View Single Post
  #1  
Old May 18th, 2011, 09:34 AM
happycats's Avatar
happycats happycats is offline
Senior Contributor
Hexxagon Champion
 
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Ontario
Posts: 4,665
one dog dead, others missing from an Oshawa training facility

In the Oshawa news today

http://www.durhamregion.com/news/article/177501

One dog dead, others missing from Oshawa training facility
SABRINA BYRNES / METROLANDOne dog dead, others missing from Oshawa training facility

OSHAWA -- President of Storm's Animal Allies, Texie Torok, stood with a sign protesting animal cruelty in front of Craig Wright's FACW K9 Training and Rehabilitation business on May 17. Mr. Wright has been charged by police with one count of obstructing justice and by the local OSPCA with three charges relating to failure to provide proper animal care and allowing animals to be in distress. May 17, 2011Map data ©2011 Google - Terms of UseMapSatelliteHybridTools
Smaller Text | Larger Text
Email this Article
Print this Page
Report Typo or Correction

Owner of FACW K9 Training faces charges from SPCA, police
May 18, 2011 - 04:30 AM

Kristen Calis and Jillian Follert

OSHAWA -- Brenda Romeo cries about the loss of Cody each day, and struggles with the guilt of leaving her beloved pet in the hands of a facility that would later be charged by both police and the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.

"It hurts every day," she says.

Ms. Romeo and her daughter Andrea brought their healthy six-year-old miniature dachshund to FACW K9 Training ad Rehabilitation Centre in Oshawa on March 30 for a month of behavioural training.

Nine days later, workers called her to say Cody was ill and had to be picked up. Ms. Romeo immediately picked up her dog and brought him to a veterinarian.

"He died six hours later," says the devastated pet owner.

The SPCA has since laid charges against owner Craig Wright for permitting distress and causing distress to a dog and failing to comply with prescribed standards of care.

He also faces one police charge for obstructing justice in connection with a dog that went missing from the training centre.

Debby Houghton, an animal cruelty investigator with the local SPCA, confirmed that a miniature dachshund died at FACW K9 Training in April, but declined to elaborate on what happened.

She said the case is in court May 31.

"If anyone is convicted under this legislation, they can face jail time or fines of up to $60,000 and be prohibited from owning animals for a lifetime," she says. "It's very strong legislation."

Ms. Romeo isn't the only one to lose a dog to FACW K9 Training.

Oshawa resident Linda Fry thought something strange was going on when Mr. Wright tried to convince her that her dog shouldn't be neutered.

Earlier this month, her family adopted a one-year-old border collie named Chevy. The dog was a rescue who had been living outside and needed to be housebroken and trained.

Ms. Fry said they chose FACW because they had heard good things about the facility.

"My dog was gone within 24 hours of taking him there," she said. "This is a horror story."

Ms. Fry dropped Chevy at the training facility on Sunday May 8, then called the next morning to say she would be taking him to the vet to be fixed.

That's when Mr. Wright told her the dog had run away.

"He wouldn't give anybody a straight answer about where he left this dog or where this dog supposedly ran away from," she said. "He wasn't remorseful ... said he was a vicious dog and I was better off without it."

Durham Regional Police spokesman Dave Selby said Mr. Wright was charged with obstructing justice. Police believe he changed his story about Chevy's disappearance.

Mr. Selby said the owner initially said the dog ran away after being driven to a location in Ajax. He later recanted that story and told police the dog escaped from the Oshawa training centre.

Repeated calls to the FACW training centre were not returned, although Mr. Wright was on site when a This Week photographer visited the facility.

"Our big concern is that there are still dogs in there," said Texie Torok, a local animal advocate who runs a group called Storm's Animal Allies.

She said she has talked to other people who report that their dogs went missing from the facility.

"Several dogs missing like this is too much of a coincidence .... we have a facility that is calling itself a professional training centre and people need to know what's going on in there. They need to be shut down," Ms. Torok said.

Her group held a protest outside the centre on May 16 and plans to protest again Wednesday evening.

Ms. Romeo joined the recent protest, saying she wants to make sure no one else goes through the pain her family has experienced.

"He wasn't just a dog," she says. "He was a member of our family."

She cautions dog owners to thoroughly research training facilities before trusting someone with their dog, and suggests contacting their Humane Society or SPCA for reference checks before leaving a pet with a stranger.

According to the company website, FACW K9 Training and Rehabilitation uses "dog psychology" to improve the relationship between dogs and their owners.

Services offered include obedience training, socialization, behaviour modification and puppy training.
__________________
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

What is man without beasts? If all the beasts were gone, men would die from great loneliness of spirit. For whatever happens to the beasts, soon happens to man. All things are connected.

~~Chief Seattle (Duwamish tribe)~~
Reply With Quote