The Gold Coast Bulletin

Help, sitters won’t give my corgi back

- KIRSTIN PAYNE AND LUKE MORTIMER

POLICE are investigat­ing a Gold Coast family’s complaint about a bizarre incident with an acquaintan­ce entrusted with their corgi – but refusing to return it.

But the acquaintan­ce Ian Porter claims in purported email correspond­ence to the owner he was led to believe he was taking permanent ownership of beloved $2400 corgi Haku.

Haku’s Labrador-based owner Carmen Pham initially laid a complaint with police on July 17 and said she approached police again on Sunday in a bid to get her family pet returned.

Mrs Pham claims Haku was left in the care of Mr Porter and his now-estranged wife while her family was holidaying in Vietnam in March.

She believes Mr Porter took a liking to Haku and alleged he was now refusing to return the four-year-old purebred.

“In March we decided to go to Vietnam to visit my parents so they could meet my daughter before all the lockdowns came into place,” Mrs Pham said. “We left Haku with this couple we were close to, because they said they would look after her.”

After returning, Mrs Pham said the dog sitters asked to keep Haku another week because they were lonely during COVID-19 restrictio­ns.

“I love Haku but I was also happy to let them keep her company for a little while longer, because we were in lockdown. They were an old couple, I thought I would be kind.”

However, the pattern continued into July with Mr Porter allegedly begging to keep the dog for “one more week” every time Mrs Pham asked for her back, she claims.

“It broke my heart, we have had Haku since she was a puppy, she is a big part of our family,” she said.

Mrs Pham said she had even offered to buy Mr Porter another dog.

“He says he just wants

Haku,” she said. “They are trying whatever they can to keep her, but she is my dog, we raised her as a baby. It wasn’t supposed to happen, we trusted them.”

Mr Porter was repeatedly contacted for comment, but calls to his mobile went to voicemail and he did not respond.

“Police have told us they can’t get into the house but have spoken to him about it. I am just desperate and want Haku home,” she said.

Mrs Pham forwarded emails in which Mr Porter claimed he was led to believe “we could take Haku permanentl­y”.

In the emails, he said the Pham family was “well aware how much Haku and I have grown together and the love and affection Haku and I enjoy”.

“The best option for Haku is me to take ownership and if it is about the $$$, I will pay you the $2400 you paid,” he wrote.

The man claimed Haku had been “locked inside a garage at times” due to Mrs Pham and her husband’s employment demands.

However, Mrs Pham described the dog as a muchloved family member,

She produced a document from “the part-owner of Tallia Corgi Kennels” in northern NSW, showing Mrs Pham and her family bought a Pembroke corgi registered as Tallia Haku Pham on September 7, 2016.

On Sunday, Mrs Pham said Mr Porter had texted her asking her not to talk to the media.

“I said ‘Please just drop Haku into the vet or pound – but he won’t’,” she said.

“We’re exhausted. It’s crushing, it’s been so long. It just breaks my heart.”

Queensland Police said the matter was ongoing.

THEY ARE TRYING WHATEVER THEY CAN TO KEEP HER, BUT SHE IS MY DOG, WE RAISED HER AS A BABY. DOG OWNER CARMEN PHAM

 ?? Picture: SCOTT POWICK ?? Carmen Pham, from Labrador, claims her corgi Haku was entrusted to dog-sitters who she claims now refuse to return the much-loved pet.
Picture: SCOTT POWICK Carmen Pham, from Labrador, claims her corgi Haku was entrusted to dog-sitters who she claims now refuse to return the much-loved pet.

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