Karen Matters

> Cathy,
> I received an email a week ago from a man in Nevada wanting to know if I
> could help him get papers.  He bought two dogs for $3000 from Jane and
> has not been able to get any papers.  He calls her and she keeps telling
> him that they are in the mail.  He said he hopes he doesn't have to get
> nasty and use force.  I hope he does.  Something needs to be done about
> her.
> Karen Matters

Ok folks...here we go! I promised I would surprise us all and be silent but
feel compelled to vent. People have a legal right to breed dogs for fun and
profit. Where do we draw the line between the clever con artist with a good
spin who speaks with authority (but either does not show at all, or with
pitiable success when he/she does) and breeds several litters a year for
profit - the sincere breeder who has a beautiful website to show off their
beautiful dogs, who does their best to breed happy, healthy dogs and sell
for pets/companions to carefully screened homes the ones that don't come up
to their high standards for show - or the breeder that takes good care of
their dogs, has lost the desire to show but likes the $$$ coming in and also
has a website - and finally, the oft referred to puppy mills. Obviously, the
latter is an anathema and the sincere breeder is an asset BUT if the clever
con artist cannot be proven to have their dogs in bad conditions and their
activities do not constitute fraud, it is a grey area both legally and
morally. Personally, I have no respect for them and feel they ought to find
another way to make $$$ but compared to getting up every morning and getting
dressed, then driving to work where, due to little or no skills, they don't
make much $$, they stay home and breed their dogs to their bitches and make
a hefty profit. BUT it is their constitutional right. Here comes the advice
part: if someone is misrepresenting the puppy to the buyer (fraud), or fails
to provide papers (fraud), or the puppy is ill and the veterinatian will
state in writing that it was incubating when it was bought, then something
can be done. The buyers need to contact the state's attorney general, the
town's better business bureau, the animal control officers in the area and
do it over and over again. Someone sent me a good article for the last TRS,
said to get the name of the mill owner's veterinarian that signed any/all
certificates and take this vet's name to the state veterinary board. Make a
fuss concentrating on the law. Fraud, sick dogs. The complaints will have to
come from the 'injured' party i.e. the buyer. This is the only was in my
view, anything can be done. Because cavaliers are so expensive, the Janes of
the world will continue to thrive. Actually, when they are bred to death and
no one will pay more than $250 for one, the millers will leave in droves to
wreck havoc on the next dog du jour. The dogs-for-profit concept has
bothered me as there will always be a percentage of immoral people who will
slip into the mill mentality. God save the dogs. We all do our best but
often it just isn't enough. I speak with the experience of someone who was
successfully sued by a for-profit breeder. Perhaps someone could come up
with a small sheet of responses to give to the buyer so they can go after
the miller? Thanks people, I know you out there care deeply, the recent San
Diego debacle proved that!
Michael Allen
Am. Cockers for over 50 years

=========================================================
"Magic Commands":
to stop receiving mail for awhile, click here and send the email:
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?body=SET%20CKCS-L%20NOMAIL
to start it up gain click here:
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?body=SET%20CKCS-L%20MAIL

 E-mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] for assistance.
Search the Archives... http://apple.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ckcs-l.html

All e-mail sent through CKCS-L is Copyright 2002 by its original author.

Reply via email to