Rabbit Advocacy Animal Matters

 

252 Rabbits, Goats, Chickens, Cats, Dogs and a Duck Rescued from Filth, Abuse in St. Clair

Wednesday, November 13, 2013 by: Lindsay Toler, Riverfront Times

The Humane Society of Missouri and the Franklin County Sheriff's Office rescued 253 animals, including 192 rabbits, 25 goats, 21 chickens, 10 cats, 4 dogs and a duck from a property near St. Clair on Tuesday.

The animals were living in filthy conditions on a property where, in 2010, 158 rabbits, dogs, cats, goats and fowl were also rescued, and the owner was restricted by the Franklin County Prosecutor from buying new animals for two years.

Clearly, two years wasn't enough. A concerned resident reported the property to the Humane Society of Missouri's Animal Cruelty Task Force, which joined with the sheriff's office to remove the animals Tuesday.

Feces was piled in the rabbits' cages, as well as more than a foot under the cages, says the Humane Society. The cages, which housed as many as ten cramped rabbits, were encrusted with dirt and hair. The rabbits had little to no shelter from the weather, and their drinking water was frozen, dirty and contaminated with feces.

The animals seemed to have received little to no veterinary care, including the goats, which are suffering from an upper-respiratory illness.

The rescued rabbits, dogs and cats will be taken to the Humane Society shelter in St. Louis for triage and care. The goats, chickens and duck will be taken to the Humane Society of Missouri's Longmeadow Rescue Ranch in Union. To report animal abuse, call 314-647-4400.

Comment: Repeat offences are very common as hoarding generally tends to be a chronic mental disorder.

November 16, 2013 update: ‘Rabbit Lady’: No Reason to Take Animals

Read more: Saga of a rabbit hoarder: a crime and an illness; suffering and neglect