Rushville Animal Shelter
Under Investigation
This story is from Rushville's local paper, the Rushville Republican, on 11/28
Rushville Animal Shelter under
investigationElizabeth Gist
Staff Writer
It would be any animal shelter worker’s worst nightmare.
Imagine going to a walk-in freezer filled with animals that
are supposed to be dead after being euthanized and seeing a
dog, alive, pop up.
Now, imagine it’s happened twice
before.
So begins the saga of an ongoing
investigation at the Rushville Animal Shelter, an explosive
situation canvassing community, state and cyberspace forums
nationwide.
According to “whistle blower” and
assistant animal control officer Jamie Glandon, the problem
started Aug. 8. In a formal complaint delivered to Mayor Bob
Bridges Monday, Glandon related that Rushville Animal Control
Officer Jack Hill euthanized a number of animals, one of which
was a 7-year-old Border Collie. Space constraints rendered the
situation necessary, as the Collie was deemed “unadoptable” by
the shelter and all options were exhausted.
“After putting the animals down,
[Jack] put them in the freezer and went on with his day. On
August 9, upon arriving at the shelter at 8 .m., I started my
daily routine,” Glandon’s typed statement reads. “When Jack got
back he informed me he heard a dog howling in the freezer. So
at 8:20 a.m. he went into the freezer and found out it was the
Border Collie. He went and got the medicine he used to
euthanize, opened the freezer door and injected the dog and
closed the door back. At 8:47 a.m. the dog was still howling.
At 9 a.m. he injected the dog again and closed the door. That
was the last we heard from her.”
According to Glandon, she verbally
made Mayor Bridges aware of the situation that day.
On Oct. 25, according to the formal
complaint, Hill again euthanized several dogs before Jamie
began her shift.
“I arrived at work at 8 a.m. and
heard whining from the freezer. I opened the door and found
three lab puppies on the top of a pile in the freezer still
alive. Jack was pulling up to the shelter when I went in. I
told him what was going on. I started to pull the puppies out
and he told me to leave them be. He went in and got his
medicine and injected the dogs again while still in the
freezer. That was the last I heard from them. I verbally made
my city council representative aware of the situation on Oct.
25, who then made Mayor Bridges aware, and then he spoke with
me the same day.”
According to Mayor Bob Bridges, a
proactive stance was immediately taken.
“I spoke with Jack and asked him
what the procedures were and if there were any things that were
needed in place to be sure that incidents like this do not
happen again in the future,” Bridges said. “Two items needed
were a scale and a stethoscope. I donated the stethoscope and
told Jack to order the scales that day.”
Funds from a shelter fundraiser
held earlier in the month were used for the scales, which weigh
the dogs correctly so that the proper euthanaisa dosage can be
administered.
Bridges also contacted local
veterinarian Rob Jackman so that training on administering the
serum could be utilized. The shelter employees traveled to
Jackman’s clinic that day and watched as Jackman demonstrated
how to find a vein on an animal while administering an IV to a
dog.
“The humane standpoint we take is
to make sure that it [euthanization] is done as quickly as
possible,” Jackman stated. “There are several methods, but we
use a solution that humanely stops the respiratory process and
the heartbeat. It’s as instantaneous and painless as we can do
it and dose-dependent on weight.”
“I wanted them trained to make sure
the euthanasia is performed by protocol,” Bridges said. “I want
a protocol sheet with a checklist of steps to take when this
has to be done. We know that no one likes to do it, but the
same steps should be taken every single time. It kills me to
see an animal suffer. It kills me to see an animal have to be
put down. I’ve cried every time one of my own animals has had
to be put to sleep. It might be a sign of weakness, but that
doesn’t matter. I just absolutely did not want this to happen
again.”
Bridges also assigned Glandon
to develop this protocol, which was good timing considering the
city is currently revamping its policies and procedures for all
employees in all departments.
