gray wolf population in the Southwest). Unlike their cousins to the north, the reintroduction of gray wolves in the Southwest has not produced significant population gains. In fact, there are only about 50 Mexican gray wolves in the wild--half the numbers that scientist hoped to reach by 2006. The reintroduction program has suffered from a lot of problems, including poaching and the liberal culling of wolves found to have killed cattle...
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Bush has already approved to kill all of the wolves in the Yellowstone area. It sounds like these guys still have a chance.Saturday's Albuquerque Journal ran a story noting the extreme challenges facing... more
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Zimbabwe’s government, which so far has made no effort to relieve the suffering of it’s starving people, has now resorted to slaughtering the country’s elephants to feed Robert Mugabe’s soldiers.
According to ZimOnline, the state Parks and Wildlife Management Authority has since last week supplied elephant meat to army barracks, which, like the rest of the country, have run out of food. The crippling food shortage has left up to half the nation already facing starvation and in the midst of the cholera crisis has left untold thousands of people dead.
The country’s elephants are now the latest victims in a crisis that the government has refused to accept responsibility for. The Mugabe administration reportedly views the supplying of elephant meat to soldiers as “killing two birds with one stone” as it enables it to cull allegedly excess animals while also ensuring its army has food.
The army is a critical part of Mugabe’s continued grip on power and the soldiers’ comfort has long since taken precedence over that of the people. With no food or goods to plunder in the ravaged country anymore, it is not surprising that hunger is rearing its head in the barracks. Analysts have ruled out the possibility of a military coup against Mugabe because all top commanders are still relatively comfortable. But some say that worsening hunger could at some point force ordinary soldiers to either openly revolt or to simply refuse to defend the government, should Zimbabweans rise up in a civil rebellion.
Meanwhile Defence minister Sydney Sekeramayi has declined to comment on the matter or to discuss the availability of food at army barracks in general, while Parks director-general Morris Mutsambiwa reportedly would not take questions on the matter. It is as of yet unknown how many elephants have been turned into soldier fodder, but it does go without saying that the slaughter is not merely a method of feeding the troops. The ivory collected will undoubtedly be sold off to the country’s dubious Chinese business links, lining the pockets of government officials and further aggravating the illegal ivory trade.Zimbabwe’s government, which so far has made no effort to relieve the suffering... more
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A homepage dedicated to the (late) 6 month old puppy, Karley.
Story links, news updates, contact information and most importantly, petition links.
PLEASE DO NOT LET HER CRUEL DEATH GO UNPUNISHED.
Society must take responcibility... this horrible act against a helpless creature is a disgrace to what it means to be human.
There is NO excuse for animal cruelty.
If you witness or suspect animal abuse or animal cruelty, PLEASE speak up... your voice might be their only chance.A homepage dedicated to the (late) 6 month old puppy, Karley.
Story links, news... more
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The following information has been provided by the Riverside Sheriff’s Department:
The Riverside County Sheriff’s Department’s investigation into the animal cruelty allegations made against Glynn Johnson on November 3 is continuing. For several days, investigators have attempted to contact Mr. Johnson to ask if he is willing to provide more information about the incident. Attempts to contact him by phone, at his home and through his employment have been unsuccessful so far.
Glynn Johnson is a Los Angeles Assistant Fire Chief.
Anyone with information regarding this incident is encouraged to contact Sr. Investigator Cherie Blossfield at the Perris Station at (951) 210-1000.
According to the Riverside County Sheriff’s Department the investigation started on November 3, at about 4:30 p.m. Riverside County Sheriff’s deputies were called to a home on Armintrout Drive in the unincorporated community of Woodcrest.
Two calls were received, minutes apart. One was from a woman who stated her husband had just been attacked by a dog. Another call was received from a male, who stated his neighbor had just beaten someone’s dog with a boulder.
When deputies arrived, they were told by a witness that a nearby resident had severely beaten a dog belonging to another neighbor. The dog had been found by the witness near his home and he was returning it to the owner when the neighbor, who lived next door to the owner of the dog, offered to return it for him.
After turning the dog over to the neighbor, the witness saw him beating the dog with his hands. At one point, the witness claimed he saw him use a nearby rock to strike the dog. The injured dog was taken by its owner to a veterinarian, where it was euthanized.
A deputy contacted the neighbor later at a Riverside area hospital, where he was being treated for an injury to his wrist and thumb. He claimed he had been attacked by the dog and only struck it in self defense.
