Just
Another Piece of Garbage?
I Don't Think So.
Every
week at Dogs Deserve Better we receive pictures of chained
dogs that are obviously just another piece of trash, left
and forgotten, in the caretaker's yard. The
dog sits, day after day and year after year, amidst old
junk cars, broken toys, rusted tools, and nameless and
sundry other used up and broken paraphenalia, becoming too sad to even bark or make
a fuss anymore.

I believe a good portion of the blame
for the pervasiveness of this attitude rests upon the shoulders
of this state's law enforcement agencies and judicial system. Three
recent Pennsylvania cases not only support this argument, but
were, in fact, what has led me to this conclusion.
Contrary to what many of us may think, Pennsylvania
DOES in fact have anti-cruelty laws in place. They state: A person commits
a summary offense if he wantonly or cruelly ill-treats, overloads,
beats, otherwise abuses any animal, or neglects any animal as
to which he has a duty of care, whether belonging to himself
or otherwise, or abandons any animal, or deprives any animal
of necessary sustenance, drink, shelter or veterinary care, or
access to clean and sanitary shelter which will protect the animal
against inclement weather and preserve the animal's body heat
and keep it dry. A person convicted of a summary offense should
pay a fine of not less than $ 50 nor more than $ 750 or to imprisonment
for not more than 90 days, or both.

So why does Pennsylvania have so many cases of dead and dying
dogs, oftentimes abandoned on the end of a chain or locked in
a shed where they remain until death?
The problem seems to lie in the actual ENFORCEMENT of these
laws. More often than not they are simply not enforced. The
police feel it is not their job to enforce them, and the humane
officers, few that there are, are both overwhelmed and beaten
down by a judicial system that all too frequently sides with
the abusers.
They become lackadaisical about enforcement because they know
whatever work they put into building a case, the judge may very
well throw it out and let the abuser walk. There is no reward
for their efforts on behalf of the animal, only loss after loss
in the courtroom, leading to an eventual paralysis of both heart
and mind.


Recently in Centre County, PA, Dogs Deserve Better
volunteers twice tried to get a humane officer to go look at
chained dogs to ascertain if laws were being broken. They
were told both times that the officer had more than 30 counties
to oversee, and there was no way she could get there anytime
in the near future. What
happens to a dog who is near death in these counties without
adequate humane enforcement and police who feel it's not their
job? I think we all know the answer to that. And I think
it's happening daily, with no one held accountable for yet another
death of another helpless companion.

The attitude that dogs in Pennsylvania are JUST PROPERTY, and
can be treated as such, is archaic and in need of some serious
overhaul. In a sad nod to the effects of
this 'just property' notion, and in what may horrifyingly become
a legal trend, is convicting animal abusers of 'scattering rubbish' instead of
the actual crime of cruelty to animals.
Scattering rubbish, a dead dog? With
insane verdicts such as these appearing in our state newspapers
and other media, the court system and law enforcement agencies
are putting forth and reinforcing the notion that dogs are
just another piece of garbage; that it's ok to kill a dog as
long as you dispose of it properly. This lends credence to the already prevalent notion amongst Pennsylvania's
animal abusers that dogs are not living breathing creatures deserving
of our respect and just treatment according to the law, but merely
chattel, refuse, something worthless and of no value. That you
can dispose of one and get another with no consequences and no
thought.

On January 8, 2008 in Stroudsburg, PA, Arnold
Wheeler was acquitted
of animal cruelty charges in the 2006 shootings of three of his
dogs. Wheeler use a .22-caliber rifle to shoot a 2 year old male
dog 4 times, an 8-month-old female dog 3 times, and another female
with puppies 1 time, and then dumped their bodies off along the
road. For these crimes he walked, but was
instead convicted of scattering rubbish for dumping the dog's
bodies. He was ordered
to pay a $200 fine and sentenced to 30 days in jail.
Then on January 24th, 2008, Cheryl
Magnotta of Smethport, PA
was sentenced for 6 counts of animal cruelty, after pleading
guilty to abandoning 21 Great Danes and leaving them to die of
starvation on her property. She was initially
charged with 44 counts of 'scattering rubbish' and 21 counts of animal cruelty,
but she pled out of all 44 counts of rubbish
charges and all but 6 of the animal cruelty charges. She received time served
and probation.


On September 11, 2006, I
helped a dog left to die on the end of a chain in a yard, a
useless 'piece of refuse' who could no longer stand or even
bark. Despite video and photo evidence of
cruelty, as well as eye-witness and vet testimony, no charges
were ever filed by either the police or the humane officer against
the dog's caretakers. Private criminal charges
filed by myself and Dogs Deserve Better remain 'in limbo', probably
in a 'let's avoid this' stack of charges on the DA's desk. Instead,
I was arrested for 'stealing property', and refusing to give
it back when it was demanded of me. I was convicted and
will be sentenced on February 22th...for standing up for 'just
another piece of Pennsylvania garbage'.

Maybe, and that's a big maybe in East Freedom,
Pennsylvania, if Doogie had died that day and been dumped along
the road by the Arnolds, they too would have been convicted of
'scattering rubbish'. We will never know, because this
one time someone stepped in and picked up the trash before it
was all the way dead. With
my conviction, the message being sent once again to the
Pennsylvania public is that it's ok to kill your dog, because
it's just another piece of junk laying in your yard; treat it
as you see fit.
Just make sure you dispose of it properly when
you're done.

Tammy
S. Grimes, founder, Dogs Deserve Better
I
want to help DDB with financial support.