Councilman Darrin McGowan, who
serves as the shelter’s city liaison, requested samplings from
New Castle’s Animal Shelter to use for reference, but
procedures for euthanasia were not included in the packet. As
Glandon was now left to her own devices, she was not able to
make the presentation for the protocol at the Nov. 20 City
Council meeting as planned and had to be pulled from the
agenda.
The mayor considered the situation
handled and Glandon considered the situation rendered until a
little puppy raised its head in a freezer full of dead animals
on Nov. 12.
On that Monday, one day before
taking vacation time, Hill put down another group of animals as
the shelter was again at capacity. Two German Shepherd-Mastiff
mix puppies were on the list for euthanasia that day as pleas
for adoption went unanswered and postings on petfinder.com were
ignored.
Nov. 16, an elderly woman brought a
cat in to be disposed of. Glandon went to the freezer to place
the dead animal in it.
“When I opened the freezer door, a
puppy popped her head up out of the barrel,” Glandon said. “I
screamed like a little girl. But I didn’t want to scare the
lady there to death, so I closed the freezer door. She asked me
if I was okay, and I told her I would be fine, but to just
leave the cat and leave the shelter, because I didn’t want her
to just see what I had seen.”
The woman drove away, and Glandon
immediately pulled the dog from the freezer.
“She was buried under other dogs up
to her chest,” Glandon said. “She smelled like death, which is
the worst possible smell you could imagine, and couldn’t walk.
Her back half-end was slightly swollen, and she just started
wailing. I placed her in the dog crate outside of the freezer
to give us both a time-out because I needed to go to the
restroom and throw up.”
Glandon immediately called
Jackman’s Animal Clinic to schedule an emergency appointment
for the dog who she named “Gabby” and was told they would get
back with her. In the meantime, she notified Mayor Bridges, who
told her to take the dog to the clinic immediately. Whether the
dog needed to be put to sleep again or further treatment to
save its life was irrelevant, as the mayor offered to pay for
it out of his own pocket.
“I gave her a bath while I was
waiting for the clinic to call me back because the smell was
unlike anything you could imagine,” Glandon said. “Jackman’s
took her in around noon. He took her temperature and said her
core body temp was low, but surprisingly not dangerously low.
She was buried beneath the other dogs, which is what I think
kept her alive. He checked her teeth and gums, listened to her
heart and lungs, which he also said sounded surprisingly good
as well.”
In fact, the dog’s health was so
good Jackman administered the dog’s first round of
vaccinations.
“The dog’s circulatory system,
respiratory system and physical condition, other than being
thin, were great considering that it had allegedly been in a
freezer for four days,” Dr. Jackman said. “Her core body temp
was on the high end of normal. It would be very surprising to
me that the dog would survive the chill of the freezer for four
days. That was what was presented to me, and that was what was
documented. I would have expected it to be in much worse
shape.”
Jackman also said that Glandon’s
documentation was inconsistent with what he saw that day. The
dog’s back end was not swollen and the dog was walking find
other than not being leash-broken.
“It couldn’t have happened the way
it was documented,” Jackman said.
Regardless of the vet’s
observations, Glandon isn’t backing down, and her nightmares
affirm what she saw in that freezer, she said.
She immediately shipped the
dog out to rescue, and it has been checked by the rescue’s own
veterinarian. A trip to a specialist is planned within the week
to do more extensive bloodwork.
Glandon said she blew the whistle
on her own shelter because she felt that things were being
swept under the rug and that she, as well as the mistreated
animals, were not being taken seriously. It was election time,
Glandon said, and any controversies arising just before weren’t
given proper attention with the promise of being remedied after
the votes had been tallied.
But the Mayor said this just isn’t
the case.
“I received the formal complaint on
my desk Monday morning. It’s not signed, but I assumed it was
from Jamie. Someone dropped it on my desk and it got grouped
into another pile of animal shelter papers that I had laid
aside because I was working on a project,” Bridges said. “None
of this was ever pushed aside. I told Jamie she had to
understand that the investigation will be done, but it will not
be done tomorrow. These things take time.”
