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Charges filed in Snohomish County puppy mill case, WA May 8, 2009

Source: Heraldnet.com, May 8, 2009

GOLD BAR — Prosecutors filed a half-dozen felony animal cruelty charges Thursday against a Gold Bar-area couple believed to be linked to a ­multimillion-dollar puppy mill.

Jason and Serenna Lar­sen, both 37, were charged in Snohomish County Superior Court.

Snohomish County sheriff’s deputies and animal control officers on Jan. 16 raided a home outside of Gold Bar and rescued about 160 dogs. Many of the animals were covered with urine and feces.

The conditions were “noxious, overwhelming and utterly disgusting,” according to court papers. The fetid air made some officers ill, burned their eyes and caused breathing problems.

Dead puppies were found in a freezer and a mummified husk of dog, likely a beagle or basset hound, was found in an outbuilding, documents said.

A veterinarian diagnosed several medical problems among the rescued dogs, including dental, cardiovascular, skin, musculoskeletal, gastrointestinal and neurological problems.

Investigators say the Larsens lived in the house filled with mistreated dogs. The Larsens said they lived elsewhere.

The investigation expanded to a Mount Vernon-area kennel, where 450 dogs were seized. A Snohomish kennel, Wags ‘n’ Wiggles, operated by Renee Roske, also is under investigation by the sheriff’s office.

Jason Larsen has said the dogs in Gold Bar belonged to Roske. He said Roske told him that keeping the dogs as he did broke no laws. Roske has denied owning the dogs. She hasn’t been charged in connection with the operation. Snohomish County has revoked Roske’s kennel license.

The sheriff’s investigation into Roske and her business continues.

The Larsens are scheduled to be arraigned on May 15.

 

65 puppy mill dogs up for adoption, WA March 12, 2009

Source: KOMONews.com March 6, 2009

EVERETT, Wash. – Adoption applications are now being accepted for dozens of dogs rescued in January from an alleged puppy mill operation near Gold Bar.

The Everett Animal Shelter is accepting the applications through March 14. Adoption fees will range between $200 to $250 per animal depending on age and condition.

Shelter staff said 65 of the dogs are up for adoption, and all of them are in need of highly qualified and experienced adoptive families. Because of their previous lack of socialization, training and medical care, they will likely have special needs throughout the rest of their lives.

Most of the dogs were found in deplorable conditions, underfed and malnourished in tight cages contaminated with filth, urine and feces.

Prospective adopters should be prepared for extensive behavior modification, ongoing issues around potty training and moderate to extensive veterinary care each and every year for a variety of health issues.

Adoptable dogs have been spayed or neutered, vaccinated (except for rabies), micro-chipped, de-wormed, flea-treated and will come with one month of free PetHealth insurance.

Instructions for submitting an application can be found here. The Everett Animal Shelter dog adoption committee will review each application.

Preferred candidates will be contacted and invited to an event to interact with the dog to confirm a good match.

The sheriff’s office continues to investigate a Snohomish breeder who is believed to be responsible for the dogs. A Gold Bar couple who were looking after the dogs face six counts of first-degree animal cruelty.

The breeder’s mother and stepfather also have been charged with several counts of animal cruelty in Skagit County. Officials there rescued about 450 dogs from a kennel near Mount Vernon.

The Skagit County couple have forfeited claims to those dogs.

 

Who’s to blame in alleged puppy mill case? WA February 26, 2009

Source: KOMONews.com, by Casey Norton & KOMO Staff,Feb 24, 2009

SNOHOMISH COUNTY, Wash. — Investigators are digging deeper into the alleged puppy mill operations that spanned two counties, trying to find out exactly who’s to blame for the hundreds of dogs found living in deplorable situations.

Last month investigators raided a Gold Bar kennel belonging to Mary Ann Holleman and seized 155 dogs living in ghastly conditions conditions so horrific that it shocked even veteran animal control officers.

Holleman, however, has not been charged. Instead, Jason and Serenna Larsen were in court on Tuesday, each charged with six felony counts of animal cruelty.

Holleman’s sister, Renee Roske, had hired the Larsens to live on site at her kennel and take care of the dogs, according to the search warrant. Roske runs the Wags N Wiggles Pet Shop out of her home in Snohomish.

According to court documents, the Larsens allegedly starved, dehydrated and suffocated at least six animals while on the job.

