Home
Success Stories
Membership
Get Laws!
Volunteer
Donations
Adopt Me!
Area Reps
In The News
In Memory Of
Pictures of Chained Dogs
Articles and Links
Information/Tips
Dog Links

Two dogs dead in cruelty case
By Curtis Johnson
The Herald-Dispatch

September 21 , 2006

HUNTINGTON -- Two of the 13 dogs police say were being abused and malnourished at a Cabell County home have died, and now the court process is beginning for the 69-year-old woman charged with 13 counts of animal cruelty.

Sara Florence Phipps, 69, of Huntington was arrested by West Virginia State Police on Tuesday evening and charged with the 13 misdemeanor crimes. If convicted, she faces six and a half years in jail and/or a fine between $3,900 and $26,000.

Phipps was being held in the Western Regional Jail on those charges and a fugitive from justice warrant. The fugitive warrant was filed in connection to a worthless check case from Cattlettsburg, Ky. Her release is dependent upon payment of a $325,000 bond and resolution of the fugitive case.

The criminal complaint charging Phipps states police observed "13 dogs chained with heavy logging chains which were very short." The document goes on to describe the dogs as being "very thin" and malnourished.

"The dogs appeared to have mange, open wounds around the neck and one was dead inside a box," the complaint states.

Another one of the abused dogs was euthanized Tuesday at the Huntington-Cabell-Wayne Animal Shelter, where Director Anita Asbury said the remaining 11 dogs are being cared for. She said their recovery could be part of a slow process.

"On something that's been malnourished, you obviously can't throw a ton of dog food in for it, and then expect it to gain weight in a week or two," she said. "That's going to be something that's ongoing. It's going to take several months to nurse that."

Asbury would not comment specifically about the defendant, but she said the dogs' injuries were consistent with something that would have been noticed by most dog owners.

"If you fool with the animals any at all, you would notice the chains were becoming embedded in their necks," she said. "You would notice they were losing weight. You have to feed them."

State troopers said in the complaint that no food was available and noted that only a couple of the dogs had access to water.

Asbury said she wants to put each of the dogs up for adoption, but she said that is not possible until she obtains a court order allowing her to do so.

After that, Asbury said she will want to make sure each of the dogs are healthy enough for adoption. That's because she fears the malnutrition could have lowered each of their immune systems, making each animal more susceptible to diseases such as parvo or kennel cough.

She said the malnourishment could also affect the animals' eyesight.

"I would hate to have somebody come in, adopt the animals and get attached to them and then there is heartworms right along with them."



You can help Dogs Deserve Better anytime you shop online through iGive.com.

Contact Info: Dogs Deserve Better, Inc. • P.O. Box 23 • Tipton, PA 16684 • Toll Free 1.877.636.1408 • 814.941.7447
email: info@dogsdeservebetter.org • Website designed and maintained by Crescent Communications