Pit bull Society SA
Why adopt a
pit bull
Regards
Stanley
Jacobs
Patrick, the pit bull that was
rescued after it was starved and discarded down a trash chute, is making
progress and could be ready for adoption by July, his caregivers told NBC New
York on Thursday.
Associated Humane Societies,
the group handling the adoption of the animal that won the hearts of dog lovers
everywhere, has received thousands of requests from people wanting to give him
a home.
Bruce Sanchez, the
organization’s general manager, said it hopes to find Patrick a home by early
July.
The pup will spend the next
few months recovering from the devastating abuse he suffered. His caregivers
say he has made great strides, and is now able to run and play with toys — many
of which have been donated from well-wishers.
He is “absolutely wonderful,”
said Patricia Smillie-Scavelli, administrator at Garden State Veterinary
Specialists in Tinton, N.J.
On Tuesday, he had surgery to
remove a solid, three-inch-long hairball from his stomach.
“It looked more like a big,
flat rock,” said Smillie-Scavelli. “It was very heavy.”
The dog was also neutered and
given a dental examination.
Associated Humane Societies
said that Patrick’s medical milestones are the promising first steps toward
adoption.
But animals recovering from
abuse and neglect often need to work on social behavior, such as growling and
snapping, before moving on to a new home.
“This was just the first half
of the battle,” Sanchez told NBC New York. “Once they start to feel well, they
start to have issues.”
Patrick, named for being
discovered the day before St. Patrick’s Day, was originally found by a Newark
housing complex maintenance worker, who alerted the Associated Humane
Societies.
The dog was allegedly tied to
an apartment balcony and starved for more than a week by its owner, Kisha
Curtis. The dog was then tossed in a garbage bag and shoved down the garbage
chute of the 22-story building.
When the employee found the
dog, Sanchez said the dried saliva in his mouth caused his mouth to fuse shut,
and it had to be pried apart. He was “almost skeletal and clinging to life,”
Sanchez said in March.
The organization immediately
put the dog on intravenous fluid and covered him with heating pads before
transferring him to Garden State Veterinary Specialists.
Curtis, 27, pleaded not guilty
to four counts of animal abuse on March 31. Her mother said someone gave her
the dog and she couldn’t care for it.
The response from the public
has been even greater than the Garden State Veterinary Specialists expected.
Donations came in so rapidly via a PayPal account set up on the veterinarians’
website that they had to shut down the account
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