Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

SPCA Hopes For Charges After 70 Cats And Dogs Seized In Surrey, B.C.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Feb, 2016 12:02 PM
  • SPCA Hopes For Charges After 70 Cats And Dogs Seized In Surrey, B.C.
VANCOUVER — Another 70 animals have been seized by the B.C. SPCA, less than a month after the animal welfare agency rescued more than six dozen dogs from a puppy mill.
 
Officials took 56 cats, 12 dogs and two puppies from a breeding and boarding facility in Surrey, B.C., Tuesday after a vet deemed they were all in distress, said spokeswoman Lorie Chortyk.
 
The cats are Persians and short-haired exotics, while the dogs include four French bulldogs, a poodle, a Boston terrier, a Chihuahua, a Rottweiler, a Doberman, a Jack Russell terrier, a Shiba Inu, a Pomeranian and the Pomeranian's two puppies.
 
Two of the 70 animals seized Tuesday from a boarding and breeding facility in Surrey, B.C., have been euthanized.
SPCA chief enforcement officer Marcie Moriarty says one cat and one kitten were put down.
 
She says they were in such distress that veterinarians had no choice but that the remaining 54 cats, 12 dogs and two puppies remain in the society's care.
 
Moriarty says a warrant issued to seize the animals has been sealed so she can't say much about the case or comment on what led officials to the property.
 
She says staff are focusing on treating the animals and making them comfortable while completing the investigation and forwarding a report to Crown for possible charges.
 
The seizure in Surrey comes just over a week after the SPCA seized 66 dogs from an alleged puppy mill in nearby Langley. 
 
Those dogs are doing great, but require further treatment before they can be adopted, Chortyk said.
 
"They've all been groomed and bathed and they're undergoing ongoing treatment," she said.
 
Some of the dogs fear humans because they spent their entire lives in cages and will need rehabilitation, Chortyk explained.
 
"But they're amazing animals and as soon as they're healthy, we'll put them up for adoption and hopefully they'll get amazing homes," she said.

MORE National ARTICLES

Alberta Health Officials Say B.C. Person With Measles Visited Multiple Places In Calgary

Alberta Health Officials Say B.C. Person With Measles Visited Multiple Places In Calgary
The person was at Calgary International Airport between 10 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. on Jan. 18 and took WestJet flight WS287 to Vancouver, which departed at 11:35 a.m

Alberta Health Officials Say B.C. Person With Measles Visited Multiple Places In Calgary

Education Council Recommends Closure Of New Brunswick Elementary School

Education Council Recommends Closure Of New Brunswick Elementary School
Members of the Anglophone West School District education council voted Thursday to recommend closing the school.

Education Council Recommends Closure Of New Brunswick Elementary School

Ottawa Runs $400m Surplus In November; So Far $1Billion In The Black For 2015-16

Ottawa Runs $400m Surplus In November; So Far $1Billion In The Black For 2015-16
The Finance Department's monthly fiscal monitor also says Ottawa had a surplus of $1 billion over the first nine months of the 2015-16 fiscal year.

Ottawa Runs $400m Surplus In November; So Far $1Billion In The Black For 2015-16

Headline-grabbing Jian Ghomeshi Sex-Assault Charge Carries 18-month Maximum

Headline-grabbing Jian Ghomeshi Sex-Assault Charge Carries 18-month Maximum
Former radio star Jian Ghomeshi faces maximum penalties that — if convicted — are dramatically different for the charges he faces.

Headline-grabbing Jian Ghomeshi Sex-Assault Charge Carries 18-month Maximum

B.C. Mounties Describe Harrowing Recapture Of Escaped Alberta Prisoner

B.C. Mounties Describe Harrowing Recapture Of Escaped Alberta Prisoner
Cpl. Dan Moskaluk of the Northern Rockies RCMP says in a news release that the chase began Tuesday morning when employees at a Husky bulk fuel plant along Highway 97 reported seeing Harley John Lay, 29.

B.C. Mounties Describe Harrowing Recapture Of Escaped Alberta Prisoner

Northern Communities Struggle To Recruit And Retain Teachers: Advocates

Northern Communities Struggle To Recruit And Retain Teachers: Advocates
The first year Clint James worked as a teacher in northern Ontario, a student asked him in October whether he was coming back after Christmas.

Northern Communities Struggle To Recruit And Retain Teachers: Advocates