Bridges was dismayed that Glandon
took the stance that he was not proactive.
“I began working on the report at
night on my own time,” Bridges said. “I think that anyone that
knows me knows that I am very passionate about animals. I am
probably, at times, too much so. I am an animal lover. I had my
dog Holly, who was a fixture in my family for 17 years, and she
ran with me every day. We were friends. When I had to put her
to sleep it was devastating.”
Tuesday, Bridges began an
investigation to be conducted by himself as well as councilman
McGowan, who is also a reserve police officer.
“I had no idea about the stuff on
the Internet until I got a phone call from someone locally
saying that they had seen something on a Web site, and was it
true,” Bridges said. “I had no idea what they were talking
about.”
The site and subsequent comments,
posted by someone who had caught wind of the situation through
the rescue that Jamie had shipped Gabby to out of necessity of
being classified as a “special needs dog” tell of her
plight.
A petition on another site has well
over 1,000 signatures from people from France to Bosnia, and
calls for no more euthanization.
“I started receiving threatening
calls at home that night, so I figured that there was something
going on,” Bridges said.
Hill, who has been with the shelter
eight years in January, has never had a formal complaint filed
against him, although there have been complaints given to the
city on the condition of the shelter itself. Wednesday morning,
he was placed on administrative leave as is the protocol with
ongoing city investigations.
According to a statement released
by city attorney Julie Newhouse, Hill is devastated.
“He conversed with two
veterinarians who assured him that he didn’t do anything
wrong,” Newhouse said. “The whole situation is upsetting, and
he feels it has totally destroyed his reputation.”
Various scenarios as to what
happened or why this happened are numerous. According to
records, the dog was said to be 20 pounds., but when weighed on
a scale at the vet’s office on the day of her discovery in the
freezer she weighed 33 pounds. Euthanasia serum requires 1 cc
for every 10 pounds of dog body weight.
“Even with half of the
dosage, it’s poisonous,” Jackman said. “And even if it didn’t
hit the right vein, it absorbs into the bloodstream regardless,
and has the same effect. But it takes longer, which is when it
infringes on the humane aspect.”
Is it a matter of poor
resources?
“I have looked, and for the money
we have allocated we have given them [the shelter] everything
that we can,” Bridges said. “I talked to two of the council
people on this, and I cannot remember a time when a program
involving the better treatment of animals, adoption, rescue and
microchipping that were brought before the city council weren’t
embraced fully and passed unanimously.”
Marjorie Banks, director of United
States Animal Protection as well as shelter director of the
SPCA in Tennessee, was notified of Rushville’s situation as her
role of watchdog for shelters all over the U.S. She is
horrified about the situation in Rushville’s shelter.
“I had a heart attack,” Banks said.
“We’re going to be looking into it, get open records of the
intake and outgoing animals, euthanasia records, budget and
where the shelter gets their medication. And we’ll be able to
tell what’s going on. The main problem here is obviously
someone is not trained to euthanize properly, or just didn’t
give enough medicine. Had they done it correctly, none of this
would have happened.”
The main result Banks hopes to gain
from this is an effort that will continue.
“Our end goal is to prevent
inhumane killing. All we ask is that animals be treated
fairly,” she said. “We understand that shelters have to put
certain dogs down and that they run out of space. We want to
see rescues go in there and get these dogs, but sometimes you
can only do so much. Sometimes putting animals down is the best
for the animal and the animal population, but it should be done
with dignity and respect and not in a cruel manner. This was
cruel, intentional or not.”
Glandon feels she has nothing to
gain by going public with the story, but felt compelled to do
so.
“I have nothing to gain by making
this public,” she said. “But I have to do this for my animals,
and especially for Gabby. If she was strong enough to survive
four days in a freezer, I’m going to have to be strong enough
to stand up for her and the rest of the animals here and tell
her story.”
Glandon also hopes this situation
will raise awareness among the community about the conditions
at the shelter.