After the initial investigation by deputies was done, the Perris Station Investigations Unit took over the investigation. A thorough investigation is being done in order to determine if a crime has been committed. California Penal Code 597 makes it a felony for anyone who maliciously and intentionally maims, mutilates, tortures, or wounds a living animal.
This investigation is currently in-progress. Anyone with information regarding this incident is encouraged to contact Sr. Investigator Cherie Blossfield at the Perris Station at (951) 210-1000.
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You Tube Video - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t9NXrEEzJEEThe following information has been provided by the Riverside Sheriff’s... more
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A puppy had to be euthanized after she was beat by a Los Angeles County assistant fire chief who told investigators that he was acting out of self-defense.
According to witnesses and the police report, Karley, the Toole family's 6-month-old German Shepherd puppy, wandered out of her yard Monday. A neighbor, Travis Briggs, found Karley and was walking her back home. That's when another neighbor, assistant fire chief Glynn Johnson stepped in.
Johnson told investigators that he tried to take the dog back home and Karly bit him.
Briggs said Johnson then hit the dog with a rock.
"He hit the dog in the face with a closed fist two times. He got on top of the dog and started beating her," Briggs said.
"At that time I ran down my driveway, ran up his, tried to pull him off and his hands were in the dog's mouth. He was trying to pull the dog's jaws apart, breaking the dog's jaws."
Briggs said that's when the dog managed to get away.
But by that time the puppy suffered injuries so severe that she had to be euthanized.
The family said Karly's skull and ear canal were crushed and her jaw was broken.
"There's no explanation to me," said Shelley Toole, the dog's owner. "He intentionally, for one, went over to (our neighbor) Travis, who already had the puppy and was bringing her home, and took her. He, to me, had no intention of ever returning her. He intended to do her harm."
Johnson told investigators that Karly had bitten him and that he was acting out of self-defense. He was treated for an injured wrist and thumb.
"She never ever would hurt anybody and she never hurt him," Shelley Toole said.
According to witnesses and the police report, Karley, the Toole family's 6-month-old German Shepherd puppy, wandered out of her yard Monday. A neighbor, Travis Briggs, found Karley and was walking her back home. That's when another neighbor, assistant fire chief Glynn Johnson stepped in.
Johnson told investigators that he tried to take the dog back home and Karly bit him.
Briggs said Johnson then hit the dog with a rock.
"He hit the dog in the face with a closed fist two times. He got on top of the dog and started beating her," Briggs said.
"At that time I ran down my driveway, ran up his, tried to pull him off and his hands were in the dog's mouth. He was trying to pull the dog's jaws apart, breaking the dog's jaws."
Briggs said that's when the dog managed to get away.
But by that time the puppy suffered injuries so severe that she had to be euthanized.
The family said Karly's skull and ear canal were crushed and her jaw was broken.
"There's no explanation to me," said Shelley Toole, the dog's owner. "He intentionally, for one, went over to (our neighbor) Travis, who already had the puppy and was bringing her home, and took her. He, to me, had no intention of ever returning her. He intended to do her harm."
Johnson told investigators that Karly had bitten him and that he was acting out of self-defense. He was treated for an injured wrist and thumb.
"She never ever would hurt anybody and she never hurt him," Shelley Toole said.
LINKS:
http://www.justice4karley.com/
http://www.prestonsplanet.com/2008/11/help-bring-justice-for-karley/
http://www.care2.com/news/member/525884267/953296
http://ga0.org/ct/Cp111111XTNW/A puppy had to be euthanized after she was beat by a Los Angeles County assistant fire... more
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Brave little 'Bobo', died several days later from the burns.
**--GOLDEN, Colo. -- A woman accused of tying up her dog and setting him on top of a stove had her arraignment continued today in Jefferson County.
Tanya Martin, 38, appeared in court Monday morning and her arraignment continued to Feb. 17 at 8 a.m.
Prosecutors say in October, Martin put her 6-year-old Yorkshire terrier on top of a telephone book on a lit stove burner.
When officers arrived, they found the terrier laying on his back on top of the burning telephone book, his legs tied down with speaker wire.
The terrier, named Bobo, suffered second- and third-degree burns to 50 percent of his body and died a few days later.
Martin has been charged with animal cruelty and arson.
Martin's uncle, Leo Cordova, says she suffers from mental illness.