At the time of the raid, adult dogs and puppies were found living in crates and small pens filled with large accumulations of feces and heavily soiled shavings. Officers said the odor from the feces and urine was so overpowering it could be detected well outside the residence. A large commercial dumpster stood in the yard overflowing with dog waste.

Eighty-seven of the dogs were living in a converted attic.Several dead puppies also were found in a freezer, and two dead dogs were found elsewhere on the premises. Most of the dogs were heavily matted, covered with their own feces and saturated with urine.

Investigators said many dogs had open sores on various parts of their bodies and all were covered with fleas. Several dogs had tumors and other abnormal body conditions. Medications and used syringes, used to treat sick animals, were found scattered in front of pens and in a refrigerator.

In court, Jason Larsen insisted he and his wife were just a small part of a multi-million dollar operation. Larsens also said they would need public defenders to represent them.

In addition to Holleman’s kennel, investigators also raided Holleman’s and Roske’s homes in January. At that time, Roske told them that some of her dogs were at her parents’ kennel in Skagit County.

Roske’s claim led detectives to Marjorie and Richard Sundberg’s Mount Vernon kennel where they seized nearly 450 dogs.

The Sundbergs each face four counts of animal cruelty in the first degree, four counts of animal cruelty in the second degree and one count of transporting or confining in an unsafe manner. The two are due back in court on Friday.

Roske has not been charged as a part of the puppy mill allegation; however, the investigation is ongoing.

Detectives are seeking customers who may have purchased a dog from Roske or Wags N Wiggles. Anyone who thinks they may have done so to e-mail them. Some 110 people have e-mailed with complaints so far.

 

Reputed puppy mill thrived despite a history of trouble, WA February 23, 2009

Filed under: Abuse/Neglect,Puppy Mills,Recent News — aschae @ 1:09 pm
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Source: Seattle Times, Feb 23, 2009, By Lynn Thmpson, Times Snohomish County Reporter

When Ruth Brumbaugh answered an ad in the Little Nickel Classifieds for a Yorkshire terrier, she envisioned a companion dog who would alert her to strangers.

What the elderly widow got was almost $1,200 in veterinary bills for a dog that was deaf, couldn’t bark and within six weeks had to undergo a Caesarean section to deliver two stillborn puppies.

The bill of sale, signed by Snohomish kennel owner Renee Roske, said the 7-year-old female was spayed.

Now, officials are investigating Roske’s role in what they allege is an illegal puppy mill that netted millions of dollars in the past decade. Last month, sheriff’s deputies seized hundreds of sick and diseased dogs at homes in Snohomish and Skagit counties owned by Roske’s parents and sister. Her parents and another couple have been charged with felony animal cruelty.

Roske has not been charged. But Snohomish County officials have revoked her license and the sheriff’s office last week announced that as part of its investigation, it was asking for anyone who has done business with her to contact detectives.

Attempts to reach Roske and her attorney for comment were unsuccessful. She has appealed the revocation of her license.

Former customers have complained about Roske for years, reporting her to county animal control and suing in small-claims court.

Snohomish County first discovered Roske was operating an unlicensed kennel with 30 dogs in 1996. She obtained a license, and since then, inspectors have cited her seven times; fining her twice — for $50 and $100.

In November 2003, after finding dogs hidden in a dirt enclosure beneath her front porch, the county revoked her license. County Licensing Manager Vicki Lubrin documented a subsequent meeting with Roske.

“I told her that her file history illustrated a 7 year pattern of continued disregard for the laws and she continually demonstrated willful violation (of) the provisions of her license,” Lubrin wrote.

“I know, I know,” Roske responded, according to Lubrin’s memo. “You warned me, the inspectors warned me, everybody told me, it’s my own fault. I just don’t like rules.”

Roske appealed the revocation. Four months later, a county hearing examiner ordered that her license be reinstated and Roske be given “one last chance.”

After that, the county recorded no problems at her kennel. Her parents opened a kennel in Skagit County where there are no dog-breeding regulations. Their stated purpose: to supply dogs to Roske.

Another couple bred dogs for her in an unlicensed operation on her sister’s property, Snohomish County Sheriff’s detectives allege.

The lack of regulations in some counties, and the discovery of so many dogs living in such poor conditions, has raised cries for statewide limits on kennels. A bill pending in the legislature would set minimum-care standards and limit to 50 the number of dogs in a kennel that have not been spayed or neutered.

