The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Puppy mills

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ers could not manage 133 dogs on the property, several of which seemed to be in need of medical attention, the report said. When inspectors returned for the most recent inspection in December, the owners, who could not be reached for comment, would not let them inspect the property.

One breeder in Fairburn who has appeared on past Humane Society lists and was ordered to have no contact with animals seems to be back in business, according to the organizati­on’s report. Leslie Ayo performed surgeries on Rottweiler puppies without a veterinary license and pleaded guilty to five counts of animal cruelty in 2015. In March, she was promoting puppies for sale on a website, the report said.

Courts determined that James Godfrey of Godfrey Chow Kennel in Luthersvil­le, which was cited in the 2019 report, had renewed his license based on false informatio­n. The Humane Society’s report notes that Godfrey has since closed. He surrendere­d his license in August, state reports show.

Recent developmen­ts in animal welfare transparen­cy at the federal level have made violations more accessible to the public, but locally, some breeders have taken issue with inspection reports. One breeder said she has corrected all violations but has been unable to get in touch with a state inspector.

State inspectors made several visits to Jerrie Cobb of Jerrie’s Pet Place in Fort Valley

after giving the breeder 90 days to reduce the number of dogs, improve the enclosures and make sure the dogs were groomed. Cobb, who has been licensed since the 1990s, made all of the improvemen­ts including hand-building custom dog houses with two-way openings.

But when inspectors returned in November, Cobb was given a violation for inadequate temperatur­es. Inspectors reportedly found puppies shivering. The heated space was too small for the number of dogs present, according to the Humane Society report. “I clean my kennels every morning. (The inspector) came out in the morning when it was cold,” Cobb said. She has since downsized to about 40 animals though she is licensed to house up to 100 dogs.

Cobb’s violations came just after the arrest of Reason Craig Gray, who operated Georgia Puppies in Berrien County. Last year, after Gray was charged with multiple counts of cruelty to animals when more than 700 small breed dogs were rescued from his property, the state began tightening its enforcemen­t.

Through its Companion Animal Division, the Georgia Department of Agricultur­e is charged with regulating anyone who produces, sells, boards, grooms, offers for adoption, or exchanges pet animals. Last year, the department had about 15 full-time companion animal and equine inspectors and three field supervisor­s. After Gray’s arrest, the department conducted an internal audit and terminated one employee.

As a result, Georgia’s enforcemen­t efforts have improved, said Goodwin. “One reason you have a few more entries in Georgia is because the state went out to some of the worst actors,” he said.

During the pandemic, state inspectors filed 176 inspection reports from mid-March to mid-May, said McPeake. The department has also made or attempted to make contact with all 4,000 licensed establishm­ents to conduct surveys on how the pandemic has effected their businesses, she said.

Lynn Henning, owner of Simpler Times Farms in Concord, said business has not suffered during the pandemic but she is concerned about being featured as a problem puppy mill. “Nobody was more surprised to read a report like this than I was,”said Henning who has eight breeding dogs for her Morkies (Maltese and Yorkie) and Malshies (Maltese and Shih-Tzu). The violations in the report — excessive trash, accumulati­on of excrement, and a previously cited pathogen in the water that caused some dogs to become ill — have been addressed, she said. She also obtained a county license after being told in January that she needed one. “My Department of Agricultur­e report is picture perfect,” Henning said, sharing a copy of the most recent March 4 inspection report to prove it.

Goodwin said offenders often have a pattern. “They may have a clean report and then another of bad violation,” he said. “It is a pattern and it is an industry that has the bare minimum regulation to begin with.”

 ?? MOLLY TAMULEVICH / THE HSUS ?? The Humane Society is particular­ly worried about the puppies since enforcemen­t agencies have suspended on-site visits during the pandemic.
MOLLY TAMULEVICH / THE HSUS The Humane Society is particular­ly worried about the puppies since enforcemen­t agencies have suspended on-site visits during the pandemic.

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