Saturday, October 11, 2008
Daisy At Home 1st 24 Hours
Update: Eckhart, owener of Almost Heaven Dog Kennel "was charged [October 2nd] with animal cruelty and his state kennel license [has been] revoked... which means he can no longer keep more than 25 dogs on his property" Eckhart is scheduled for a hearing on the charges Oct. 17 . Since "On Aug. 7, less than two months before the raid, two other wardens, a supervisor and the bureau supervisor issued a clean inspection report to Almost Heaven." "The state dog warden in charge of the counties where [Almost Heaven, another] large kennel raid and a mass shooting occurred in the last three months has been transferred from the Bureau of Dog Law Enforcement. Richard Martrich, dog warden supervisor for the southeast region, has been named regional supervisor in the Bureau of Weights and Measures, also in the Department of Agriculture."
Friday, October 10, 2008
Reposted Article: Rendell signs long-awaited dog law: October 10, 2008: TheMorningCall.com
10:59 AM EDT, October 10, 2008
The bill designed to make Pennsylvania's commercial dog breeding kennels more humane was signed into law by Gov. Ed Rendell Thursday.
Nearly two years in the making, the law will require commercial kennels that handle 60 or more dogs a year to double the minimum size of cages, ban stacking the cages and require kennels to develop a plan for giving their dogs daily exercise.
One provision of the law takes effect immediately: Only veterinarians will be allowed to euthanize dogs. A Rendell spokesman said that provision is law now so that kennel owners who do not want to upgrade their facilities do not have the legal right to kill their dogs. Two Berks County kennel operators this summer legally shot 80 dogs rather than comply with demands to take the animals to a veterinarian.
Kennels that sell or transfer 60 or more dogs a year will have a year to make changes to their facilities to comply with the law, but the secretary of the Department of Agriculture can exempt kennels from the deadline.
-- Reporting by Tim Darragh, The Morning Call
Related links
Legislature passes dog law overhaul
Who's watching out for me?
Reposted Article: Who's Watching the Dogs, By Bill White
Who's watching the dogs?
Experts say officials must have noticed 'horrific' abuses earlier.
Bill White in TheMorningCall.com
October 5, 2008
The discovery of horrendous conditions at a Chester County puppy mill this summer was bad enough on its own merits.Breeding dogs were brought away with empty eye sockets full of flies, eyes long dead for untreated infections, splayed feet from a life on cage wire and a host of other medical problems. The owner of Limestone Kennels was raided by Pennsylvania SPCA agents and charged with some 23 counts of animal cruelty.
But the story also had a very disturbing kicker. That same kennel, full of hellish conditions, had been inspected earlier this year by a state Bureau of Dog Law warden and her supervisor -- and had been rated ''satisfactory'' in all respects.In response to the PSPCA's findings, the bureau sent different wardens to inspect, and the kennel's license was revoked. An investigation is under way, and the inspectors involved were reassigned to desk duties.
Anyone who read reporter Tim Darragh's terrific 2007 series about the kennel inspection system -- or knows anything about Lancaster County puppy mills -- knows how screwed up the system is. But the Limestone story was particularly interesting to me because one of the inspectors, former dog warden and now supervisor Rick Martrich, has been a controversial figure in the Lehigh Valley, thanks to the well-publicized problems of the inaptly named Almost Heaven dog kennel in Upper Milford Township.
People have been questioning for years how Almost Heaven and notorious proprietor Derbe ''Skip'' Eckhart received such favorable inspection reports, and many of the questions have focused on Martrich, the warden who conducted most of them. More on him in a moment. He's not permitted to respond to press inquiries, so I haven't been able to ask him about it.
Those questions intensified this week when Pennsylvania SPCA investigators raided Almost Heaven -- less than two months after a spotless state dog law inspection -- and found more than 800 animals of all varieties living in absolute filth. Many of them were sick, frightened, injured, dehydrated and crammed into overcrowded cages, investigators said.Investigators' comments were consistently disturbing.''It's bad.'' ''It's disgusting.'' ''It's horrific.'' ''It's heartbreaking to see the dogs like this.'' They ended up charging Eckhart with more than 550 counts of animal cruelty.
PSPCA Chief Executive Officer Howard Nelson told me, ''I wasn't there a couple of months ago, but my guess is [Eckhart] knew they were coming Â… . Then he cleaned it up, and hid animals that were severely sickened and severely matted.'
'Still,'' he added, ''there are some common sense things, to me, that they just missed. Anybody knows so few people can't possibly care for and clean with that large a number of animals.'' He said he can't believe that all these problems just appeared. Investigators at the scene said the same thing.
Carol Araneo-Mayer, vice president of the New Jersey rescue organization Adopt-a-Pet and co-founder of the annual Puppy Mill Awareness Day in Lancaster County, told me she's received maybe 80 rescue dogs over the years that originated at Almost Heaven, and they're always in horrible shape. She has checked his inspection reports and can't believe he kept passing. ''There's something really really wrong here,'' she said. ''Maybe one inspection. Not even two. Every single dog that came out of there looked the same way -- dirty, starving, wounded. There's always something wrong with their dogs. What were [the inspectors] looking at?
