86° F Thursday, May 17, 2012

The dispatcher answered the call that came into the Bastrop County Sheriff’s Office on Friday, Nov. 11. The caller reported an injured dog in the street on Greasy Bend Road in Smithville.
Animal control officer Blake Koenig responded to the call, but, upon arriving, found no dog in the road. She patrolled up and down the road a few times, before parking and getting out. According to her supervisor, shelter director Troy

Priscilla Bledsoe

Priscilla Bledsoe

Walters, Koenig, as usual, was going to go above and beyond to help out a possibly injured animal.
Although Koenig did not find an injured animal in the road, what she did find after talking to people in the neighborhood was a case of possible animal abuse so serious it has sparked an international mail campaign, a Facebook sensation, a petition with more than 3,000 signatures on it and a story on at least one Austin television station’s news report.
“Once our officer found (the dog known as Claire), I was called because of the severity of the dog’s condition,” Walters said.
Koenig found Claire lying on a front porch. The approximately four-year-old Great Dane was skin and bones. Her body was covered with demodectic mange. And that was just what observers saw at first glance. At first, Koenig thought the dog was dead.
Once Koenig made contact with the dog’s owner, Koenig quizzed her about medical treatment and feeding.
“She claimed she was feeding the dog twice a day, but she couldn’t produce any food,” Walters said. “She said the dog was so skinny because it was very active.”
The owner also claimed the dog was being treated for the mange, but could not produce any medicine to support the claim.
When Koenig determined there was no food or medicine for the dog, and the owner did not intend to take the dog to the veterinarian for treatment, she asked if Bledsoe would willingly surrender the dog, which the owner agreed to do.
“That same day, we called Big Dog Rescue (an Austin-based rescue group) and we stayed late for them to come and get Claire,” Walters said. “The urgency was to pick the dog up and get help. I think our animal control people did an excellent job.”
According to Lorraine Joy, vice president of Big Dog Rescue, Claire was in bad shape when she took her to the veterinarian.
“I couldn’t even touch her,” she said. “If I touched her, she bled. She was shaking and flakes were flying off. They told me she was close to death and might not recover.”
The letter writing and Facebook campaigns began as a way to bring justice to an owner that would allow their dog to live in such a condition, Joy said, although she was quick to praise the work of the county animal shelter and the people who work and volunteer there.
“If it wasn’t for them, this would not have had a positive ending,” she said. “They work hard and they care.”
Owner Priscilla Bledsoe was arrested on Thursday, Dec. 1 and charged with cruelty to non-livestock animals and failure to provide, a class A misdemeanor.
The medical report from the veterinarian that first saw Claire was heartbreaking, Joy said. Besides being extremely malnourished, Claire has not only demodectic mange, but also sarcoptic mange, secondary skin infections, heartworms, a

Claire was skin and bones and covered with mange.

Claire was skin and bones and covered with mange.

yeast infection and is deaf and partially blind – possible consequences of malnourishment.
Walters said Claire’s owner also has two other dogs and two cats that, except for reportedly not being current on state-mandated rabies shots, seem to be in good health. The owner has since brought the two cats in for the rabies vaccinations and reportedly plans to bring the other two dogs in next week.
The rescuers named the dog Claire, which means “bright.” Since Claire has been in their care, roughly 20 days, they say she has gained 20 pounds.
“She definitely wanted to eat,” Joy said.
According to Bastrop County Sheriff Terry Pickering, his investigators have been working to build a case against Bledsoe since Claire was found.
“What people don’t understand is we have to prepare a case for the district attorney that they can actually take to court,” Pickering said. “We just obtained the medical records from the veterinarian that treated her. We wanted to make sure there was no underlying condition wrong with the dog that would have caused this.”
He pointed out that the justice system has to prove that Bledsoe intentionally and knowingly committed a criminal act.
“It doesn’t boil down to ignorance,” he said. “When you go to present a criminal case, you have to have evidence of criminal culpability.”
One difference – at least in the eyes of the law – is that Bledsoe voluntarily surrendered the animal, rather than having it removed after a court order.
Walters said animal abuse and neglect cases can go one of two ways.
“They take care of the animal or surrender it,” he said. “Or we come back with a warrant. It’s always painful for them and us, either way.”
Joy wants people to know that there are resources available for people who find themselves unable to care for a pet.
“This is a tragic situation,” she said. “We hope that by bringing awareness to this, other owners that find themselves in a situation like this will realize there are resources out there. Also, if you see something going on in your neighborhood, please report it.”

