Los Angeles Times

Convicts and canines get a new leash on life

Through O.C. group Cell Dogs, inmates turn unwanted pets into service animals.

- By Ben Brazil ben.brazil@latimes.com Brazil writes for Times Community News.

Janette Thomas is all about second chances.

Nobody, in her view, is beyond redemption, including convicted criminals.

That’s why Thomas founded Cell Dogs, an Orange County group that rescues dogs from shelters and pairs them with inmates who train them for adoption.

“The mission of our group is second chances for shelter dogs and people who have made poor choices in their lives,” said Thomas, 63, of Tustin.

The organizati­on is preparing to celebrate its 10th anniversar­y with its annual fundraiser on Sept. 26. Thomas started the group on her own and ran it for about five years.

Cell Dogs has seven members: three trainers, a grant writer, a clerical support specialist, an outreach coordinato­r and Thomas, a retiree who is the only fulltime member.

Throughout the year, the group takes dogs from shelters and brings them to correction­al facilities where inmates train them during an eight- to 10-week course. Juvenile and adult convicts participat­e in the program.

Cell Dogs runs programs with the Orange County Probation Department and at the James A. Musick Facility in Irvine, a jail run by the Sheriff ’s Department.

Thomas said the training program is redemptive for inmates who are given a chance to learn new skills, opening doors to potential career opportunit­ies after they serve their sentences.

“You have to develop a sense of responsibi­lity and patience to train dogs,” Thomas said. Prison dogtrainin­g programs are not uncommon, and Thomas said they’ve been shown to reduce recidivism.

The canines are trained in basic obedience, such as how to sit and walk on a leash. The dogs never return to the shelter after departing, staying with their trainers until “graduation,” when about 80% of them are adopted.

Some dogs that have shown a predilecti­on for learning go on to be trained as service animals.

Thomas said the other 20% are adopted by children with autism, the physically disabled and veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder.

Cell Dogs has placed more than 300 canines in new homes.

Erin Quintanill­a, 34, of Orange received a service dog from the group about two years ago to help her with daily tasks she’s unable to perform because she uses a wheelchair.

Blossom, a 3-year-old chocolate Labrador, provides crucial services — picking things up for Quintanill­a, pulling her wheelchair and closing doors for her, among other tasks.

“Blossom is my lifeline,” Quintanill­a said. “She helps me be so much more independen­t.”

Quintanill­a said Blossom is an example of what the nonprofit organizati­on can accomplish.

“I am proud that Blossom has touched more than just my life, she also helped an inmate,” Quintanill­a said. “She’s helped two people in her little life.”

 ?? Photograph­s courtesy of Cell Dogs ?? AN INMATE works with a dog he’s training. Cell Dogs takes canines from shelters and brings them to correction­al facilities where convicts put them through the paces during an eight- to- 10-week course.
Photograph­s courtesy of Cell Dogs AN INMATE works with a dog he’s training. Cell Dogs takes canines from shelters and brings them to correction­al facilities where convicts put them through the paces during an eight- to- 10-week course.
 ??  ?? THE CANINES never return to the shelter after departing, staying with their trainers until “graduation,” when about 80% of them are adopted.
THE CANINES never return to the shelter after departing, staying with their trainers until “graduation,” when about 80% of them are adopted.

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