Put them all through the wood chipper

spaminator

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Now that bestiality is illegal in Ohio, convicted child rapist charged after allegedly giving dog oral sex
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Friday, September 22, 2017 07:09 PM EDT | Updated: Friday, September 22, 2017 09:23 PM EDT
CLEVELAND — A man accused of performing a sex act on a dog has been charged under a new state law that criminalizes bestiality.
The law went into effect March 21 and makes sexual contact with an animal a misdemeanour offence that carries a maximum penalty of 90 days in jail upon conviction. Previously, animal cruelty laws applied, but Cleveland Animal Protection League president Sharon Harvey said those cases were difficult to prosecute because they required proof the animal suffered.
Cleveland OH Local News, Breaking News, Sports & Weather - cleveland.com reported Thursday that 47-year-old Scott Turner was charged with the misdemeanour. Turner was told to appear in court Oct. 5. Court records didn’t list an attorney for him, and he doesn’t have a publicly listed telephone number.
Turner told Cleveland Animal Protection League investigators he was caring for a woman’s dog in May when he abused it, according to court records.
He previously served more than 12 years in prison for sex crimes involving children. He pleaded guilty to several counts including rape and kidnapping with sexual motivation, according to court records. He was released in 2015.
The Humane Society of the United States says bestiality has been criminalized everywhere in the U.S. except Washington, D.C., Hawaii, Kentucky, New Mexico, West Virginia and Wyoming.
Cleveland sex offender charged under new Ohio bestiality law after admitting to sex act with dog | cleveland.com
Now that bestiality is illegal in Ohio, convicted child rapist charged after all
 

spaminator

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NYC man gets jail for throwing dog off 7th-floor balcony
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Wednesday, September 27, 2017 08:20 AM EDT | Updated: Wednesday, September 27, 2017 08:22 AM EDT
NEW YORK — A man who hurled his dog to its death from a New York City apartment balcony has been sentenced to jail after pleading guilty to felony animal cruelty.
Yuk Cheung got the 45-day sentence and five years of probation on Tuesday.
Queens District Attorney Richard A. Brown says Cheung threw the 12-year-old pug, named Yoda, from the seventh-floor balcony in March while arguing with his ex-girlfriend.
He then went to the street, put the dog’s body in a box with ice, and dumped it in a trash can.
Cheung will be banned from owning pets for five years. He also will be registered with the city as an animal abuser.
NYC man gets jail for throwing dog off 7th-floor balcony | World | News | Toront

Video of pit bulls on treadmills, 2 other pieces pulled from Guggenheim exhibit after animal cruelty complaints
Travis M. Andrews, Washington Post
First posted: Wednesday, September 27, 2017 10:24 AM EDT | Updated: Wednesday, September 27, 2017 11:24 AM EDT
The Guggenheim Museum in New York City pulled three pieces from an upcoming exhibit after hundreds of thousands of people signed a petition claiming they depicted animal cruelty.
The museum said in a news release Monday that "explicit and repeated threats of violence have made our decision necessary." The decision was made "out of concern for the safety of its staff, visitors, and participating artists."
The three works were among the nearly 150 making up the upcoming exhibit Art and China after 1989: Theater of the World, which will open to the public next Friday.
One video-based work, Dogs That Cannot Touch Each Other created by artists Sun Yuan and Peng Yu, shows pit bulls, who were trained to fight, tethered to treadmills that face each other. The dogs run without ever being able to reach the dog they face. Eventually, they grow weary and are seen panting and salivating at increasing levels. The seven-minute video is a recording of a 2003 live performance, the Guardian reported.
Another work, Theater of the World, is a table outfitted with a translucent dome. Inside, hundreds of insects and reptiles ranging from locusts to cockroaches to lizards wander about while a bright lamp shines on them. They are all fighting for survival.
"During the three-month exhibition some creatures will be devoured; others may die of fatigue. The big ones will survive," the New York Times reported. "From time to time, a New York City pet shop will replenish the menagerie with new bugs."
The third work, titled A Case Study of Transference, is a video showing a boar and a sow having sex. Both animals are stamped with gibberish symbols, a mix of Chinese and Roman characters.
Ingrid Newkirk, president of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, sent an open letter to the museum Monday criticizing the works and asking the museum to remove them. In the letter, she wrote that all of the animals, including the cockroaches and centipedes, "experience every emotion that you, I, and our beloved dogs and cats do."
"People who find entertainment in watching animals try to fight each other are sick individuals whose twisted whims the Guggenheim should refuse to cater to," Newkirk wrote.
An online petition decrying the three works gained more than 700,000 signatures as of early Wednesday morning. It read:
"Help us send a message to the Guggenheim by signing this petition. Let them know that animal cruelty holds no place in art in the United States, nor should it anywhere in the world. This assault on animals in the name of art will not be tolerated or supported. Guggenheim - please do what you know in your heart is right. Take a stand with our animal cohabitants of this planet, and pull the pieces employing these cruel methods from your upcoming show."
The museum's decision to remove the works was met with both praise and derision.
Newkirk sent a follow-up note to the museum, thanking it "for withdrawing these vile acts of cruelty masked as creativity, because abusing animals should never be taken lightly and the museum is not a circus but a temple of fine art."
PEN America, an organization that works to defend free expression, called the decision "a worrying precedent."
"That threats of violence became grounds for the cancellation of the works represents a major blow to artistic freedom," it said in a statement.
Video of pit bulls on treadmills, 2 other pieces pulled from Guggenheim exhibit
 