Dan Paul, Washington state director of the Humane Society of the United States, said puppy mills — operations that mass-produce dogs — sacrifice animal welfare for profits. The animals in these operations are often caged for most of their lives, bred repeatedly, and trapped in overcrowded, filthy conditions, Paul said.

“There’s no way they could have cared for all these animals,” he said of the pending cases. “And that’s what we saw.”

Country home

At Roske’s home on five acres in the Snohomish countryside, a gravel driveway circles a neatly landscaped yard and a handful of puppies run in a small wire enclosure beside the front porch.

A hand-painted sign, hanging under the eaves says, “Wags N Wiggles Kennel.” Another sign notes that all major credit cards are accepted.

“You arrive up to a sweet country home with one dog playing in the front. It looks like a mom and dad operation,” said Sandy Nelson, director of the Skagit Valley Humane Society.

“On a sunny Saturday, there would literally be a line of buyers at her door,” said Brandon Hatch, the former Snohomish resident whose tip spurred the raids on the puppy operations. “She was good looking, had quite the silver tongue and could basically sell ice to an Eskimo.” Roske took out multiple ads in local newspapers offering breeds such as Shih Tzu, Chihuahua and toy poodles and typically charged $350 to $1,500 a dog. The ads promised a “one year health guarantee.”

She first came to Snohomish County officials’ attention in August 1996 when license inspector Jay Crockett found 30 dogs at Roske’s home. She had neither a private kennel license that would allow up to 10 dogs, nor a commercial license that would allow 25.

Roske applied for and was granted the 10-dog private kennel license. Two years later, an inspector visited and counted 44 dogs. Roske obtained a commercial license, but then violated the 25-dog limit four times, twice paying small fines.

Meanwhile, from the late 1990s on, customers complained to Snohomish County Animal Control that Roske had sold them sick dogs and did not respond to concerns.

Dianna Kern, who then lived in Marysville, paid Roske $350 for a miniature Pomeranian only to learn from her veterinarian that the puppy was infected with ear mites, roundworms, Giardia, Cryptosporidium and Coccidia, a potentially fatal organism that attacks the stomach and intestines and is spread through contact with feces.

Kern complained to Roske but the breeder insinuated that Kern’s vet “didn’t have a clue what he was talking about,” according to a letter Kern wrote to Roske and also sent to the county.

Wendy Hooser, of Maple Falls in Whatcom County, complained that a miniature dachshund Roske sold her had ear infections and a skin disease and needed surgery to have a hole in his nasal cavity repaired and 18 rotting teeth removed.

Hooser told the county, “I believe Ms. Roske is running a puppy mill.”

The $900 Chihuahua that Brian and Verna Loft brought to their Ferndale home developed bloody stools and needed care for Giardia and Cryptosporidium. The couple’s two other Chihuahuas got sick and nearly died, Brian Loft said. When they called Roske, “she hung up twice.”

By 2004, Snohomish County had revoked Roske’s license and then restored it on court’s orders. But the restored license came with a warning: one more violation and she’d be shut down.

Skagit County

A few months after Roske’s kennel-license troubles in Snohomish County, in July 2004, her parents, Marjorie and Richard Sundberg, purchased a nearly 5-acre property in Skagit County just outside of Mount Vernon. There was a small, manufactured house and several heated garages and shops, all set back from the road and screened from neighbors by trees.

“There was no kennel law. It was very easy to set up shop,” said the Humane Society’s Nelson.

After a neighbor complained about noise from dogs, Skagit County officials told the Sundbergs they had to have a permit for a home-based business. In December 2006, the Sundbergs applied for the permit, saying they would be breeding “in excess of 75 dogs,” to be sold at their daughter’s house.

The following month, Skagit County Animal Control Officer Emily Diaz inspected the kennel, guessing the Sundbergs had “150 adult dogs, but that does not include all of the puppies.” She said the small room where mother dogs and their puppies were kept in wire cages was crowded and had such a strong odor of ammonia, “it made my eyes burn.”

But while some “minor adjustments,” were needed, Diaz concluded the overall operation “is safe and handled well.”

Roske also sought out other people to raise dogs for her. In 2006, she approached Jason and Sarenna Larsen, a Sultan couple who ran a small breeding operation, said Brandon Hatch, a longtime friend of the couple’s.