*FOLLOW LINK FOR NEWS VIDEO & SLIDESHOWBrave little 'Bobo', died several days later from the burns.... more
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SEE VIDEO & PHOTO GALLERY
http://www.newschannel5.com/Global/story.asp?S=9621110#
Two pieces of new legislation involves the sale of puppies and the other addresses animal cruelty.
Because of tough times one proposed bill may have a better chance of passing.
State lawmakers want to join 37 other states and make cockfighting a felony. A cockfighting ring was recently dismantled in Nashville.
"Cockfighting isn't just two birds pecking at each other, they actually put knives like this on their heels so when they're fighting, they're slashing each other to pieces," said John Goodwin of the Humane Society of the United States.
Making it a felony instead of a misdemeanor seems to make sense. But there's a chance money will override commonsense this year on Capitol Hill.
The state is facing $1 billion shortfall.
"There's an awful lot of need out there and we are not going to be able to pass many bills that have high fiscal notes on them, because we just don't have the revenue coming in this year," said state Rep. Janis Sontany, D-Nashville.
***please follow link to continue storySEE VIDEO & PHOTO GALLERY
http://www.newschannel5.com/Global/story.asp?S=9621110#... more
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PHOTO: Described in 2005, the Laotian Rock Rat [Laonastes aenigmamus] was first encountered by scientists on sale at an outdoor food market in Lao
Over one thousand new species have been discovered in the Greater Mekong Region of Southeast Asia since 1997, says a new report by WWF.
Among the most incredible finds documented in 'First Contact in the Greater Mekong' are the Lao Rock Rat, thought to have gone extinct 11 million years ago but discovered in a Lao food market; the hot-pink “dragon millipede” that produces cyanide in self-defense; the world’s largest huntsman spider, which has a leg span of over 30 centimeters; and a new species of purple banana from Southern China.
All told, over 500 plants, 250 fish, 80 frogs, 40 lizards, and 20 snakes, as well as 15 mammals, 4 birds, 4 turtles, 2 salamanders and a toad, were found throughout the six countries of the Greater Mekong region, Cambodia, Lao PDR, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam and the southern Chinese province of Yunnan.
In documenting such a prolific rate of discovery—an average of two species per week were discovered over the past decade—the report’s findings reaffirm the importance of the Greater Mekong as a biodiversity hotspot and conservation priority. As a result of such high biodiversity, the region is also recognised as a hub for the illicit trade in wildlife. Plants and animals of all sizes and description are poached from their natural habitats, transported across the region to major markets such as China and Viet Nam.
However, while many of these discoveries are new to science, Sulma Warne, Co-ordinator of TRAFFIC’s Greater Mekong Programme, says it is likely that many of the species have been known by local communities, and in some cases have long been harvested for food, medicine or other reasons.
While excited about the recent discoveries and recognizing the importance of sharing such news with the rest of the world, he was, however, concerned that high levels of publicity might motivate a demand for some species that was previously non-existent beyond low level local consumption.PHOTO: Described in 2005, the Laotian Rock Rat [Laonastes aenigmamus] was first... more
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The reptiles, especially softshell turtles, are prized in China as food and as a source for traditional medicines. U.S. experts fear the trade could lead to extinctions.
The turtle tank at Nam Hoa Fish Market is empty, but not to worry: The manager of this bustling Chinatown store says he has plenty in back.
As Asian economies boomed, more and more people began buying turtle, once a delicacy beyond their budgets. Driven in particular by Chinese demand, Asian consumption has all but wiped out wild turtle populations not just in China, but in Laos, Vietnam, Cambodia and elsewhere in the region.
Now conservationists fear that the U.S. turtle population could be eaten into extinction.The reptiles, especially softshell turtles, are prized in China as food and as a... more
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YOUNG Lauren Pearson has taken a new feathered friend under her wing – or should that be the other way around?
And it's hard to believe that just a few weeks ago the lucky hen was among others in a small cage with barely enough room to spread their wings.
Caroline Pearson and her partner Julie Bull, from Dalkeith, are one of the Lothians families to adopt chickens through the Battery Hen Welfare Trust.
The charity is appealing for more farmers to give unwanted hens to new owners, rather than send them to the slaughterhouse.
The trust has already won the backing of celebrity chefs, including Jamie Oliver and Antony Worrall Thompson.
It only began operating in Scotland last year, but has already found new homes for 2000 hens. This includes around 200 in Edinburgh and the Lothians.
