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Home PETS

Is that rescue dog really a trafficking victim?

by Doggone Well Staff
September 21, 2023
in PETS
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Is that rescue dog really a trafficking victim?
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If you’re thinking about adopting a rescue dog, good for you. But you should also do your homework.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recently declared an extension of a suspension of dog imports from 110 countries. The move is designed to mitigate the risk of animal diseases accidentally spreading.

According to the Agriculture Department, 1 million dogs are imported every year and regulations are lax. That’s convenient if you take your pet dog on a trip. But the lack of regulations has also given rise to pet trafficking, often under the guise of “animal rescue,” and a serious risk of disease outbreak.

According to the CDC, “Many dogs are bred irresponsibly in large numbers in ‘puppy mills’ overseas, where the risk of congenital abnormalities and disease is high. Importers then fly them as cargo in large batches, claiming them as ‘rescue’ dogs, valued at $0 on their paperwork, and allowing the importers to evade entry and broker fees.”

In June 2020, a Ukrainian International Airlines plane arrived in Toronto, where Canadian authorities found 500 crated purebred puppies. Many were dehydrated and weak, and 38 were dead.

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Ironically, pet trafficking is being driven by laws that try to improve animal welfare.

Over the last few years, some states have banned pet stores from selling dogs from breeders. Pet stores may only sell dogs that have been “rescued.”

Supposedly, these laws help combat puppy mills. They’ve done the opposite.

Pet traffickers breed high-demand puppies like French bulldogs in foreign puppy mills, then fool unsuspecting families by marketing them as “well-bred, American-born puppies” on social media. These puppies are sold for up to $5,000.

In other words, laws aimed at fighting American puppy mills have directly contributed to animals being imported from foreign puppy mills.

Disease experts believe animal rescuers introduced H3N2 Asian dog flu to America in 2015 while moving dogs from Asia to shelters here. The disease sickened more than 1,000 dogs in the Chicago area, killing several. The disease has continued to reappear.

Other diseases have been tied to animal rescue as well. According to the CDC, brucellosis and rabies are two of the most common zoonotic diseases that are found in illegal dog importations — and both can be passed on to humans.

Pet breeders who care about the animals are going out of business due to bans on pet stores selling pets. Meanwhile, pet traffickers are thriving at the expense of animals, as well as families that may have to pay thousands of dollars in unexpected medical bills for their new “rescue.”

If lawmakers want to crack down on puppy mills, prevent diseases and improve animal welfare, they would be wise to rethink their strategy. Instead of banning the sale of pets, which just creates a black market, they should focus on making sure all pets sold — or adopted from a rescue — are treated humanely. And they should pass the Healthy Dog Importation Act, a federal bill endorsed by veterinarians that would increase regulations to mitigate the risk of disease.

In the meantime, if you are looking to get a puppy, do your due diligence.

Will Coggin is managing director of the Center for Organizational Research and Education/InsideSources.com



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