spaminator

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Florida cops seek suspect after pit bull puppy Ollie beaten, stabbed and stuffed in suitcase to die
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Wednesday, October 11, 2017 10:33 AM EDT | Updated: Wednesday, October 11, 2017 10:41 AM EDT
HOLLYWOOD, Fla. — Police in Florida want to know who stuffed a beaten and stabbed pit bull puppy in a suitcase and left him to die.
Hollywood police spokeswoman Miranda Grossman tells news outlets that officers traced the puppy’s cries Tuesday to a blue suitcase that was left behind an abandoned building. Inside, they found the bloody dog with deep cuts on his head and body.
Grossman says they took the dog, now named Ollie, to an animal hospital.
She says Ollie is about a year old and will be neutered and micro-chipped as soon as medically possible.
Meantime, she urges anyone with information about what happened to Ollie to contact investigators.
In this photo provided by the Hollywood Police Department, a pit bull puppy is seen being treated by veterinarians after being abused and stuffed in a suitcase. (Facebook/Hollywood Police Department)

Florida cops seek suspect after pit bull puppy Ollie beaten, stabbed and stuffed
 

tay

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May 20, 2012
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A 26-year-old North Bay man has been sentenced to life in prison for sexual abuse in a child pornography case in Virginia.

Benjamin Faulkner, who had worked in North Bay as a lifeguard for more than six years, along with American Patrick Falte, 27, pled guilty in U.S. federal court in Richmond, Virginia last week to the aggravated sexual abuse of a minor.

Faulkner had experience working as a professional internet security professional. Through an international investigation, Faulkner and his partner were intercepted online by police while the two were running a dark website called “Child’s Play.”

On Faulkner's Couchsurfing page he writes his philosophy is "I'd rather live life with no regrets, so whenever an opportunity presents itself, I won't hesitate to jump and make the most of it."

He also says his current mission is to "Explore the world, broaden my horizons."

His Linkedin account states, "Meticulous Information Security Assessment Specialist who undertakes complex assignments, meets tight deadlines and has a passion for penetration testing. Possesses strong programming skills as well as experience building, configuring, integrating, maintaining and supporting mission critical applications in enterprise sized environments. Very technically inclined with a passion for IT security; loves evaluating IT systems/application security utilizing many different techniques and technologies. Operates with a strong sense of urgency and thrives in a fast-paced setting. Currently working towards obtaining Offensive Security's Penetration testing with Kali Linux."

Faulker writes that he worked as a lifeguard at the YMCA between May 2008 – September 2014, was a Junior IT tech at the Near North District School Board from May 2010 – September 2010 and attended Canadore College taking Advanced Diploma, Computer Systems Networking and Telecommunications from 2009 – 2011

more

https://www.baytoday.ca/local-news/north-bay-man-faces-life-in-prison-in-the-us-737181
 

Gilgamesh

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wIn the past we didn't have electronic communications & forensic science. I would bet these atrocities were just as prevalent back then.
 

tay

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May 20, 2012
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wIn the past we didn't have electronic communications & forensic science. I would bet these atrocities were just as prevalent back then.
Yes many similar atrocities have always occurred, but due to our ability to communicate these events asap they become more noticeable, if not breathtaking in how many times they occour.....




A man is accused of abusing three children — all under the age of ten — and their mother is accused of failing to stop him.

State police mince no words in describing the abuse three children – ages 4, 8 and 9 – faced at the hands of convicted felon Robert Paul Geschke inside a New Alexandria Road home.

“They are horrible crimes,” Trooper Stephen Limani said.

Investigators say Geschke abused and exploited the children often.

To keep from going back to jail, he was regularly tested for drug use. Geschke, on parole, allegedly used heroin in front of the children in the home, so to beat the test, Limani says “he would have the 8-year-old provide the urine sample.”

And if the children didn’t comply…

“When he would go on one of his tirades, the children would be subjected to physical abuse — choking, hitting,” Limani said.

Geschke often punished the children, terrorizing them, chasing them and locking them in dark rooms.

Geschke wasn’t the only adult in the home.

“The mother was present during the majority of the incidents that took place — between the physical abuse, when it came to the striking and choking of the children,” Limani said.

Investigators say the kids’ mom, 31-year-old Jennifer Thompson, did nothing to help them. Geschke wasn’t even allowed to be near Thompson or the kids.

“He was so worried about getting caught that he had a motion sensor set up at the house so that whenever the probation officer would come, he’d be alerted,” Limani said. “That would give him time to stow the kids away in a closet or a vehicle or wherever he could hide these children.”

Children and Youth Services got word and got the kids out of the home. As soon as that happened, Geschke and Thompson went on the run.

State police are asking anyone who knows of their whereabouts to contact them.

