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‘Speaking for the voiceless victims’

January 24, 2008 : 11:47 AM ET

Alert the media!
(We did.)

Today, January 25, the defendant in the final case related to Michael Vick was sentenced, allowing us to begin telling the happy-ending stories of the Vick dogs here at Best Friends.

Members of the national media have been invited to the sanctuary on January 28 from 10 am to 12:45 pm to meet and learn about the dogs.

They’ll be able to interview key Best Friends staff members, observe our staff interacting with the dogs and, in the process, see how friendly these animals are toward humans.

They’ll also have the opportunity to meet the stars of “Dogtown,” the National Geographic Channel’s TV series.

It will be the first time that news media anywhere in the U.S. have been able to photograph a large group of the dogs since they were seized from Vick’s property.

The New York Times was the first organization to say it would send someone. We also expect TV crews from Salt Lake and Las Vegas, with many of them sending packages to the major networks and individual stations in Virginia that have been on this story for months. We’ve also received queries from NBC Nightly News and Inside Edition.

It’s a true feel-good story about some dogs with a new lease on life.

Written by John Polis

When the Michael Vick dogs are introduced to the public at Best Friends on Monday (see sidebar story), it will signal the true new beginning for the 22 pit bulls who were in the group that survived the imprisoned football star’s aptly named Bad Newz Kennels.

They’ve been at our sanctuary in southern Utah for nearly three weeks, becoming acclimated to their accommodations and getting to know the Best Friends caregivers (as well as many other sympathetic staffers and visitors).

Under an agreement among federal officials, Best Friends, and rescue groups that accepted the other Bad Newz refugees, we’ve kept them pretty much under wraps until the final Vick-related case was closed January 25.

From now on, we no longer refer to them generically as the Vick fighting dogs, but as the Vicktory dogs, with their own names and unique personalities. Best Friends rehabilitators are working with them on socialization and other canine life skills, and our adoptions staff will set about the task of placing them in exactly the right homes.

“We will work with these guys and gain a full understanding of who they are and what particular homes they will be looking for, and we’ll try to find those homes and make a love connection,” says Patty Hegwood, director of animal care at Best Friends.

That message and motivation has been consistent throughout and beyond the Vick case – from his indictment July 17, to his guilty plea five weeks later, to his sentence of 23 months in prison handed down on December 10, to negotiations over what would happen to the dogs.

Best Friends worked behind the scenes to ensure the dogs’ future, even as other groups pushed for them to be euthanized. A spokeswoman from People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals called them “ticking time bombs,” and said that “rehabilitating fighting dogs is not in the cards.”

The Humane Society of the United States agreed with PETA. “Officials from our organization have examined some of these dogs and, generally speaking, they are some of the most aggressively trained pit bulls in the country,” HSUS president and chief executive officer Wayne Pacelle told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution in early August. “Hundreds of thousands of less-violent pit bulls, who are better candidates to be rehabilitated, are being put down. The fate of these dogs will be up to the government, but we have recommended to them, and believe, they will be eventually put down.”

The government ignored HSUS’s recommendation.

Meanwhile, away from the TV cameras, radio shows and newspaper interviews, Best Friends and others considered the well-being of the dogs and worked on their behalf.

“Several people got involved all at once, using their own contacts,” says Russ Mead, Best Friends general counsel. “We were approached by an attorney in New York City, Flora Edwards, to help.”

She spoke with him and Best Friends executive director Paul Berry, who gave Mead the go-ahead to work on a legal brief to be filed in the Vick case.

Eleven animal welfare groups were parties to the 31-page brief, which “speaks for the voiceless victims of the defendant’s criminal conduct.”

In addition to calling for appropriate prison time and fines for Vick, the brief, filed September 12, offered “a process to conduct assessments to determine which of the survivors can be saved and a plan to place as many dogs as possible in specialized care where they can be rehabilitated and to provide sanctuary and special care for those who have any potential quality of life.”

Mead drafted major sections of the document, which was welcomed in the animal law world. “The brief was significant in that we were speaking to the court on behalf of the victims of the crimes, the dogs themselves,” he says. “Unlike most of the rhetoric surrounding the case, our brief actually became part of the case. It is, of course, hard to say how much the brief influenced the court, but many of the points in the brief were followed by the judge.”

