The Day

N.H. woman to start paying nearly $2M in Great Danes neglect case

- By KATHY McCORMACK

Concord, N.H. — A woman who was convicted in 2018 of housing dozens of filthy and sick Great Danes in her New Hampshire mansion must now start paying back nearly $2 million for their care, a judge ruled Thursday.

Christina Fay was found guilty of 17 counts of animal cruelty. She had been sentenced to pay the bulk of the money to the Humane Society of the United States, which took in, cared for and found homes for most of the 84 dogs seized from her 13,000-squarefoot Wolfeboro residence in 2017. She also had to pay money to the town itself.

Her case was put on hold as she appealed to the New Hampshire Supreme Court, saying her privacy was violated when authoritie­s allowed the Humane Society to take photos and video as it helped gather the dogs from the house. Her lawyer also unsuccessf­ully argued that Wolfeboro police had failed to disclose that an animal welfare group would be participat­ing when they requested a search warrant from a judge. The court rejected Fay’s appeal in December.

Fay, 62, who joined the video hearing by phone and did not speak, has five years to pay back the money, in monthly installmen­ts. She had pleaded not guilty and maintained that she loved the dogs.

“I lost everything I love,” she said in 2018.

Court records and testimony showed that Fay said she wanted to be the primary U.S. collector of European Great Danes and had been acquiring and breeding them since 2014.

Authoritie­s who seized the dogs from Fay’s mansion back in June 2017 said the animals were living in urine and feces and suffering from health problems. Prosecutor­s accused her of neglect, withholdin­g water and allowing the dogs’ medical conditions to fester. Some of the dogs later died.

Her attorney, James Cowles, said Thursday he had $142,000 in escrow for the first payments, and suggested that the arrangemen­t would have to be revisited at some point.

“We’re looking at a staggering amount of restitutio­n,” he said, adding, “Unless Ms. Fay’s circumstan­ces drasticall­y change, I don’t know how she’s going to be able to satisfy the entire amount in full in five years, given how large it is.”

Separately, Fay filed a personal injury lawsuit in Washington, D.C., against the town and the Humane Society last year, asking for $35 million. A message seeking comment was sent to her lawyer in that case.

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