A settlement has been reached in the USDA’s case against C.C. Baird -- one of the country’s largest USDA-licensed Class “B” animal dealers selling “random source” animals to research facilities. Many random source animals are stolen pets, strays, seized shelter animals, or obtained through “free to good home” ads under false pretenses.
As a result of a 15-year investigation by LCA, the USDA charged C.C. Baird with hundreds of violations of the Animal Welfare Act.
http://www.lcanimal.org/invest/baird.htmA Glimpse Behind the Kennel Door
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Baird and his wife "treated hundreds of animals cruelly and inhumanely, in myriad ways, including failing to provide them with the most basic needs: sufficient and nutritive food, potable water, safe shelter and adequate veterinary care." The Bairds "continued to acquire large numbers of random-source animals, and to keep scant or no records, while paying lip service to their adherence to the law."
Baird made a formal arrangement with his part-time veterinarian "that specifically excluded a written program of veterinary care and regularly scheduled visits to respondents' premises" and the veterinarian "merely performed 'walk-through observations' and performed no regularly-scheduled examinations of animals, and provided no regularly scheduled care to animals." Dogs were suffering malnutrition, dehydration, lameness, conjunctivitis, infections, and lacerations; many fresh puncture wounds and cuts appeared to be the result of fights with other animals and one dog lost part of her ear to an aggressive dog in her pen. One beagle had 3 lacerations, a puncture wound, and "an area of painful swelling...that ruptured upon moderate palpation, emitting a pale yellow-green purulent exudate." A hound suffered from a host of ills including "a possible femoral head fracture."
The Bairds paid a veterinarian $5 apiece to sign blank copies of official health certificates for dogs and cats. The Bairds completed hundreds of these documents using false information before transporting animals to research laboratories. During the summer, Baird subjected dogs inside his kennel to intense heat and humidity. In late August 2003, the temperature inside the dog building was recorded at 97.2 degrees Fahrenheit, and that night the temperature dropped to a mere 84 degrees. Even dogs in outdoor runs during extreme heat exhibited "signs of stress and discomfort."
Baird's employees "failed to conduct even minimal cleaning of respondents' facility and animals, failed to comprehend basic animal husbandry requirements, and failed to provide food and water to animals." Failure to clean pens often enough resulted in dogs being prevented "from walking without stepping in urine, feces and food debris." During the cleaning of their enclosures, dogs in the main compound were sprayed with a combination of water, urine, feces and food refuse by employees. More...
http://www.awionline.org/pubs/Quarterly/04-53-3/533p16.htmPuppy Mill - 600 dogs found, 125 seized
Williford, AR (US)
Martin Creek Kennels near Hardy in Northeast Arkansas is owned by a man animal rights groups call the most notorious class-B animal dealer in the county. In August, the Feds confiscated more than 100 dogs from C.C. Baird's Martin Creek Kennels. Agents took the animals to Little Rock to the state fairgrounds before sending them on to Humane Societies and Animal Rights groups in Arkansas and across the country. Three of the dogs ended up in foster care in Crittenden County. "He's had a very bad injury to his eye and he's got scars all over his face." The other dog is still thin but friendly.
Julanne Ingram, president of the Humane Society of Eastern Arkansas, says an alarm went off in her head when a friend called and told her the dogs came from C.C. Baird's Martin Creek kennels. "The instant I heard his name I knew what the situation was because he has been charged before - he's been convicted."
In that August raid, agents from the United States Department of Agriculture and the U.S. Attorney's office in Little Rock, armed with a warrant, spent almost a week checking out more than 600 dogs. They found reason to seize 125 of the dogs. Bud Cummins, U.S. Attorney said, "There were veterinarians on hand at the time of the search and they examined each dog and some of them because of the state of their health they were seized others didn't have appropriate documentation at the site that established the person there's legal right to have those dogs. So they were taken." Cummins says Baird is being investigated for violations of the Animal Welfare Act and other criminal statutes. Cummins says the confiscated animals are one of the largest groups ever seized by the feds. The U.S.D.A. issued Baird's Class-B license. It allows him to legally sell animals to research labs. The big question many have is where does he get the dogs.
Animal rights groups like Last Chance for Animals say C.C. Baird abuses his animals, and they claim to have the undercover video to prove it. The group also accuses Baird of buying stolen animals, pets for 10 to 20 dollars a piece. They say he sells them for research, getting as much as 800 dollars an animal. more...
http://www.pet-abuse.com/cases/1811/AR/US/I think they need to change the chickenshit laws, so that "Brother" Baird never gets out of prison.