Man Accused Of Forcing 8-Year-Old To Provide Urine Sample « CBS Pittsburgh
 

spaminator

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Puppy fatally beaten, stabbed and left in suitcase
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First posted: Friday, October 13, 2017 10:19 AM EDT | Updated: Friday, October 13, 2017 10:24 AM EDT
HOLLYWOOD, Fla. — A pit bull puppy that was beaten, stabbed and stuffed into a suitcase in Florida has died.
The Hollywood Police Department said Friday on Twitter that the puppy recently named Ollie died at an animal hospital Thursday night from multiple severe injuries. Hospital administrators say Ollie’s story prompted an outpouring of support and emotion from across South Florida.
The puppy was found Tuesday after officers traced its cries to a blue suitcase that was left behind an abandoned building. Inside, they found the bloody dog with deep cuts on his head and body.
Investigators are asking anyone who might have information about the abused puppy to contact Hollywood police.
A pit bull puppy was beaten, stabbed and stuffed into a suitcase in Hollywood, Fla. The dog later died. (Facebook/VCA Hollywood Animal Hospital Photo)



http://twitter.com/HollywoodFLPD/status/918823864532197376
local dog rescue, Grateful Paws Dog and Cat Rescue Home
http://gofundme.com/oliver-stabbed-left-for-dead
Puppy fatally beaten, stabbed and left in suitcase | World | News | Toronto Sun
 

spaminator

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Cat returned to family after dangerous misadventure
First posted: Monday, October 16, 2017 09:52 AM EDT
When Shannon Stevenson's cat, Lexi, went missing from her northeast home two years ago, she searched everywhere but eventually gave up hope of ever seeing her grey tabby again.
Then, on Wednesday, Stevenson got a phone call out of the blue from the Calgary Humane Society: they had Lexi — but she had suffered a gunshot wound to the leg that would likely require amputation.
"I was very shocked. I just thought she was gone. I'd mourned her already," Stevenson said.
Stevenson — who was contacted thanks to a pet identification tattoo — was now faced with a tough decision: euthanize the cat or proceed with an expensive procedure without insurance.
"I just got my cat back, there's no way I'm going to lose her again," said Stevenson. "I said, 'things will work out in the end, just go for it.' "
Lexi had the surgery Thursday morning to remove the injured left front leg, which had been completely shattered by a bullet.
"When you’ve got just little pieces to try to put the bones back together, you’ll have less pain and much more improvement in terms of their quality of life if you just take the leg off," said Dr. Shelby Kimura, of McKnight 24-hour Veterinary Hospital where Lexi was treated.
"The recovery is faster as well. Surprisingly, they do well almost right away."
Within hours, Lexi was up and hopping around the exam table, and Stevenson has been able to take her home to her son.
"This cat is an unbelievable fighter," Stevenson said. "I'm still in shock."
Kimura said it's unfortunately not uncommon for pets to be injured by pellet guns or other firearms.
"It does happen. Most commonly we see animals with BB pellets, but this is not that — I have no idea what kind of bullet it is, because it’s just little fragments left within (Lexi’s) leg," Kimura said.
Kimura said Lexi's story is also proof of the value of getting pets microchipped or tattooed.
Stevenson said she's grateful to everyone who has contributed funds so far to help with Lexi's medical bills and delighted to be reunited with her cat, who instantly recognized her even after all this time.
"The cat went straight to me, she started purring and flipping around. It was a beautiful moment. She knew who I was, for sure."
Mom, Shannon Stevenson with her son Dominick Whitney,13, and their long lost cat Lexi who was recently found after she was shot and had to have one of her legs amputated in Calgary on Sunday October 15, 2017. Darren Makowichuk/Postmedia

Cat returned to family after dangerous misadventure | Canada | News | Toronto Su
 

spaminator

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Viral photo of dog tethered to flatbed trailer leads to charges
Bryan Passifiume
Published:
November 14, 2017
Updated:
November 14, 2017 6:20 PM EST
This image of a dog on a flatbed trailer in Calgary from Oct. 28 was shared widely on social media. The dog's owner is now facing a number of charges. Facebook
Charges have been laid against a man in his 40s after photos of a dog tethered to a trailer went viral on social media.
On Oct. 28, images showing a large dog riding on the bed of a flatbed trailer began appearing on social media.
The photo shows the large dog — cowering on the trailer’s wooden deck — appearing to be secured to the trailer via a leash tied to the front rail.
On Saturday, 40-year-old Rocky View County resident Volodymyr Irodenko turned himself in, and now faces numerous municipal, provincial and criminal code charges in relation to the matter.
The criminal charge — causing damage or injury to animals while they are being driven or conveyed — is an indictable offence that could see Irodenko face two years imprisonment if found guilty.
The Calgary Humane Society’s Brad Nichols said the dog, which shelter staff believe is mostly a Leonberger, has been removed from the owner and is now in their care.
“The owner has not been forthcoming with either the name of the animal or the breed,” he said.
Courtesy Calgary Humane Society
“He’s doing OK — frankly, these offences don’t necessitate physical suffering or injury, it’s really the recklessness associated with the act itself.”
He said transporting dogs on the bed of flatbed trailers can be a deadly endeavour for the animal — especially in colder weather.
“On a flatbed trailer, there’s no protection whatsoever from wind, from debris, the elements,” he said.
“There’s certainly an expanded fall hazard as well.”
Had the dog been bumped off the trailer, the result would have almost certainly been fatal, Nichols said.
He credits the co-operation between the humane society, Calgary police and Rocky View County officials with the investigation’s successful conclusion.
“There were jurisdictional issues with where the owner was living, relative to where the offence took place,” Nichols said.
“The public was outraged, and I think rightfully so, because it was so egregious — it’s certainly nice to be able to provide some satisfactory action.”
bpassifiume@postmedia.com
On Twitter: @bryanpassifiume



Viral photo of dog tethered to flatbed trailer leads to charges | Toronto Sun
 

Danbones

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France Reveals Agenda To Become A Pedophile Haven As It Eyes Lowering Age Of Consent To 13

French politicians have revealed their hidden agenda to lower the age of consent in France to 13 years old. No you aren’t reading The Onion, these lunatic lawmakers in Paris want to enable pedophiles. This comes after two men were acquitted in separate cases of rape for having sex with two 11-year-old girls.

