The Cruel Reality of Puppy Mills
Most people think of puppies when they hear or talk about puppy mills and, yes the puppies are an integral part of puppy mills. After all they are the product produced and the reasons puppy mills exist. They are the cash crop of this industry.
Puppies born in these facilities are:
- Often inbred.
- Often taken away from their mothers when they are 7 weeks old. They are very young and barely weaned.
- Un-socialized by their mothers at this age which can cause problems as they grow.
- Puppies can often be sick, have suppressed immune systems and many develop behavioral problems.
- Shipped to consumers and pet stores without food, water or ventilation. They often get sick during transport developing illnesses such as respiratory infections, mange and parasites that usually present after a family has purchased their new, beloved pet.
- Have genetic defects that do not show up for years such as luxating patellae, epilepsy, hip dysplasia, eye disease such as juvenile cataracts, deafness as well as heart disease and more.
- Have emotional and behavior problems.
Families rarely return a puppy for a refund. Instead, they incur high vet bills, heartbreak and even devastating loss. The online breeders and websites are committing consumer fraud as they mislead the customers about where the puppies were born. They know where the puppies come from but fail to inform the consumer that the puppies come from high volume commercial dog breeding facilities. With all of this being said, the puppies can sometimes be viewed as the “lucky” ones!
The Forgotten Victims
The unlucky dogs are the ones sentenced to life imprisoned in a puppy mill. I am talking about the mother and father dogs of puppies purchased online, through the newspaper and on social media. They are the true victims and the ones that are forgotten. These “breeding stock” dogs, as they are referred to, are treated like livestock, and the inhumane treatment of these dogs is legal in the eyes of the USDA.
These dogs usually live in very stressful conditions and are usually suffering from painful illnesses. Females are forced bred every six months, and the males usually number one for every 30 or more females and are also forced to breed as often as possible. They are essentially bred until they can no longer produce a profitable litter. At that point they are either disposed of by gunshot, drowning, poisoning or hit over the head. If not “disposed” of, the breeding dogs will sometimes be sold to another puppy mill in “as is” condition, auction style, where they are sold to the highest bidder at a dog auction. Some breeding dogs are rescued.
Dog Auctions
Buyers and sellers at dog auctions sign an agreement stating they will not hold the auction house responsible for any refunds or guarantees. They understand that “items”, in this case dogs, are sold “as is where is.” Attending a dog auction clearly defines the priorities of this industry and demonstrates how cruelty can be legal.
Eleven “lucky” French Bulldogs and a Pug, five males and seven females were recently rescued from a dog auction in Missouri. They were part of an all bulldog auction where 110 bulldogs were being sold “as is” to the highest bidder. The “as is” part is the most disturbing.
Remember, they were in these conditions at the time of sale and would most likely remain in these conditions at their new resident puppy mill once sold. They would be expected to produce litter after litter until they were noticeably sick in the cage or no longer produced profitable litters.
Sick Dogs Bought and Sold
While attending the 2012 dog auction in Wheaton, Missouri, I was able to see firsthand the conditions, both mental and physical, of the dogs being placed on the block. One group of four dogs was being sold by the same breeder. All four were under a year old. They were sick and being sold “as is”.
The mental condition of these young dogs was inhumane. Not only were they hand shy and petrified of human touch, they were physically sick as well. They all walked with their bellies to the ground, pancake style. All four were overweight. They all had loose hips and poor muscle tone from being caged since birth. When you picked them up they would arch their backs and frighteningly stare blankly towards the sky. I was horrified by this alone. It was later found that three female French Bulldogs all had upper respiratory tract infections upon rescue and two of them also had blood in their urine due to painful urinary tract infections. They were being sold “as is” sick with no mention of their illnesses at the time of sale.
Allowing these animals to exist in these conditions is legal animal cruelty and abuse. They needed vet care!
There were other examples of animal cruelty that I witnessed at the auction. For instance, #41 a female French Bulldog born in Sept 2011 was too young to have any selling points in the auction catalog. She was extremely hand shy and had an elongated palette which causes breathing problems. Upon rescue, she was found to have blood in her urine due to a painful urinary tract infection as well as an upper respiratory infection. She was sick and not feeling well. She needed medication and vet care.
#45 a male French Bulldog, born Nov 2011. Too young to have any selling points in the auction catalog. Upon rescue, he was found to have ringworm and an upper respiratory infection. He was sick, he did not feel well and he needed vet care.
#46 a male French Bulldog, born Nov 2011. Too young to have any selling points in the auction catalog. He was extremely thin at the time of rescue but healthy otherwise.
#53 a male French Bulldog, born Jan 2011. This boy had ringworm and a painful urinary tract infection. He was sick and needed medical attention.
#93 a female French Bulldog, born Jan 2007. This beautiful girl’s selling point was that she was due “in season” in July 2012. Upon rescue she was found to have a painful untreated eye ulcer and blood in her urine due to a painful urinary tract infection. She was sick and needed medical attention.
