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NEWS ARTICLES
250 Rabbits Seized in Cruelty Case
Regulation: Raid of the Mar Vista home finds many
of the animals hurt and some dead.
By KENNETH REICH
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer(April
19, 2002)
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Dr. Karen Halligan, left, examines one of
the rabbits discovered at a private home in Mar Vista
after a large strike force from the Society for the Prevention
of Cruelty to Animals, armed with a search warrant, conducted
a raid. Neighbors had complained of the strench.
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A large strike force of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty
to Animals, carrying a search warrant, raided a rented home Thursday
in Mar Vista and removed more than 250 rabbits, many of them injured
and some dead.
Madeline Bernstein, president of the SPCA's Los Angeles chapter,
said it appeared that the woman who lived there had begun "a
collection of rabbits and then allowed the animals to multiply
without control."
Neighbors had complained of a stench.
At least eight SPCA trucks and more than 20 people were involved
in the raid in the neighborhood on the Westside of Los Angeles.
Rabbits still alive were trucked either to a veterinarian's office
or a shelter. Bernstein said some would be offered for adoption.
When SPCA workers arrived at the house in the 3000 block of Stoner
Avenue and showed the resident the search warrant; she left the
property, Bernstein said. She was not arrested.
"A huge number of rabbits [were] found in the backyard and
along the sides of the house," Bernstein said.
The name of the resident was not released, but neighbors said
she had rented the home for a year and a half.
Lazarus Benjamin, a next-door neighbor, said he had noticed bad
smells for some time.
But the number of rabbits discovered "was a shock,"
he added.
Bernstein said Los Angeles ordinances regulating the sheltering
of rabbits are less clear than for dogs and cats but that rabbits
must be kept in healthful, clean surroundings.
"This person may have meant well," Bernstein said,
"but things got beyond her."
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