The Associated Press reported that a bill was being prepared by French lawmakers to set a minimum legal age for sexual consent for the first time, and the country’s Justice Minister Nicole Belloubet said Monday that she thinks 13 years old could be a reasonable age.
https://www.activistpost.com/2017/11/france-agenda-pedophile-haven-consent-13.html

Yup, that's Macron the "establishment" guy for you.
...and the "establishment"
 

JLM

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Nov 27, 2008
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Vernon, B.C.
Viral photo of dog tethered to flatbed trailer leads to charges
Bryan Passifiume
Published:
November 14, 2017
Updated:
November 14, 2017 6:20 PM EST
This image of a dog on a flatbed trailer in Calgary from Oct. 28 was shared widely on social media. The dog's owner is now facing a number of charges. Facebook
Charges have been laid against a man in his 40s after photos of a dog tethered to a trailer went viral on social media.
On Oct. 28, images showing a large dog riding on the bed of a flatbed trailer began appearing on social media.
The photo shows the large dog — cowering on the trailer’s wooden deck — appearing to be secured to the trailer via a leash tied to the front rail.
On Saturday, 40-year-old Rocky View County resident Volodymyr Irodenko turned himself in, and now faces numerous municipal, provincial and criminal code charges in relation to the matter.
The criminal charge — causing damage or injury to animals while they are being driven or conveyed — is an indictable offence that could see Irodenko face two years imprisonment if found guilty.
The Calgary Humane Society’s Brad Nichols said the dog, which shelter staff believe is mostly a Leonberger, has been removed from the owner and is now in their care.
“The owner has not been forthcoming with either the name of the animal or the breed,” he said.
Courtesy Calgary Humane Society
“He’s doing OK — frankly, these offences don’t necessitate physical suffering or injury, it’s really the recklessness associated with the act itself.”
He said transporting dogs on the bed of flatbed trailers can be a deadly endeavour for the animal — especially in colder weather.
“On a flatbed trailer, there’s no protection whatsoever from wind, from debris, the elements,” he said.
“There’s certainly an expanded fall hazard as well.”
Had the dog been bumped off the trailer, the result would have almost certainly been fatal, Nichols said.
He credits the co-operation between the humane society, Calgary police and Rocky View County officials with the investigation’s successful conclusion.
“There were jurisdictional issues with where the owner was living, relative to where the offence took place,” Nichols said.
“The public was outraged, and I think rightfully so, because it was so egregious — it’s certainly nice to be able to provide some satisfactory action.”
bpassifiume@postmedia.com
On Twitter: @bryanpassifiume



Viral photo of dog tethered to flatbed trailer leads to charges | Toronto Sun


I saw that on the news last night and while I certainly don't think it's anywhere near the worst case of animal cruelty, I definitely think the owner could use a lesson in the care of dogs. What we want to stay away from is the tendency of some "drama queens" who are hell bent on creating a pariah for life and sentenced to a spell in the stocks!
 

tay

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It was difficult to know why Amanda Dumont was crying.

The 32-year-old mother stood in the prisoner’s box, shoulders slumped, whispering to her defence lawyer Ken Marley, before being led away to serve her nine-year sentence in the death of her toddler son, Ryker Daponte-Michaud.

Her ex-boyfriend, Scott Bakker, 28, had been handed the same nine-year prison sentence, with the judge deciding they were “actively complicit” in hiding the burns 20-month-old Ryker suffered three days before he died in Strathroy on May 21, 2014.

The sentencing brought to an end the sad case of child neglect and an insight into the difficult life of a little boy who died unnecessarily.

In a case full of shocks and sadness, both at the mistrial a year ago and retrial in the summer, it was clear Dumont never accepted responsibility for her little boy’s well-being.

Even after Superior Court Justice Renee Pomerance found Dumont to be an “incredible” witness ­following her testimony, Dumont stuck to her guns that it was Bakker, not her, who was responsible for Ryker’s death.

That’s not what the judge decided — and pointed at both Dumont and Bakker as the selfish, neglectful parent and guardian they were after Ryker was scalded accidentally by a cup of hot coffee.

“This situation did not call for sophisticated knowledge or advanced parenting skills,” Pomerance said in her sentencing decision.
“It called for the exercise of basic humanity.”

Ryker would have lived had he been taken for medical care. Instead, for three days, Ryker slowly faded away, while Dumont and Bakker did drugs, fenced stolen property and ignored all the signs of his demise.

“This was not a momentary lapse in care,” Pomerance said. “Ryker suffered for three days. For the duration of that period, very little was done to save his life.

“There was opportunity for the offenders to change their minds and take Ryker to a doctor. They continued on a course of callous neglect, despite his worsening condition.”

The judge could only infer that their reasons were self-serving.

Still, it was incomprehensible how the couple sat the boy, with third-degree burns suffered that morning to his buttocks, genitals, back, abdomen and upper legs, in his car seat for a day while they drove around trying to sell stolen jewelry taken from Bakker’s grandmother.

They lied to Dumont’s grandmother the next day, saying they had taken the toddler for treatment.

“The offenders not only failed to take Ryker for treatment themselves, they spun a web of deceit to ensure no one else would intervene to save Ryker’s life,” Pomerance said.

Pomerance noted that Dumont seemed more interested in her slashed tires and lost dog than her critically injured son the day before he died. The day he died, he was left alone in his crib and neither Dumont nor Bakker checked on him. Pomerance noted that in a videotaped conversation in the Strathroy-Caradoc police cells, they revealed they had stayed in bed all day.