''When I learned some years ago that the Lehigh County Humane Society had supplied shelter dogs to Almost Heaven's ''rescue'' operation, then-shelter manager Orlando Aguirre -- now a state dog warden working under Martrich -- told me he had done it on Martrich's recommendation. LCHS said it discontinued the practice when it learned about Almost Heaven's reputation.Aguirre, part of the four-person team that inspected Almost Heaven, declined comment at the scene Wednesday.
The kennel's problems over the years were no secret to anyone. Eckhart served jail time for cruelty to animals. He was sued by the American Kennel Club for misrepresenting himself to sell AKC-registered dogs after receiving a lifetime ban.
A few months after my 2004 columns about Eckhart's violations of the state consumer protection laws relating to dog sales, he signed an Assurance of Voluntary Compliance with the state attorney general's office promising not to engage any more in those activities. Among other things, the court papers say he failed to provide health records and full vaccination information for his dogs at the time of sale, that he used contracts with language that was contrary to the law and failed to provide written notice of their rights and a guarantee of his dogs' good health.
He agreed to comply in the future, was permanently enjoined from violating consumer protection laws and agreed to pay restitution to dog buyers who submitted complaints or who submitted claims within 60 days of the filing. He also paid a $500 fine.
The kennel has an unsatisfactory record with the Better Business Bureau of Eastern Pennsylvania because of unanswered complaints. BBB records show that in the last three years, there have been nine complaints about the kennel, and four in the last year. Of those, Eckhart failed to respond to four, the records show, and only two were resolved.
Records also show Eckhart has state tax liens for unpaid sales taxes totaling more than $80,000 dating back to 2001.
Beyond all that stuff from legal and business records, dog law and other state agencies received many complaints about him for years. I know because many of the same people called and e-mailed me. I have stacks of files on him, many of them involving Almost Heaven customers who ended up with sick dogs.
Nelson said, ''I'm relatively new to Pennsylvania, but this place is notorious. I've heard horror stories for years. Everybody knows it takes like 20 baths to clean a Skip Eckhart dog. They have that smell of feces and urine, ammonia, deep in their skin.''
''How did Dog Law not know that? I think they know it.''
What I'm saying is: This is an operation that pretty much everyone knew was a mess. So the suspicion has been that if the state of Pennsylvania keeps giving Almost Heaven a clean bill of health, there's something wrong.
I tried unsuccessfully to reach Eckhart for an explanation. However, Pattie Fontana, a longtime employee at Almost Heaven who finally left the place in 2007 but returned for a few weeks this summer, told me Eckhart always was warned before an inspection and that he had a close relationship with Martrich. Information she supplied to PSPCA helped spark this week's raid.
Bill Smith, founder of Main Line Animal Rescue in Chester Springs -- the group that sparked the Limestone Kennels investigation -- told me he has filed complaints, both with the state attorney general's office and the state inspector general, alleging that then-state dog warden Martrich was improperly sharing information with Eckhart and tipping him off to raids and the origin of complaints. He also complained to former Bureau of Dog Law Director Mary Bender after his inquiries about Almost Heaven were relayed right to Eckhart. I have copies of a whole series of e-mail exchanges on the subject.
Nothing positive came of Smith's complaints. In fact, Martrich eventually was promoted to regional supervisor, and Smith said the response when the inspector general starting investigating his complaints was an immediate inspection of Smith's own rescue kennel -- by a two-person team that included Rick Martrich.
Dog Law spokesman Chris Ryder told me this summer that Smith's complaints would be part of the investigation into how its wardens missed the horrors of Limestone. He confirmed Thursday that the investigation would be expanded to include what happened at Almost Heaven.
However, resolving that one may be more complicated than just putting a couple of people in desk jobs.
The four-person team that inspected Almost Heaven in August included the relatively new director of dog law, Sue West.
I wonder if she'll suspend herself?
Rachael's Letter Posted on Bill White's Blog
October 9, 2008
Heavenly
I’ve heard from a lot of people about the Almost Heaven horror show last week.
In case you didn’t read about it, the Pennsylvania SPCA raided the Upper Milford Township dog kennel and said it found disgusting conditions. Owner Derbe “Skip” Eckhart was charged with animal cruelty, and the state revoked his kennel license. Here and here are my latest columns on the subject. I’ll have more to say in the days and weeks to come.
At least partly, I suspect, in response to all the publicity over this and other SPCA raids, the state Legislature finally pushed through an overhaul of the state dog law this week. Even watered down by Senate changes, the bill certainly is an improvement, but it won’t mean much without a major overhaul of the ineffective — and I’m being really generous to confine myself to that adjective — state Bureau of Dog Law.
The rafts of calls and e-mails I received included lots of horror stories about experiences with the kennel, expressions of disgust with Eckhart and hopes for a suitable punishment, and questions about how to adopt animals rescued from the kennel.
