因残忍对待动物,多伦多动物保护协会 会长等五人被警方逮捕,动物如同呆在地狱

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多伦多信息港(记者季翔报道):调查员周五称他们在多伦多动物保护协会(Toronto Humane Society)办公室的天花板上发现一具死猫的干尸。

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这只猫被困在一只捕兽笼里,看上去从没有人去检查过这个笼子。“让人毛骨悚然。”安省防止虐待动物协会(Ontario Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals)的调查员Kevin Strooband周五在动物保护协会的办公室外对记者说。

此前一天,多伦多动物保护协会的会长等5人被捕。官员称几十只“染病”的动物被关在笼舍里等死而不是被实行安乐死。工作人员也没有给动物们足够的食物和水。

多伦多动物保护协会的会长Tim Trow被控残忍对待动物,合谋犯下可公诉罪行以及妨碍警察执行公务罪。首席兽医Steve Sheridan,总经理Gary McCracken,主管Andy Bechtel和经理Romeo Bernadino也被指控残忍对待动物及合谋犯下可公诉罪行。这五人以及多伦多动物协会的董事局还被控虐待动物罪——安省《Ontario SPCA Act》中的一条规定。

防止虐待动物协会的律师Christopher Avery说,一名多伦多警察在逮捕Trow的时候遭到他的狗Bandit的袭击,该警察不得不对它喷胡椒水。
 
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http://www.cbc.ca/canada/toronto/story/2009/11/27/toronto-humane-society653.html

4 Toronto Humane Society animals euthanized

Society spokesperson briefly detained by police

Last Updated: Friday, November 27, 2009 | 11:05 PM ET Comments227Recommend165

CBC News


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Betsy, a grey tabby cat, is suffering from tongue ulcerations and an eye ulceration, and was among the animals seized at the Toronto Humane Society's shelter on Thursday.
(CBC)Four animals inside the Toronto Humane Society's shelter in the east end of the city had to be euthanized after animal cruelty charges were laid against the president and the board of directors at the facility.

A puppy, two cats and a raccoon were euthanized overnight Thursday, said Alison Cross of the Ontario Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, or OSPCA.
T
he OSPCA alleges dozens of animals were neglected at the Toronto shelter, including dozens left to die in their cages without proper care and nutrition.

The River Street shelter is now closed and under the jurisdiction of the OSPCA.

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Tim Trow, president of the Toronto Humane Society, sits in the back of a police car after his arrest.
(CBC)Toronto Humane Society (THS) staff are barred from entering the building as the Toronto Police and the OSPCA investigate the conditions at the facility.

In a further development, prior to a media tour of the shelter on Friday afternoon, OSPCA investigator Kevin Strooband told reporters his staff had found a dead cat caught in a trap inside the building.

He described the device as a live trap, meant to catch animals to transport them for humane purposes.

"This is pretty deliberate," Strooband told reporters. "Somebody set that trap and knew it was up there. But it wasn't checked until we received some information just now saying that there might be one up there."

Earlier Friday, Ian McConachie, a THS spokesman, was arrested as he tried to retrieve documents from the office. He was briefly detained before being released without a charge.

Shelter to open Tuesday


Around 1,100 animals are still inside and under the care of veterinarians, and will be put up for adoption Tuesday when the shelter reopens, the OSPCA said.
Five senior officials have been arrested and charged with animal cruelty after police conducted a Thursday afternoon raid:
  • President Tim Trow.
  • General manager Gary McCracken.
  • Head veterinarian, Dr. Steve Sheridan.
  • Supervisor Andy Bechtel.
  • Manager Romeo Bernadino.
Charges against Trow, McCracken, Bechtel and Bernadino also include obstruction of a peace officer.

Members of the society's board of directors were also charged with five counts of animal cruelty, a provincial offence under the Ontario SPCA Act.

A Toronto Humane Society spokesperson called the OSPCA's actions disgusting and politically motivated. There has been a long-running feud between the two animal-care organizations, he said.

Euthanasia policy under fire


OSPCA lawyer Christopher Avery alleges the Toronto society is reluctant to euthanize sick or dying animals, and blames management for dictating euthanasia policy without taking the animals' best interests into account.

"What Mr. Trow did is he instituted a policy where the veterinarians, contrary to the regulations and laws that relate to veterinary medicine, aren't able to make the final decision with respect to their patients' medical care," Avery told CBC News.

"Euthanasia can only be approved by management, and management seemed more concerned with their euthanasia statistics because they use them for fundraising purposes as opposed to the best medical needs of the animals."

The society relies on donations as the sole source of its operating funds.

All five senior officials were released on bail late Thursday night. They are expected to appear in court in January.
<cite class="source">
With files from The Canadian Press
</cite>
 
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http://www.thestar.com/news/gta/tor...y-it-seems-like-house-of-horrors?bn=1#article

Humane Society: 'It seems like house of horrors'

An inside look at the Toronto Humane Society revealed a place where neglected animals lived and died in terrible pain and feral cats roamed free in the basement and between walls, one dying a slow death in a trap.

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On Friday, a tip led investigators to pull panels from a ceiling on the second floor, where they discovered the body of the caged animal. Its skin stretched thin over frail bones. Its organs turned to thick dust, the remains of a feast for maggots.

"It sent chills down my spine," said Kevin Strooband, lead investigator from the Ontario Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.

"I don't know what is going on here, but it seems like a house of horrors."

The cat was sealed in a live trap, the door closing after it was lured by food, above a high-traffic area. Its weakening cries would have mixed with the chorus of animals below.