Only when Dumont’s oldest daughter insisted one of them stay home with the children instead of shopping at Wal-Mart was the boy’s body discovered.

“The idea that a parent or guardian would completely ignore a healthy 20-month-old child for an entire day is difficult to understand. The failure to check on the condition of a severely burned child for an entire day verges on staggering,” Pomerance said.

Dumont, the judge noted, has a history of child welfare involvement from the moment she became a mother — and a history of having high-risk boyfriends who were violent and drug-addicted.

Bakker, Dumont’s boyfriend for only five months, had 49 criminal convictions — some involving violence — dating back to 2004. He has mental health issues. As a teen, his mother put him in group home care because of his behavioural issues.

With time served, Bakker has just more than five years left on his prison sentence. He also faces two counts of assault in connection with an incident at the Elgin-Middlesex Detention Centre.

Dumont has 6½ years to serve.

Mother, ex get nine years in tot


 

spaminator

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HORRIFIC ANIMAL ABUSE: Cops on the hunt for twisted teen accused of launching helpless kitten
Postmedia News
More from Postmedia News
Published:
December 4, 2017
Updated:
December 4, 2017 8:56 AM EST
California cops are on the prowl for a twisted teen accused of hurling a helpless kitten high into the air before watching it screech in pain in the middle of a road.
Ontario, Calif., police tweeted Saturday that “Spots” the cat suffered a leg fracture in an incident so graphic some media outlets elected not to show the horrific animal abuse.
Spots the cat following the attack. (KNBC – LA)
“We are investigating the animal cruelty to a cat video,” Ontario, Calif. ,Police tweeted. “We have located the cat and owner. The cat has leg fracture but is going to be OK.”
Too sickened to even watch the video, Spots’ owner told KNBC they had a message for the suspect seen in the video.
WARNING: This video will be too disturbing for some users
“I just want him to know he hurt a victim that can’t defend itself,” she said.
Social media users were less measured.
“He deserves jail time,” one user responded.
Added another: “I hope you lay the proper charges on him and anyone else that was involved with filming the video. Anyone that abuses an animal like that is odd to do worse in the future. Please let us know once he has been charged!”
The accused appears to laugh before hurling Spots.
“That video legit ruined my day,” responded a third Twitter user.
Fitted with a cast, Spots also suffered internal injuries, according to blood tests conducted by a vet. She remains in an animal hospital.
The investigation is ongoing.

HORRIFIC ANIMAL ABUSE: Sick teen accused of launching helpless kitten | Toronto Sun
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
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Animal cruelty charges laid after B.C. dog 'literally dying from fleas'
Canadian Press
Published:
December 11, 2017
Updated:
December 11, 2017 1:27 PM EST
Rascal the dog is shown with a BCSPCA volunteer in a handout photo.HO-BCSPCA / THE CANADIAN PRESS
VANCOUVER — An advocacy group says an animal cruelty charge has been laid against a British Columbia man after a dog nearly died of a serious flea infestation.
The SPCA says in a release that an older terrier named Rascal was rushed to an animal hospital on Vancouver Island earlier this year after losing about 85% of his blood to fleas.
WARNING: Some viewers may find the following video disturbing:
Animal protection officer Tina Heary says the dog was “literally dying from fleas” when he came into the group’s care.
Heary says people know fleas can cause itchy skin and irritation, but don’t always realize the insects feast on blood.
I think people understand that fleas can cause itchy skin and irritation, but they often disregard those discomforts.
Tina Heary, BC SPCA
The SPCA says Rascal recovered after receiving life-saving blood transfusions and is now thriving in a new home.
It says Gary Bob of Lantzville has been charged with one count of animal cruelty under the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act.

[youtube]ZaEzVL0rf5w[/youtube]
Animal cruelty charges laid in case of severe flea infestation
 

spaminator

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Three Florida men charged in shark dragging video incident
Associated Press
Published:
December 12, 2017
Updated:
December 12, 2017 8:18 PM EST
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Florida wildlife officials and prosecutors have charged three men connected to a video of a shark being dragged behind a speeding boat.
A Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission news release says 21-year-old Michael Wenzel and 23-year-old Spencer Heintz of Palmetto, along with 28-year-old Robert Lee Benac of Bradenton, each face two felony counts of aggravated animal cruelty. Wenzel and Benac also face a misdemeanour count of illegal method of taking a shark.
The video of the shark being dragged went viral in late July after a Miami sport fisherman criticized it on social media.
FWC Chairman Bo Rivard said in a statement that he hopes the charges send a clear message that this kind of behaviour won’t be tolerated.
Prosecutors in Hillsborough County are handling the case. Jail records didn’t list attorneys for the men.

http://instagram.com/p/BW7_3spDXOG
Three Florida men charged in shark dragging video incident | Toronto Sun