I decided to share one of the e-mails with you, because I was touched by the kindness and by the much-needed infusion of hope. It’s from Rachael — she asked me to withhold her last name — of Montgomery County.
“Bill, until I walked into the Philadelphia SPCA this past Sunday (secretly praying that I would find the perfect dog for me) I had not heard of the Almost Heaven puppy mill raid. After five minutes, I was informed by workers about the raid. I was disgusted and my heart was heavy at the same time.
“I did not seek out an Almost Heaven victim, but that is what I found. Even though she weighs less than half of what she should, is bald, covered by a red rash, sores and scabs from head to toe, bleeding ears and a double eye infection — I have found the perfect dog. Today I finalized the adoption of my new dog.
“She is unstable on her feet because she was kept in a cage so small she could not stand up, she has never been on a leash because no one cared enough to walk her, she does not know how to play because no one every played with her, she is not house-trained because she has never been in a house. Despite all the neglect and suffering she has endured, she can still love!”
Current Comments:
Good luck rachel. You just won the Lottery of Love. That is one lucky dog.
Posted By: Chris Casey Oct 9, 2008 8:55:09 PM
Thanks Bill for sharing this story. And thank you to Rachel for giving this dog a second chance!
Posted By: MOB Oct 9, 2008 9:18:23 PM
Reposted Article from: The Morning Call October 9, 2008, By Tim Darragh
By Tim Darragh Of The Morning Call October 9, 2008
A dog waits to be inspected by members of the Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of the Cruelty to Animals (PSPCA) at Almost Heaven Kennel in Upper Milford on Wednesday, October 1, 2008. The PSPCA out of Philadelphia raided the kennel after complaints about the health of some of the animals. (RICH SCHULTZ/ SPECIAL TO TMC / October 9, 2008)
The Almost Heaven Kennel in Upper Milford Township was a dirty, dangerous place for dogs, pocked with protruding wires and rusted pipes, littered with feces and filled with debris and waste in the dogs' cages and bedding, according to citations issued by a state dog warden.
The citations drew a picture of a kennel that was poorly maintained. The dog warden said she found rusted pipes with jagged edges, protruding wires and a shed with insulation falling from the ceiling, holes in walls and ripped up flooring. A drainage trough was filled with feces, urine and debris. An indoor kennel was overwhelmed by a ''pungent odor'' of ammonia. Feces were found ''throughout all kennel sections'' and ''had not been removed daily,'' as required.
Email To Almost Heaven and Their Response
Subject: (no subject)
Almost heaven yeah right!! Have you ever stopped and thought about the fact that one day you will meet your maker and you will have to pay an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth for each of those poor innocent animals you have chosen to abuse. I can say only this that GOD spelled backwards is DOG. Think about it.
To Rachael:
Subject: Re: (no subject)
and i agree and i love my DOGS and my GOD dont you forget it you have heard one side and i wont answer to any of you as*)^%(. the truth will come out and all my dogs are happy and HEALTHY
Wednesday, October 8, 2008
Oprah's Show on Puppy Mills
The following text was taken from Oprah's website:
"A number of times they'll call us and give us 45 minutes to an hour to come out and pick up a dog before they shoot it when they no longer want it. It's always amazing to me when I go out to pick up a dog, they've had the dog eight or nine years and it doesn't have a name. It's never been out of the hutch. It doesn't know how to walk. I have to carry it to the car. It's heartbreaking."
"Bill [from Main Line Animal Rescue] says he's asked the breeders who own puppy mills why they treat the dogs so badly. "They think that we're fools when we pick the dogs up," he says. "I just went back to one of the mills, and they were asking me about the cocker spaniel we pulled out. … And I said, 'Well, she's fine. She's walking around the house and everything.' And he said, 'You let that dog walk around the house, where the people in your family live?' And I said, 'Yes, we do.' He just couldn't get over it. It's a different mentality. [Dogs] are considered agricultural products. They're like an ear of corn.'"
"Some had their vocal chords damaged by a pipe in order to keep them from barking."
If you are thinking about adopting a new pet, make your first stop the local shelter or animal rescue office. "You can find any kind of dog you want, any age you want, at a shelter or rescue," Oprah says.
Consider these facts when adopting a dog.Sometimes, what you see isn't always what you get when it comes to that doggie in the window of a pet shop. "You can be deceived when you see these cute puppies in the stores," Lisa says.If you are looking for a specific breed of dog, Bill says you're likely to find one at a rescue. "A third to 50 percent of the animals in shelters, depending on the location, are purebred dogs," Bill says. "The rest are great designer mixes." Bill says there are also breed-specific rescues throughout the country.
What you need to know about animal shelters and finding responsible breeders.For people who would still like to use a breeder, Bill urges you to find one that is responsible. Quality breeders care about the quality of life their dogs will have when they go to their new homes and will often interview you about your home. "One of the things that makes them a responsible breeder is they take their dogs back even if it's six or seven years later," Bill says.
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