#96 a female French Bulldog, born in Oct 2006. She was described as a “good mother” that had 6 pups in her last litter. Upon rescue she was found to have glucose in her urine. She had painful chronic untreated ear infections that caused her ears to thicken and she had been branded on her hind leg. She previously had been treated for mange with motor oil that burned her skin and she had a hernia. Her face had numerous fly bite scars and she had an untreated eye ulcer. She is currently being monitored for diabetes. She was sick when sold at the auction “as is.”
#99 a male French Bulldog, born Sept 2006. He was listed as a “proven breeder” and a “free breeder.” Upon his rescue he was found to have an upper repository infection as well as an elongated palette. The rescue vet that specializes in French Bulldogs said it was the worst elongated palette she had ever seen. Elongated palettes make it hard for dogs to breathe especially if they get too excited or are exposed to extreme temperatures.
The 9 year old female Pug was not listed in the auction catalog but was for sale for $20. She had 3 broken teeth that were very painful. It was difficult for the rescue vet to sew her up after her spay as her abdominal wall was extremely thin due to having so many litters.
How Can This Be Legal?
As I reflect on the auction, I know the reason why dogs can legally be allowed to live and breed while being so sick. The federal Animal Welfare Act (AWA) which governs commercial dog breeders only requires the breeders to have an adequate vet “program” established.
AWA Section 2.4 Vet Care says nothing about guidelines for the actual health or condition of the dog. In other words, the current system outlined by the AWA allows dogs to be sick while still being forced to produce puppies. The AWA requires the licensure very minimum standards for housing, cage size, food and water.
However, the USDA fails to adequately enforce even these standards. Puppy mills feed poor quality food, water is often contaminated and dirty, illnesses and injuries are not addressed, and they live their lives in all wire filthy cages.
In some kennels USDA inspectors have documented high concentrations of urine causing blindness to the resident breeding dogs. This failure to enforce results in dogs’ continued suffering while living in substandard conditions, as well as, allows them to be forced to produce puppies while sick or unhealthy.
Lastly, when the dog’s body is finally worn out and can no longer produce profitable puppies, the dog is essentially exterminated. If you read USDA inspections reports, it is not unusual to find numerous violations while the breeder is allowed to keep his or her kennel in operation.
The USDA inspection report for Oct 2011 for #96’s breeder shows this mill had 57 adults and 26 puppies on the property. The mill had 13 USDA violations at that time for the following: inadequate vet care, expired medication, improper record keeping, indoor and outdoor housing violations, inadequate housing of dogs in cages, exercise violations, pest control (an overabundance of flies were listed) and filth. The breeders are asked to “correct” the violations but nothing about the actual health of the dogs is addressed.
The health and mental conditions of the dogs at the time of sale supports the definitions that profit prevails over their health and well being. While at the auction I noted that breeders came from at least 8 different states, and sick dogs were being offered by as many different breeders.
This is not just one bad breeder, it is industry wide. The puppy mill industry is a country-wide issue; no region or dog is exempt from this legal systemic cruelty.
National Mill Dog Rescue, an organization that has rescued close to 5,000 breeding dogs directly from puppy mills, reports that 10% of the dogs they take in are deathly ill and suffering with life threatening issues. 60% of the dogs they have rescued have emotional problems and half of those dogs require long term rehabilitation. 100% of the dogs over age 4 have genetic problems or other painful health conditions affecting eyes, teeth, ears, skin, and knees. Many have genetic diseases that are passed on to their puppies.
These statistics are a bold and accurate statement describing the inhumane effects this industry has on the breeding dogs it uses. These dogs are the mothers and fathers of the puppies sold in pet stores and online through misleading websites. They are the forgotten ones, but they are also the dogs that need our help the most.
Profiting From Cruelty
Puppy mills are profitable because “breeders do not provide the basic needs to allow these animals’ to live healthy happy lives. This is legal animal cruelty. Period! Consumers support this when they buy a puppy from a picture, fail to meet the mother dog or have a puppy direct shipped. So many unaware do not know.
The puppy mill industry keeps its “dirty little secret” hidden from the un-enlightened consumer. Most do not understand where or how puppy mill puppies are sold. If they knew this secret, most people would not want to support this industry.
As a society we need to determine if it is worth putting these dogs thru this hell so we can walk into a pet store with a credit card and walk out 15 minutes later with a puppy? Some stores will even finance their puppies on credit. What about ordering a puppy online and having it shipped overnight to your doorstep? What kind of a society do we live in that views this industry as acceptable?
The Forgotten Dogs Need Us
They do not get a soft bed or big backyard to run in. Most never touch the ground or have ever been out of a cage or dark barn.
While demand for puppies will always exist. Education and awareness will stop this industry from flourishing while we work on changing the laws. We desperately need the good breeders to step in and speak up for laws that will help stop puppy mills.
Janie Jenkins
President
Stop Online Puppy Mills