Breeder with 84 sick Great Danes found guilty of animal cruelty charges
Associated Press
Published:
December 12, 2017
Updated:
December 12, 2017 12:47 PM EST
Christina Fay. (Wolfeboro Police Department photo)
CONCORD, N.H. — A woman who had dozens of filthy and sick Great Danes living in her New Hampshire mansion was found guilty Tuesday of 10 animal cruelty charges.
Eighty-four dogs were seized from Christina Fay’s Wolfeboro home in June. Authorities said the animals were living in filth and suffering from health problems.
“The conditions in which these dogs were kept constitutes cruelty” under the law, Judge Charles Greenhalgh wrote. “Their cages and living areas were covered with an accumulation of feces and urine days or weeks old. The dogs had to walk in and lay down in the waste covering the floor.”
Fay pleaded not guilty, saying she loved the dogs and compared them to an art collection. She said she wanted to be the primary U.S. collector of European Great Danes, which she had been acquiring to breed and sell since 2014.
Fay initially was charged with 12 misdemeanour charges, but Greenhalgh dismissed two last month. In his ruling, he found the evidence showed Fay didn’t provide proper care or shelter for the dogs.
Messages to her lawyers weren’t immediately returned.
Fay is to be sentenced within 30 days. The New Hampshire chapter of The Humane Society of the United States said Greenhalgh would determine the dogs’ care at that time. For now, the organization is caring for them.
While Greenhalgh noted that Fay appears to have been devoted to her dogs, he also said she started having difficulty in April, when she suffered a knee injury and couldn’t move about easily. She also started losing staffers and was unable to replace them.
Greenhalgh said there was “a pervasive ammonia odour” in the home, so strong that veterinarians and others were unable to remain inside without taking frequent breaks.
Fay testified at her trial before Greenhalgh that she took good care of the animals. She said she spent $25,000 to $35,000 a month on their food, medication and other materials.
Court documents say she believed the town of Wolfeboro manufactured the allegations of animal cruelty to force her to shut down her kennels. But Greenhalgh said pictures, video and testimony from witnesses in and around Fay’s home between May and June consistently show the same filthy conditions.
Earlier this year, Republican Gov. Chris Sununu revamped a state commission that he hopes will help develop stronger animal cruelty laws, following developments in Fay’s case.
[youtube]SiloU8ynIlc[/youtube]
http://blog.humanesociety.org/wayne...r-kept-great-danes-deplorable-conditions.html
Breeder with 84 sick Great Danes found guilty of animal cruelty charges | Toronto Sun
 

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GRAPHIC VIDEO: Dog hurled against door prompts investigation
Trevor Wilhelm
Published:
December 13, 2017
Updated:
December 13, 2017 8:07 PM EST
The Windsor human society is investigating the origins of a video that shows someone violently slamming a puppy against a door.
The Windsor humane society is investigating the origins of a video that shows someone violently slamming a puppy against a door.
People sharing the video online have suggested the video was taken in Windsor. But Melanie Coulter, executive director of the Windsor-Essex County Humane Society, said that has not been confirmed.
“We take this seriously,” she said. “If there is anything that is sent to us we’re going to follow up on it.”
“Our officers are investigating. If anyone has any information about the dog or the individual, we encourage them to contact us or Crime Stoppers.”
The video shows a person hurling a small dog against a door. It then cuts to scene of the dog cowering next to a pet cage before the person picks it up by the neck and throws it against the door again.
Coulter wouldn’t comment on the content of the video.
“It’s definitely an open investigation though,” she said. “Our officers are actively pursuing it. They’ve been trying to determine if it did happen in Windsor.”
Windsor humane society investigates video of dog being thrown against door | Toronto Sun

'WHO DOES THIS S---?': 3 men who laughed as they dragged shark could go to prison
Washington Post
Published:
December 13, 2017
Updated:
December 13, 2017 5:45 PM EST
Three Florida men were arrested Tuesday and accused of making Snapchat videos in which a shark is shot with a revolver, then tied to the back of a motorboat and dragged through the waves to its death.
A 10-second clip of the shark’s dragging revolted hundreds of thousands of people when it emerged in the summer, and exposed an online subculture in which fishermen brutalize and degrade their catches for sport.
And yet the clip – as described by Florida Fish and Wildlife investigators in an arrest affidavit – showed only a small part of the carnage that took place on a motorboat in the Gulf of Mexico on that summer afternoon.
Michael Wenzel, 21, and three friends set off from his waterfront home in Palmetto on June 26. They were all avid fishermen, according to the arrest affidavit, and had brought with them on that expedition a spear gun, a .38-caliber revolver, and of course their cameras.
This undated photo made available by the Pinellas County, Fla., Sheriff’s Office, shows Michael Wenzel under arrest. (Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office via AP)
They boated out to state waters off Egmont Key, where 28-year-old Robert Lee Benac III speared a blacknose shark, according to the affidavit.
To celebrate, Benac danced on the bow of the boat with 23-year-old Spencer Heintz and Nicholas Easterling while Wenzel recorded.
This undated photo made available by the Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office, Fla., shows Robert Lee Benac, under arrest. (Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office via AP)
The blacknose had been speared clean through, which itself was a crime under Florida law. But less than two hours later, another shark would endure far worse.
Around 5 p.m., the affidavit states, Benac hooked a 6-foot-long blacktip.
When the shark had been pulled in close enough to the boat, investigators wrote, Wenzel took out the .38 and shot it on the side of the head.
As the water reddened, the shark swerved and tried to get away from the men. But it was caught on the line, and could only make it from one side of the boat to the other.
“Get it again! Get it again!” Heintz yelled, and all the men laughed, according to the affidavit.
This undated photo made available by the Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office, Fla., shows Spencer Heinz under arrest. (Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office via AP)
Wenzel shot at the shark three more times, state investigators wrote, prompting cheers from the men. Somehow, it was still alive by the time they draped it over the edge of the boat and tied a line around its tail.
Three biologists who studied the men’s next video told investigators the animal was probably still alive when they threw the bleeding shark back in the water, cranked the boat engine and dragged it behind them like a toy on a string.
Wenzel drove the boat fast, according to the affidavit, and two of his friends recorded the moment for posterity. In a video that spread online months ago and led to the investigation, the men laugh and point as the shark skips off the water’s surface, twists in the air and smacks back down, again and again.
This goes on for half a minute, according to the affidavit, until Wenzel finally says: “I think it’s dead.” In an aftermath photo published by the Miami Herald, a man holds up a mangled shark with its tail stripped of flesh like a soup bone.
Wenzel, Heintz and Benac all turned themselves in on Tuesday to face animal cruelty charges, according to the Tampa Bay Times. They have since gone free on bail, and could not be reached by The Washington Post.
The fourth man in the boat, Easterling, cooperated with investigators and was not charged.
The months-long investigation only came about because one of the men shared video of the dragging with a celebrity shark hunter, apparently thinking he would be impressed.
“They said, ‘Oh, this is pretty cool, look what we did to the shark,’ ” Mark Quartiano told the Miami CBS affiliate. “And I go, ‘Are you kidding me man?’ ” He reposted the video on his Instagram page with the message: “WHO DOES THIS S—?”
The video was so appalling that a quarter-million people signed a petition demanding the men be imprisoned, and Gov. Rick Scott wrote that “the brutality and disrespect shown to this animal is sickening.”
And yet degrading ocean wildlife on camera is something of an online fad. It’s called “fish porn,” according to the Miami Herald.
Federal and state authorities previously investigated Wenzel in 2015 after he posted photos of himself manhandling protected seabirds, according to the Herald. But they couldn’t prove when the photos were taken, and dropped the case.
Wenzel once also took a bathroom selfie with dangling egret, the paper reported, and shared it on a Facebook page called Doyouevenfishbro, which also features videos of men drinking alcohol out of fish.
But beer-bonging a dead fish isn’t a crime. The shark dragging is being prosecuted as felony animal cruelty, with possible prison time, because authorities believe it was alive at the time.
While the three biologists who watched the video couldn’t be absolutely certain, they all told investigators that the shark appeared to be struggling as it whipped across the water.
And when Benac shared the video with the celebrity shark hunter, state investigators wrote, he explained that they were trying to flood its gills by dragging it backward through the water.
“You had no right to drag it alive,” an Instagram commenter wrote to Benac after seeing the video, according to the affidavit.
“I had every right,” he allegedly replied.