“I hope that the shelter changes
its policies on euthanization and the treatment of the deceased
animals,” she said. “I hope that people realize that animals
aren’t trash. A life is a life. I hope that people in Rushville
become aware of the problems that the shelter is facing and
will step up and help so that stuff like this doesn’t happen
again. This is where taxpayer dollars are going. I want people
to understand that I have been working very hard at this
shelter for almost two years trying to make things better. Had
I kept this quiet for the third time, that would basically have
been like saying I approve of what’s going on, and that’s not
who I am. I’m not here to be political, not trying to cause
trouble, not personally out for someone’s job or to go after
anyone. I’m protecting the animals, and by keeping quiet I’d be
doing more harm than good.”
Shelter volunteer Linda Whistle,
who has aided Glandon in many shelter fundraisers, vouches for
her friend’s caring spirit for the local animals.
“I will vouch for the fact that she
cares so much,” Whistle said. “She volunteered at the shelter
for a month when the previous assistant [left], not having a
guarantee that she was going to get that job. She was eight
months pregnant, hauling three kids and eight dogs in the back
of her van. How can you say someone like that is making
something up? This is real, and whether people want to believe
it or not, this is the truth. So the question now happens to be
‘what’s next?’”
I applaud Elizabeth for this
indepth article. Regardless of where her feeling lie, she
reported only what was said. She lives in that town and
has to deal with all the participants in this horrid
situation.
For myself, I don't so I have some
comments to make;
- Mayor Bridges says that he got on this and admits to
being aware of the previous instances but shortly after
this came to light, around the 26-27, calls to him elicited
the response that he didn’t know anything about it. This is
a quote from an email I received written by an animal
advocate, dated 11/26
I spoke with the mayor, Bob Bridges, and he claimed
not to know what as going on about anything. Didn’t
know anything about the dog or he situation.
How could he not know what was going on when he himself told
Jamie to take the dog to the vet’s?
- The comments from Dr. Jackman come as no surprise as I
was told yesterday that he was going to say what he did.
Hopefully further tests on Gabby will reveal something more
conclusive. No surprise either that her temperature was not
severely suppressed, it had been several hours and the dog
had been bathed since she was removed from the freezer. Her
body was also insulated by the bodies of other dogs.
- Would love to hear something from Jack Hill regarding
this whole situation but it looks like he has been
suspended and most likely told not to say anything. It
seems from some comments that people feel that the blame is
being placed on his shoulders but he hasn’t had much if any
say on this at all as far as I know. Where does he stand on
this. Was he really trained in the proper euthanasia
methods and if so, why were they not being used?
- Personally I take many of the Mayor’s comments with a
‘grain of salt’. Now that this is out in the open and
cannot be covered up and swept under the carpet, being a
politician, he necessarily needs to take a ‘proactive’
stance and do some serious CYA. Trust me, what he’s saying
now and what he was saying are two different
things as many people have commented and reported.
As far as Jamie’s motives, she lays them out herself:
“I hope that the shelter changes its policies on
euthanization and the treatment of the deceased animals,”
she said. “I hope that people realize that animals aren’t
trash. A life is a life. I hope that people in Rushville
become aware of the problems that the shelter is facing and
will step up and help so that stuff like this doesn’t
happen again. This is where taxpayer dollars are going. I
want people to understand that I have been working very
hard at this shelter for almost two years trying to make
things better. Had I kept this quiet for the third time,
that would basically have been like saying I approve of
what’s going on, and that’s not who I am. I’m not here to
be political, not trying to cause trouble, not personally
out for someone’s job or to go after anyone. I’m protecting
the animals, and by keeping quiet I’d be doing more harm
than good.”
To be honest, I am not trying to come down on anyone. This
situation is reprehensible and needs to be taken care of
immediately. It is far past due.
Comments are welcome and can be left on
the blog - Euthanized Dog Found Four Days Later
Alive in Freezer - Petition
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