In May 2007, Roske’s sister, Mary Ann Holleman, purchased a home on 10 acres outside Gold Bar, property-records show. The Larsens moved in and began raising dogs for Roske, according to sheriff’s deputies.

On Jan. 10 this year, Hatch stopped by after visiting his mother in Snohomish. He said the smell hit him as he approached the door. Inside, Hatch said, there were feces, “everywhere,” including on a mattress and box springs the Larsens’ nieces slept on when they visited.

Crates were stacked two and three high in some rooms, with several dogs crowded into each. After agonizing over whether to turn in his friend, Hatch called Child Protective Services. Armed with that complaint, Snohomish County Sheriff’s deputies obtained a search warrant and on Jan. 16, seized 155 dogs.

Jason Larsen told deputies that he supplied Roske with dogs, according to the search- warrant affidavit. He broke down crying under questioning, telling deputies that they were dealing with “millions of dollars” in revenue to Roske, the affidavit said.

Six days later, Skagit County sheriff’s deputies seized 450 dogs from the Sundbergs’ property. Skagit County shut down the operation and has asked a judge to make the Sundbergs reimburse the county for caring for the rescued animals.

The Sundbergs are fighting those efforts in court. Attempts to contact the Sundbergs and the Larsens have been unsuccessful.

Adoption

Snohomish County detectives say they continue to investigate Roske.

The approximately 600 dogs seized in two January raids are still being cared for at area animal shelters and by foster families. The Everett Animal Shelter plans to alert the public when dogs are ready for adoption, probably not for another month. The Skagit Valley Humane Society is awaiting court approval to offer dogs for adoption.

Ruth Brumbaugh, who purchased the sick and pregnant Yorkshire terrier from Roske in 2007, successfully sued the kennel owner in October. The small-claims judge ordered Roske to repay almost $1,200 in vet bills and to refund the $325 purchase price. Brumbaugh, now 80, has not been paid. She has liens against Roske’s Snohomish house and another a few miles away that records show is worth $1.1 million.

The judge also told Brumbaugh to return her Yorkie.

Brumbaugh said, “I’m not giving this dog back to her.”

 

Customers’ help sought in puppy mill case, WA February 19, 2009

Filed under: Puppy Mills,Recent News — aschae @ 3:45 pm
Tags: , , , ,

EVERETT – If you bought a dog or puppy from Wags ‘n’ Wiggles, a Snohomish kennel, Snohomish County sheriff’s detectives want to hear from you.

“Anyone who has done business with Wags ’n’ Wiggles or owner Renee Roske – purchasing a puppy, for example – is asked to e-mail detectives at puppyinvestigation@snoco.org and describe their experience,” sheriff’s spokeswoman Rebecca Hover said this afternoon.

Detectives will review the e-mails they receive, she said. They’ll follow up as necessary.

Roske has been connected to a Gold Bar-area home where officials rescued nearly 160 dogs from deplorable conditions, court documents show.

Earlier this month, Snohomish County animal control officials issued an order revoking Roske’s kennel license.

The Snohomish woman filed an appeal Wednesday seeking to keep her business.

No criminal charges have been filed against Roske.

 

Felony charges filed in puppy mill case, WA February 5, 2009

Source: King5.com, Feb 4, 2009

EVERETT, Wash. – More charges have been filed in the puppy mill case in Skagit and Snohomish counties.

Jason and Serenna Larsen of Gold Bar were charged with six counts each of first-degree animal cruelty. The felony charges could bring prison time.

Prosecutors say the Larsens were associated with a Mount Vernon couple who’ve also been charged in the case.

The Larsen’s property in Snohomish County was raided on Jan. 16. Deputies said the dogs looked sick, had matted fur, were standing in their own feces and had been left without food and water. Everett Animal Services took in 155 dogs.

On Wednesday, Kate Reardon, a spokeswoman for the City of Everett, said the dogs are recovering well and are getting medical care, warm blankets, socialization and potty training

Readron said two litters of puppies have been born at the shelter, and several dogs are pregnant.

The dogs are not yet available for adoption but the shelter is accepting donations of cash, bedding, towels and wee pads.

Donations can be brought to the shelter in person or via the mail at: The Everett Animal Shelter, 2732 36th St in Everett, WA 98201.

 

 
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