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‘WHO DOES THIS S—?’: 3 men who laughed as they dragged shark could go to prison | Toronto Sun
 

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111 cats removed from Ohio home in 'deplorable' condition: Animal group
Associated Press
More from Associated Press
Published:
December 14, 2017
Updated:
December 14, 2017 11:13 AM EST
(Steven Barrezueta/Getty Images)
GAHANNA, Ohio — An animal group has removed more than 100 cats from a central Ohio home where 55 other felines were found dead.
The Dispatch reports workers from Columbus Humane wore protective suits while removing 111 cats Wednesday morning from the home of a 60-year-old man in Gahanna.
A Columbus Humane spokeswoman says many of the cats were in “deplorable” condition and that veterinarians are examining them to gather evidence and determine their future. Spokeswoman Kerry Shaw said the organization was so overwhelmed Wednesday with cats that it closed its shelter to the public.
Columbus Humane handles animal cruelty and neglect complaints for police. Shaw said the organization will seek criminal charges against the homeowner.
A hearing has been set for next week in Franklin County Environmental Court to review the situation.
166 cats removed from Gahanna home, including 55 dead - News - The Columbus Dispatch - Columbus, OH
111 cats removed from Ohio home in ‘deplorable’ condition: Animal group | Toronto Sun
 

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Dairy workers arrested after undercover video shows them hitting cows
Associated Press
More from Associated Press
Published:
December 15, 2017
Updated:
December 15, 2017 2:31 PM EST
In this Thursday, Jan. 12, 2017, photo, some of the 1,600 milking cows of the Turner County Dairy eat inside a barn in Parker, S.D. (AP Photo/Regina Garcia Cano)
OKEECHOBEE, Fla. — Police in Florida arrested three dairy farm employees on animal cruelty charges following the release of an undercover video by animal rights group showing workers abusing cows.
Okeechobee County Sheriff Noel Stephen said three McArthur Dairy workers were arrested Wednesday, The Palm Beach Post report ed.
The video by Animal Recovery Mission showed workers striking cows in the face and udders with plastic pipes, Stephen said. Three other dairies also are being investigated, he said.
WARNING: Video contains graphic content
Jamaison Schuler of Dean Foods, which owns the McArthur Dairy brand, said in a statement the company doesn’t own or control any dairy farms, though milk from McArthur Dairy is part of its supply.
Schuler said the company was “appalled at the behaviours shown in the video.”
Publix supermarkets suspended milk deliveries from the dairy.
Richard Couto, founder of the Miami Beach-based animal rights group, has said its members began working at dairies in Florida this past summer to get an overview of how the animals were being treated in the industry — not because of specific reports of mistreatment. But he says they found evidence of mistreatment almost immediately.

http://facebook.com/animalrecoverymission/videos/10154868811461599
Dairy workers arrested after undercover video shows them hitting cows | Toronto Sun
 