The facility has been described by former employees as a place of unimaginable suffering, where the weak were stacked in overcrowded disease-ridden conditions and left to die in terrible pain.
Since the OSPCA raided the building Thursday, five animals – a puppy, a dog, two cats and a raccoon – have been euthanized.

"I have seen things that have made me cry and haunted my dreams in that building," said Marcie Laking, a former animal-care worker who has spoken out numerous times against the society.
Laking started working at the society as a volunteer in 2001, and became a staff member in 2005. By 2006, what she had seen in the building had taken its toll.

"I remember taking dead animals when my shifts would start, and dead kittens," said Laking. "These animals are dying painful deaths – from ailments that are not being treated, are not being treated properly or can't be treated – and they are dying in their cages."

The body of the mummified cat was put on display Friday during a guided media tour of the facility. Strooband led groups of journalists and television crews through the area of the building used to house about 1,000 cats.

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In a back room, veterinarian Johanna MacNaughton discussed the conditions of four of the animals being treated.

"None of these cats were on any pain medication," said MacNaughton, as she held out a female whose eye ulceration was ignored to the point where it had prolapsed.

"She was not on any pain medication at all. With proper care and treatment, it wouldn't have reached the severity it had reached."

MacNaughton worked for the Toronto Humane Society from August 2008 until she resigned in April. She was surprised a cat was left to die in the ceiling.

But feral cats ran loose in all corners of the building, including the basement, she told the Star.
"It is a known fact there are ferals in the ceilings, there are feral cats all through the shelter."

She would not comment on what she saw while working at the shelter because of legal reasons but said she resigned because of management overriding veterinary decisions and extreme understaffing.

After Thursday's raid, she returned to help treat the remaining animals. Some of them had not been treated by veterinarians in months, she said.
"It is pretty deplorable."

MacNaughton said 20 per cent of the cats she examined in the adoption area of the facility – where cats are supposed to be healthy – were suffering from respiratory disease and "should have been isolated."

There were so many animals, there was no way to properly isolate the animals, or arrange for the mass cleaning of cages, she said.

Among her complaints was the hiring of staff without proper medical knowledge.

"They were hiring untrained staff and throwing them into positions that require knowledge of drugs and dosing," said MacNaughton. "Nobody should be taking on those roles unless they are appropriately trained."

She had nothing but high praise for staff taking care of the animals, and said she has faith the Toronto Humane Society can rebuild.

Right now, staffers are "just trying to get on top of years of understaffing," she said. "It is going to take so much time to dig ourselves out."
 
http://www.nationalpost.com/news/story.html?id=2278399

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Brett Gundlock/National Post Tim Trow, the Toronto Humane Society President is arrested and taken away from the Toronto Humane Society, in Toronto, Ont. Thursday, November 26, 2009. Trow and other officials were arrested and ...


In the ceiling of Toronto's 11 River St., a cat named Casper lay mummified, frozen in death and trapped in a cage meant to capture live animals.

This address is home to Canada's largest humane society, an organization whose mission it is "to promote the humane care and protection of all animals and to prevent cruelty and suffering."

But this same organization -- the Toronto Humane Society -- is currently under investigation for maltreatment of animals, and its controversial president, Tim Trow, was charged on Thursday with cruelty to animals, conspiracy to commit an indictable offence and obstruction of a peace officer.
To be sure, Mr. Trow, whose tenure with the Toronto Humane Society stretches back to the 1980s, is a polarizing character.

He is described by some as a combative dictator whose limited approach to euthanasia has done more harm than good, causing the suffering of kittens like Betsy, whose eye ulcerations had become so bad that sores developed on her cornea. To others, Mr. Trow is a man with an unfair reputation, a volunteer committed to the well-being of all creatures, small and big, wild and domestic.

The heavy-set man in his early 60s is at the centre of an extensive investigation launched by the Ontario Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, which has described the animal shelter as a "house of horrors."

Two cats and two dogs have been euthanized since Thursday's raid on the shelter, while an inspection in June revealed a kitten with a fractured skull and a cat whose skin was peeling away due to liver disease.

The investigation, sparked by witness accounts and reported observations of former volunteers, "surprises" Mr. Trow, who said he is proud of the work carried out by the society. He said he plans to fight the charges.

"It is an extremely caring environment aimed at saving the lives of animals," he said in an interview alongside his attorney, Pat Metzler. "It's a large shelter, and there can be mistakes and shortfalls, but we do our best. It's a modern, clean, progressive facility."

Richard Stainton, Mr. Trow's partner, said he has shared few words with Mr. Trow since Thursday night's arrest, but said his partner is "surprised at the vehemence" surrounding the investigation.

"He would never do anything to intentionally hurt an animal," Mr. Stainton said from the Toronto home they have shared for four years, adding that Mr. Trow's dog of 10 years, a Dalmation named King, passed away just two weeks ago. "The THS is a no-kill shelter, that's his approach. He takes pride in his work."

In contrast, one of Mr. Trow's longtime neighbours characterizes the former lawyer as "combative, disagreeable, and bossy."

"I've been avoiding him more or less for the past 25 years," said the woman, who requested not to be named.

Mr. Trow, who spent roughly 30 years in the Ontario civil service before volunteering full-time at the society, grew up on a horse farm outside Toronto and today lives in a two-storey brick home in Davisville.

"He has a long history with animals, and grew to respect them from a very young age," Mr. Stainton said, standing in the doorway of their home, which is arched with greenery and opens to a living room scattered with papers and Xerox boxes. "He is always at the humane society, and if he has any spare time, reads wildlife nature books."


 
媽的!這些人應該重判!
 
拿钱不干活。该被逮
 
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