About a month later, the judge appointed Valparaiso Law School professor Rebecca Huss to represent the interests of the dogs in the legal proceedings. She made two trips to perform individual assessments on the dogs, using a previous assessment by the ASPCA as background.

The purpose of her second trip in late November was “to determine the final placement of the dogs based on all the evaluations of the dogs’ behavior and in light of the options available for their care,” according to her eight-page report filed December 3 with the court.

As part of Huss’ assessments, she “observed the evaluations that the Best Friends Animal Society team performed [and] discussed the status and long-term prospects of these dogs with the Best Friends Animal Society team.” The team consisted of trainer John Garcia, vet tech Jeff Popowich and veterinarian Frank McMillan.

Huss recommended to the court that Best Friends be entrusted with 22 of the 47 surviving dogs. The rest were placed across seven other organizations.

“Best Friends Animal Society is accustomed to dealing with dogs that have special medical and behavioral needs,” she told U.S. District Judge Henry Hudson, who approved her proposal. “Best Friends Animal Society is committed to providing what each of the dogs needs to be able to thrive in a sanctuary environment if it’s necessary for a dog to remain in such an environment for life.”

Paul Berry said Best Friends is grateful that the court gave us the opportunity to do what we do best – provide a caring, rehabilitative home for abused, homeless animals. “They deserve the very best that we can give them, and we are prepared to provide a safe place for them to stay for the rest of their lives,” he said.

At the sanctuary, maintenance crews retrofitted one of the octagons in Dogtown to provide living quarters for the Vick dogs. Octagons provide indoor shelter and feeding areas, and have dog runs fanning out from the building. Inside, caregivers can see all the dogs at a glance and keep an eye on their activities. Each dog will have his/her own 10-foot by 20-foot outdoor run and a space to come into at night.

In a separate action, Judge Hudson ordered Vick to pay $928,073 in restitution for the “past, present and long-term care of all the dogs.” Huss, while acknowledging that the costs of care would be higher, recommended that rescues be allocated $20,000 for each “sanctuary dog” (the dogs who are likely to spend a significant amount of time, if not the rest of their lives, in a sanctuary or foster home). The judge reduced the amount to $18,275 per dog. He allocated $5,000 for dogs deemed likely to be adopted.

Best Friends estimates the average cost of lifetime care for a dog to be $40,000, but the cost of caring for the Vick dogs will probably be more. Because the Vick dogs need to live individually (most of the dogs at Best Friends live in group settings), they will require additional facilities. They’ll also need a higher ratio of caregiver time per dog, according to Hegwood.

Because of concern that dog fighters may try to get them, the Vick dogs will have more security, and the adoptions staff will require more in-depth background checks from potential adopters. As repugnant as it is, the fact remains that Bad Newz Kennels produced some dogs who would be prized by other dog fighters.

Of the 47 surviving dogs, 25 were classified as sanctuary dogs; Best Friends received 21 of those. (The 22nd dog that Best Friends received was assessed as being highly adoptable.)

The resulting stipend to Best Friends was $388,775. The other rescue groups, who took in four sanctuary dogs and 21 adoptable dogs, received $178,100.

The court paid the remaining $361,198 to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which was responsible for the dogs during the legal proceedings. That amount includes the cost of transportation, care and feeding; $31,051 for the ASPCA’s behavioral assessment; and $100,000 in hourly payments and travel expenses for Huss.

Contrary to rumors and Internet speculation, Best Friends and the other rescues agreed not to “solicit money or conduct fundraising activities with the sole purpose of raising money for the care of one or more dogs received in the case.”

That agreement with federal officials, however, allows all the groups to talk about the life stories of the dogs as part of general fundraising activities. It also contains conditions for care of the dogs, including spay/neuter provisions and adoption restrictions.

Written by Michael Rinker
Photo by Molly Wald

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February 21, 2008 : 11:06 AM ET
posted by: TamayasLori
Squeakie42, I was also concerned about the pit bulls mentioned by PAWS. I went directly to the rescue, Bullie Buddies and asked them about the situation, "I have heard a rumor that Best Friends Animal Society in Kanab, UT left 44 pit bulls with you and just disappeared? Is this true?"