Comments

  1. Robyn R says:

    Thank you for publishing this, as I and many of my friends have been following the story of Claire since the first day, before “she” became famous.. We all are so thankful to Big Dog Rescue, and her foster family for showering this dog with the love that she so truly deserves.
    It is my hope that the woman who formerly owned her will be given the maximum penalty allowed by law.

  2. Sally Williams says:

    I feel that if you know there is something wrong with your pet and you do not take it to the vet right away, then you are guilty of neglect, NO MATTER WHAT. The owner admitted Claire was her dog, so she is at fault.
    If the dog just showed up on her land, then I understand why no charges would be brought. But she admitted the dog was hers.
    And, Take All animals away from her so that she does not do this to the others.
    Thank you for your hard work on Claire. She looks fabulous today.

  3. Genova says:

    Please follow Claire’s progress: https://www.facebook.com/Fostertofurever?sk=wall (found on Facebook under ‘Friends Furever’).
    I understand that it takes time to gather evidence and also to act on a legal basis to make a prosecution. In the meantime however, this ‘person’ (and I use that term ‘person’ very reluctantly), has other animals in her ‘care.’ If the ‘owner’ could not provide evidence of food for Claire in the first place, what makes anyone think that there was food for the other animals at the residence? Furthermore, the ‘owner’ who claims that she could not care for Claire, has two other dogs and two cats. So where is her ability to care for those animals. It is sad that it has taken “an international mail campaign, a Facebook sensation, a petition with more than 3,000 signatures on it and a story on at least one Austin television station’s news report” to bring this case to attention. This is one of many disgusting cases of neglect and abuse that could have easily (and quite often do) go unnoticed and unrecognized.

  4. Karen says:

    Procecute! Procecute! Procecute!
    If those animals could only talk!!

    Thank the lord someone reported that mysterious animal. Now, if those concerned neighbors had called sooner, this poor girl may not have had such severe malnutrition, mange and h/w. Bless her little soul and the vets and techs taking care of her.

    Such happy news to know that Claire is making a recovery and doing well.

  5. lindsey kirk says:

    I understand there are other dogs/cats in the home. Why can’t they be removed? It doesn’t make sense.

  6. Lisa Carlsen says:

    Although I have nothing but praise for Big Dog Rescue & Foster To Furever, I do not understand why the authorities were not removed from her. If she could not produce any dog food that she was so called feeding Claire….then what is she feeding the other animals in her keeping??? Thank you to all that have helped save Claire. She will forever hold a special place in my heart and thousands of others!!

  7. I think there should be a “mandated reporter” law for animal abuse, similar to what is in place for child abuse. Even if it is only for a very low fine, people who see abuse and don’t report it should be sent a message that animal abuse is not ok.

  8. Jennifer Coffee says:

    Thank you Big Dog and Foster Furever for taking care of this sweet sweet girl! I will be spreading the word about Claire, as I have been, and helping in any way I can!

    Please keep posting if there is anything the pucblic can do!

  9. natia porter says:

    Horrible Story!! Unforgivable! it is true, if owner does not want a dog m he should give it to someone who cares. my heart is sinking by the story. And thank you to Big Dog rescue for being on guard for these lovely, lovely animals.

  10. Elizabeth Coffee says:

    What a moving story. I’m glad there is legislation that makes “cruelty to non-livestock animals and failure to provide” punitive, as it should be. To find a living creature on the brink of death is heartbreaking. And to see a network of officers and rescue groups like Big Dig come together is “bright,” like Claire. Jennifer, thanks for getting the word out.

  11. Jonnie Pums says:

    I agree 100% with Sally Williams

  12. Thank God the animal control people found this poor soul. I hope they take all the animals in her care from her. Good luck sweet Claire.

  13. Rosie Young says:

    Thank you Blake, for taken the extra time to actually search out this poor dog!! Hooray for BCAC!

Leave a Reply