Case of the painted pooch
Jennifer Kho
COSTA MESA -- A naturally blond dog went up for adoption Wednesday,
five days after he was found spray-painted pink at Fairview Road and
Arlington Drive.
The short-haired yellow Labrador mix, probably between 2 and 3 years
old, was found Friday by animal control officers and taken to the Orange
County Humane Society in Huntington Beach. Someone has painted along his
legs and body, and the word “Spike” was painted onto his side, but he
doesn’t answer to the name.
“What was done to him is just cruelty,” said Brigette Simec, a humane
society employee. “When I saw him, I wanted to cry. I couldn’t believe
it. It hurt me, it annoyed me, and it made me sad that someone could come
to that level of thinking. He’s just a really sweet dog, scared out of
his wits. His tail is under his legs, and this doesn’t do much for his
self-esteem. They got him pretty good, and who knows what they did to him
before they painted him?”
Aside from being scared, the dog -- named Higgens by humane society
employees -- is doing well.
“Some animals that have been abused turn mean, but a lot of them
don’t,” Simec said. “They just want to be loved and to do good. This is
just one of those special dogs.”
Simec said that although Higgens is not the only case of animal
cruelty she has seen in her nine months at the humane society, it is the
“loudest” one. Nothing can be done to remove the paint from Higgens’ fur
without endangering him, so he must be surgically shaved to remove his
fur.
The Huntington Beach shelter, which also serves Costa Mesa, deals with
a case of abuse as serious as Higgens’ about once a year, she said.
The punishment for animal cruelty depends on the stress and injury to
the animal, said Costa Mesa Police Sgt. Bob Durham. Higgens’ case --
which had not been reported to the police as of press time -- appears to
be a misdemeanor, which carries a punishment of less than a year in jail,
Durham said.
But Simec said that with Higgens found near Orange Coast College, the
perpetrators could be difficult to find.
“It seems like it could have been anybody,” she said. “Maybe it was a
college prank. In any case, I don’t think retribution is the answer.”
The society is more interested in finding Higgens a good home, she
said.
The ideal home “would probably be one with no teenagers or small
children, because I don’t know what his background was but it was
probably abusive,” Simec said. “But not necessarily an older couple,
because [Higgens] is very strong. Maybe a young twenty- or
thirtysomething couple who wants to run and play with him, that is maybe
not interested in having kids, that is maybe career-oriented but has time
to spend with him. Most importantly, he needs someone who can give him
the love he hasn’t had yet. Somebody nice.”
FYI
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