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Man had 166 live cats and 55 dead ones in his home
Associated Press
More from Associated Press
Published:
December 21, 2017
Updated:
December 21, 2017 1:42 PM EST
(Getty Images)
GAHANNA, Ohio — An Ohio man who had 166 cats and 55 dead ones at his home has been charged with animal cruelty.
The Columbus Dispatch reports 60-year-old Daniel Slyby, of Gahanna, must post a $64,000 bond by Dec. 30 or his cats will be permanently forfeited to a Columbus animal welfare organization.
Slyby was charged with 11 counts of animal cruelty Wednesday in Franklin County Municipal Court.
Columbus Humane, which conducts animal cruelty investigations, says the cats were found living in deplorable conditions when they were removed from Slyby’s home last week.
All but one of the cats is receiving care at Columbus Humane’s shelter. One cat had to be euthanized.
Slyby’s attorney, Tony Clymer, said Thursday that Slyby denies having mistreated his cats.
Gahanna man faces 11 animal cruelty charges after 166 cats removed from home - News - The Columbus Dispatch - Columbus, OH
Man had 166 live cats and 55 dead ones in his home | Toronto Sun

'I WAS VILIFIED': Woman whose 84 Great Danes were seized avoids jail
Associated Press
More from Associated Press
Published:
December 21, 2017
Updated:
December 21, 2017 12:30 PM EST
In this Sept. 6, 2017 file photo, Christina Fey of Wolfeboro attends District Court at the Carroll County Superior Courthouse in Ossipee, N.H. Elizabeth Frantz / AP
OSSIPEE, N.H. — A woman who had dozens of filthy and sick Great Danes living in her New Hampshire mansion will serve no jail time for animal cruelty but must pay nearly $800,000 for the care they received after being seized, a judge said Thursday.
Authorities took 84 dogs from Christina Fay’s Wolfeboro home in June, saying the animals were living in filth and suffering from health problems.
Fay said she loved the dogs and pleaded not guilty. Judge Charles Greenhalgh convicted her and refused her request to have the dogs returned to her so she could find homes for them. He said the Humane Society would handle that. He said she could pick a dog to keep but can never again own more than one dog.
Fay, who plans to appeal, said the proceeding was unfair and that her heart has been broken.
“It has all turned into a salacious, tabloid story, which is so inappropriate,” she said. “There are so many untruths out there. I was vilified.”
An appeal would mean a new trial in superior court. It also would mean the dogs would remain with the Humane Society until that trial is over. The society has said its expenses so far total $774,000, and the town of Wolfeboro and a local shelter are to be reimbursed about $17,500.
Fay testified that she took good care of the dogs and that the town brought the charges to force her to shut down her kennel because neighbours had complained about the barking.
A veterinarian testified that Fay’s care of the dogs “was more than adequate.” Samantha Moffitt reviewed records and saw many of the dogs, but after they were taken from Fay.
After hearing testimony from people who had worked for Fay and seeing video of the conditions in which the animals were kept, Greenhalgh concluded the animals had been abused.
“The conditions in which these dogs were kept constitutes cruelty” he wrote in his Dec. 11 ruling. “Their cages and living areas were covered with an accumulation of feces and urine days or weeks old. The dogs had to walk in and lay down in the waste covering the floor.”
Fay housed the dogs in the garage, basement and first floor of a large home on 57 acres. Fay told the court she wasn’t out to make a profit and she compared her efforts to “an artistic endeavour of promoting what she believes is a beautiful and unique breed of dogs,” according to the order.
Greenhalgh noted that Fay appears to have been devoted to her dogs, but she started having difficulty in April, when she suffered a knee injury and couldn’t easily move about. She also lost workers and was unable to replace them.
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‘I WAS VILIFIED’: Woman whose 84 Great Danes were seized avoids jail | Toronto Sun
 
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Dog found 'frozen solid' on Ohio porch during cold snap
Associated Press
More from Associated Press
Published:
December 29, 2017
Updated:
December 29, 2017 8:51 AM EST
In this Wednesday, Dec. 27, 2017, photo, people drive on Interstate 90 near the Vrooman Road exit in Ohio. Severe cold and bone-chilling winds are gripping most of Ohio. Temperatures were climbing Thursday out of low single digits, although wind-chill readings remained around zero in some areas. Bitter cold, with light snowfall, is expected to return this weekend as a weather system sweeps the state. (Lynn Ischay/The Plain Dealer via AP) Lynn Ischay / AP
A dog has been found frozen solid on an Ohio home’s porch as a bitter cold snap grips much of the United States.
Toledo humane society cruelty investigator Megan Brown tells The Blade newspaper she doesn’t know how long the dog was outside Thursday, when Toledo’s high temperature was expected to be in the teens (-11 to -7 degrees Celsius).
“She was frozen solid,” said Brown.
A second dog was recovered shivering inside the home.
The dogs’ owner says utilities had been shut off but he had been providing for the dogs while living elsewhere. He says he doesn’t know how one dog got outside.
Forecasters warn of hypothermia and frostbite from arctic air settling in over the central U.S. and spreading east.
In this Wednesday, Dec. 27, 2017, photo, Vrooman Road northbound is closed to traffic in Ohio. Severe cold and bone-chilling winds are gripping most of Ohio. Temperatures were climbing Thursday out of low single digits, although wind-chill readings remained around zero in some areas. Bitter cold, with light snowfall, is expected to return this weekend as a weather system sweeps the state. (Lynn Ischay/The Plain Dealer via AP)
The temperature at the Mount Washington Observatory in New Hampshire on Thursday was -34 degrees (-37 Celsius), breaking a 1933 record of -31 degrees (-35 Celsius) atop the Northeast’s highest peak.
Dog found 'frozen solid' on central Toledo porch - The Blade
Dog found ‘frozen solid’ on Ohio porch during cold snap | Toronto Sun