Posted on 04/28/2006 10:44:39 AM PDT by Wolfstar
Alarmed by cross-border sales of ill pets, animal groups push for law
By Vincent J. Schodolski
Tribune national correspondent
SAN DIEGO -- Sandra McConkey's cocker spaniel had just died. Halloween was approaching when she and her daughter Ashley, then 14, were walking through the parking lot of the Plaza Bonita mall here.
All of a sudden Ashley started shouting, McConkey recalled. "Mommy, look, puppies, let's buy one!"
There in a box were two cocker spaniel puppies. "They were adorable," McConkey said. "They looked just like our dog who had died."
McConkey said she bargained with the Mexican woman selling the puppies, and eventually she and her husband paid $300 for both after being assured they were purebreds and had received the initial inoculations from a veterinarian in Tijuana, just across the border.
Within hours, however, both dogs showed signs of illness, and not long after, both were dead.
"My girls had to watch all this," McConkey said, adding that Ashley and her older sister, Jennie, were terribly upset.
Thousands of puppies brought into the United States from Mexico every year suffer the same fate. According to veterinarians and animal-welfare workers, 75 percent or more of the animals from Mexican puppy farms die within days or weeks.
And now there is increasing traffic in puppies from Eastern Europe, according to the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. In response, the group is pushing federal legislation to curb dog smuggling.
[SNIP]
Beyond canine ailments such as parvovirus, distemper and scabies, "these dogs have diseases that can be transmitted to human beings," said Madeline Bernstein, president of the Los Angeles branch of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. She mentioned ringworm and mange as examples.
[SNIP]
(Excerpt) Read more at sun-sentinel.com ...
Thank you for your efforts on behalf of defeating PAWS! I'm afraid most of the public doesn't know what it's really about and it's easy to make this stuff sound like it's all for the good of our 4 legged friends.
susie
Oh gosh, cuttest shoudl be cutist...or...cuteist...or....MOST CUTE! Sheesh...
susie
As crazy as this country is anymore, I wouldn't be shocked at all to see enforcement of the borders finally come at the behest of the animal rights groups whining to have their law enforced.
Hey...as long as we get to tighter border/immigration control and enforcement, who cares how we get there! ;-)
Thank you for posting this important, eye-opening article. But I have to differ about "soft-hearted Americans." In my view, they are either fools or greedy jerks. What kind of person spends that kind of money buying a dog in a parking lot and expects it to be purebred and healthy? Rescue a dog from the shelter or a rescue group or buy from a reputable breeder.
Thanks Hair! I've got a house full of kids and dogs lately and don't have time for all the pings. Take care!
I appreciate cats, but my husband (and 2 of my kids) are very allergic, so I only can enjoy them from a distance. Those are beautiful! We had a cat when I was growing up, she was a hoot!
Are those both siamese?
susie
Here's my cutie, Gracie.
You're welcome. Sometimes by including a human interest angle in a story, a reporter winds up losing or obscuring the real point of his or her own article. Fair enough to comment on the featured woman's stupidity, and I do think the point someone made that if people like her didn't supply a market for the pups, the smuggling might stop.
As for me, I'm interested in learning more about the proposed legislation.
They are both burmese. Cooper is the light colored one (platinum). Sawyer is the brown (sable) one. They are "Brothers from Different Mothers!" one was born on the 6th of August, the other the 23rd.
She is a BABY! What breed is she? OMG she's cute as a button!
I see more dog poisonings in one month than most veterinarians see in a lifetime. There just isn't any enforcement. There have been MSM articles about what goes on here but they go off the radar easily. I have been in practice over 24 years here and I know of what I speak.
BTW, I used to show German Wirehaired Pointers and train them for field work. I bred three small litters over the years. Kept a male and female from my last litter born in 1989. The male died in February 2004 and his sister died in April of last year. (As I sit here typing this, their photos surround me.) So I understand the issues as they pertain to breeders of all types.
She's half pomeranian and half pekingese. She's the best!
We had a huge flea market near where I used to live (East TX) that had a first Monday. Lots of people I knew bought sick puppies from there. I always shook my head and asked them what they were thinking, and they always said something like, "But it was so cute and it looked healthy, and I felt sorry for it, and it was a good deal..."
susie
GWP! I used to have (and will again) Spinone, which used to always be accused of being BAD GWP! :)
Anyway, check out this link, it may shed some light for you:
http://www.pet-law.com/
The biggest problem with legislation in these areas is the law of unintended consequences. I too would love to shut down puppy mills and pet shops that sell puppies (except for those who adopt out pets from the local shelter). However, it's tough to draft a law that shuts them down, but doesn't harm the small hobby breeder.
I have to run, show this weekend, but nice chatting.
susie
And thank you for the information. I had not known before ~why~ the disease was most common in puppies.
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