Brandi from Bullie Buddies responded, "Thanks for the question, the answer is no, definately a rumor. Thanks, Brandi"

I hope this finally puts to rest this ugly and untrue account of Best Friends.


February 3, 2008 : 8:50 AM ET
posted by: Squeakie42
While the posts from PAWS are close to incoherent, I also read the post from Ann Berlin about pit bulls reportedly rescued in Utah but left in Las Vegas without adequate funding support. I would very much like to see a response from Best Friends, telling what happened, and what was done to compensate that rescue group/shelter. Two years old or not, the story and its claims have no resolution posted. How did BF handle the outcome of that situation? Please let us know.


February 2, 2008 : 2:26 PM ET
posted by: candice
I Live in NYC and read the article in the NY times this morning regarding Best Friends and the update on Vicks damaged victims ( crying for JOY for BF and hatred for Vick and his buddies). Sorry for my thought - (to pull every tooth out of Vick's/buddies mouths). I praise the wonderful caring people at BF who will take the time to teach and help these loving creatures to trust and accept the love they deserve. My same thoughts to the other shelters who will also care for the dogs, and of course to the lucky people who will hopefully get to adopt them. As a result I joined BF and will do everythng within my power to help to put an END to dogfighting and all animal fighting. I belong to many animal organizations- my heart is with the animal kingdom.


January 29, 2008 : 9:47 PM ET
posted by: Paws
I do have right now one pitbull that was a fighting dog and left for dead I am taking care for he is a sweetheart too. The other other rescues took alreay, but he was very chewed up and need lots of weight he was starved almost to death and his wounds are now alomst healed and he will be able to go to a another rescue group soon I have had about 40 pass this year. Plus help another no kill place whos family gave up everything for the animals to have a forever adopted or not she lost her house and property and has 40-50 still to go of be distroyed she had cancer and he husband has a brain tumor one place took 10, but the other groups here are full too. I help with fund raising for another no kill adopt or they have a home forever group too but they little to no funds and we are trying to get them a new building and fencing so she can take on more they do make runs east for small dogs for adoptions since the shelter there ask for some saying they are having small dog requests and no little dogs. Also have helped 2 other families with death and muli dog placments I too do what I can but rescue is tough and little money to go around small rescues like Sharons get little to no donations except the few dogs that get adopted and WalMart donated food.


January 29, 2008 : 9:11 PM ET
posted by: meagfitz
Paws,

It sounds like you have never been to Best Friends, because if you had you would know that the Vicktory dogs and any other animal that comes to BF is in the best possible place (other than finding a forever home, of course). I volunteer at BF twice a year and have seen all of their hard work first hand. Most of the animal caregivers are hourly workers and trust me, they don't work at BF to get rich. They work there because they love the animals and there is a certain level of peace and joy that even being there brings to you.

Of course BF is a business...as if they weren't a well managed business that invested and expanded wisely they would not be able to lovingly care for the animals that they do and help out sister facilities across the country. If they weren't a well run business they would end up like the facility in Pahrump or in NY that ran into financial trouble and needed BF assistance to care for the animals. But BF is a well run business so these are not concerns for them, as all animals who end up in Kanab have a wonderful happy life they would not have elsewhere.

So Paws, put yourself in your motorhome and drive to Kanab. Spend time there. Volunteer. See it for yourself...and I am more than positive you will leave Kanab knowing that while BF is a well run business, it is not a business run for financial gain, but run for the love of animals.


January 29, 2008 : 7:22 PM ET
posted by: darfield
Deep Breath. The way I read PAWS' comments, I don't think English is her (?) first language, thereby making her rants incoherent. Nonetheless, we can tell what she is trying to say - which in any language is a nonsensical waste of everyones time. Ms PAWS - it sounds like you have the creme de la creme of kennels and I know that right now in your area, in local shelters, there are 22 abused Pit Bulls that are not considered adoptable. Please go get those dogs. I'm serious. I would personally be willing to send you a little money to help care for the dogs, and I wouldn't be the only one. Just think of what YOU could do for those dogs. You have the chance to halt death sentences, and restore quality of life to dogs just like the Vick dogs. You won't get famous for doing this, but to 22 terrified dogs you would be the greatest person ever put on the face of the earth.



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