The egg-laying hens are usually slaughtered at around 18 months old, when they become less productive. But they could still live for several more years.YOUNG Lauren Pearson has taken a new feathered friend under her wing – or should... more
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Just as populations of manatees -- Florida's state mammal -- are drawing back from the brink of extinction, federal regulators have approved a yacht club on a river that advocates say attracts roughly a quarter of all Southwest Florida manatees in the winter.
Boat collisions are one of the leading causes of death for manatees. And the prospect that 128 yachts could soon be harbored in a prime manatee area has alarmed environmental groups.
Four national conservation groups, including Save the Manatee Club and Defenders of Wildlife, recently petitioned the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to update a 30-year-old list of where manatees congregate, feed and breed. The petition seeks to stop development that puts more boats in places where manatees live.
"It's just long overdue," said Patrick Rose, executive director of Save the Manatee Club.
The petition has reignited a long-running battle between conservationists and boaters, frustrated by slow speed limits in manatee-protected waterways.
The river, a small tributary of the Caloosahatchee near Fort Myers, hosts a power plant that warms the water and attracts hundreds of manatees on chilly winter days.
Cold stress and toxic algae blooms are the top natural manatee killers. Boat collisions are their leading human-inflicted cause of death. Lee County frequently leads the state in the number of manatees killed by boats.
"The speed zones that are there are not there for the manatees in and of themselves. They are there because the boats are there," Rose said. "If it's really, truly critical habitat, maybe we shouldn't put more boats in those areas."
The federal government recognized the manatee as an endangered species in 1967. Since then, it has been illegal to harm manatees or destroy their designated habitat. The rules have helped manatees increase their numbers in most parts of Florida. The exception is Southwest Florida, where red tide algae pose a frequent threat.
The state Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission conducts an aerial manatee count each year, but there are no reliable measures of the actual manatee population. At last count in 2007, 2,817 manatees were tallied.
Also, natural warm springs once helped manatees stay warm in the winter, but drinking water and irrigation demands have eliminated a large number of springs throughout the state. Power plants that constantly discharge warm water have replaced springs as sources for warm water.
The convergence of manatees basking in the Orange River's warmth and 128 yachts runs counter to the notion of protecting an endangered species, Rose said.
"It's crazy to think the most critical manatee refuge on the west coast would not be in critical habitat," Rose said.Just as populations of manatees -- Florida's state mammal -- are drawing back... more
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--Stanley Jablonka, 50, a Standfordville, NY man, decided a dog that belonged to a friend staying with his family was potentially rabid and rather than turn to authorities, he took matters into his own hands shot the dog then decapitated it --
The 3-year-old Great Dane, Humphry, belonged to Tracey Sturgess, his ex-wife’s sister who was staying with Jablonka while he fixed her car so she could be on her way to California. Not only was Humphry up to date on his shots, he was also BLIND and DEAF.
[Note]: Humphry was also CHAINED up in the garage at night where the atrocity took place... and at the time he was shot.
Jablonka’s brother, Michael said the dog was aggressive and was barking at him and had him pinned. When Jablonka was told he decided the dog probably had rabies so he shot him and being the real brainiac figured he had to chop the poor dog’s head off so it could get tested for rabies, even though Tracy had shown him Humphry’s up to date vaccination prior to that.
Sturgess said that Jablonka’s brother woke her up around midnight Sunday and told her there was a problem with her dog. She rushed out only to find a pool of blood but no dog and that was when they told her they had shot Humpgry and cut off his head.
“[Stanley] tried to say that the dog went after his brother,” she said, “but they shot the dog at the end of the chain. He was chained.”
“It’s a horrible act of violence,” Joyce Garrity, executive director of the DCSPCA said. “I’m extremely distressed.”
Even if for some reason the dog was acting aggressive, he was chained. A normal, sane person would have just stayed away from the dog and gotten the owner to deal with the situation, not resort to such a heinous act or they could have called animal control or the police.
Early Sunday morning police arrested and charged Jablonka with a MISDEMEANOR violation of the state’s Agriculture and Markets Law. A MISDEMEANOR! He shot and decapitated a defenseless, disabled dog! What the hell is this world coming to?
PLEASE X-POST!
http://petloverstips.com/ForTheLoveoftheDog/news-updates/man-decides-disabled-dog-rabid-shoots-and-decapitates-it-video--Stanley Jablonka, 50, a Standfordville, NY man, decided a dog that belonged to a... more
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