Viewpoints
Twas
the Season for Holiday Pets (and now the animal
lawyer’s turn)

Like Dr. Khuly,
my holiday was sullied by the ugly aftermath of puppies spawned by the
pet store/puppy mill industry. On Christmas day I got an email from a woman
that had gone to “Crazy About Pets” in Margate
with her girlfriend a few days before Christmas. Her girlfriend purchased
a Boston Terrier puppy; she went back the next day and purchased the puppy’s
littermate. Three days later both puppies were in a veterinarian’s
office fighting for their lives against the highly contagious and often
fatal parvo virus.
They are not in just any veterinarian’s office mind you, but at
the office of the veterinarian the pet store insists they use. This was
not her first trip to Dr. Incahoots-she took “Beanie” to him
the day she bought him-and he diagnosed the puppy as having giardia, just
like her friend’s puppy, even though he had certified them free of
internal parasites days earlier.
I spoke with her the day after Christmas, and had the woman fax me her
purchase contract and Official Certificate of Veterinary Inspection. By
then there was another puppy from the same pet store being treated for
parvo by Dr. Incahoots-and not a Boston Terrier, meaning the infection
was not contained to just that litter. By the time we talked she had called
the pet store and demanded they stop selling puppies because of the parvovirus,
but they refused, insisting their puppies were all healthy. Broward Animal
Care apparently told her that there was nothing they could do, as did the
Margate police department. The Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer
Services has the authority to investigate and quarantine the rest of the
puppies if they feel such action is warranted. I can sort of understand
why the Margate police department didn’t know that, but certainly
Broward Animal Care should have referred her to the appropriate authority
or better yet actually been the slightest bit proactive and reported the
parvo outbreak themselves.
I did call the Florida Department of Agriculture Law Enforcement, and
spoke with an officer that seemed genuinely concerned and promised to get
an investigator there on Monday. Unfortunately tomorrow is Sunday and the
pet store will be open again. How many puppies will they sell? How many
of them have been exposed to parvo-how many other animals will those puppies
spread it to? Parvo is serious stuff- the virus is extremely hardy and
very contagious. It can live in the ground for months. Your dog can be
contaminated even if s/he never encounters another dog with Parvo because
it can be brought home to your dog on your shoes, hands and even car tires.
My new client’s new puppy Beanie is still in critical condition,
and may not survive the weekend. Dr. Incahoots claims he is doing everything
possible to save the puppy’s life, but is clearly starting to worry
about whether Beanie’s mom will be able to pay him for treating this
puppy-as is she. Her friend elected to transfer her puppy to Coral Springs
Animal Hospital where she would be treated by an independent veterinarian
and receive 24 hour care that Dr. Incahoots does not provide. Her puppy
is doing better, but the bill already tops $5,000. I spoke with Dr. Incahoots,
who told me that of course the pet store wants to sell healthy puppies,
but it is hard because the puppy can be incubating something but show no
symptoms. Of course it is hard for them to sell healthy puppies I thought,
because the puppies are all shipped from out of state puppy mills where
health and welfare take a back seat to profits.
The two Boston Terrier puppies were bred by a woman named Christina Collins
in West Plains, Missouri. A quick internet search reveals other people
that have been sold puppies bred by Christina Collins that also had serious
problems, not just Boston terriers but Italian Greyhounds and at least
one German Shepherd-suffering behavioral problems, kennel cough, luxating
patellas, all standard puppy mill maladies.
Ms. Collins has had more than 100 puppies and dogs on her premises on
occasion, and is suspended from the AKC until 2015 for refusing to make
her dogs and records available for inspection. But she cannot refuse inspection
by the USDA, who has found her in violation of the even minimal provisions
of the Animal Welfare Act on multiple occasions. One inspection report
states as follows: “Wind/rain breaks should be placed on the houses
in the southern row of runs, the house provided for dog #38, and dog microchip
# 124955763A. Wind/rain breaks are not in place. These breaks should be
put in place to protect the dogs and bedding from wind and rain. Affects
8 dogs.” I wonder how Dr. Incahoots would like to be sleeping outside
in February in Missouri without protection from the wind and rain? Does
he ever think about the conditions endured by the mothers and fathers of
these puppies when he signs off on a health certificate, or only about
how much profit he will make thanks to his monopoly on treating the pet
shop’s “product”?
PS: Beanie died last night as I finished writing this blog. RIP Beanie
10/19/08-12/27/08.
PPS: Beanie’s sister has greatly improved and
will hopefully be able to go home soon.