Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Mississippi: After being convicted of animal cruelty in 2006, DIY rescuers and operators of "Choctaw Ridge Farms Rescue", Jean Norton and Beverly Greenwood caught dumping nearly 100 sick, injured and old animals at shelters in the middle of the night and driving off

MISSISSIPPI -- Sadly, more and more people are abandoning dogs and cats at animal shelters across the country. And while there are proper and humane ways to surrender your pet, the INSIDE EDITION I-Squad has spent months tracking heartbreaking cases of animal cruelty caught on tape.

Surveillance cameras caught Beverly Greenwood and Jean Norton dumping dozens of dogs and cats, many of them sick, at a Louisiana animal shelter in 2011.

But they're not alone. Cameras at a closed Alabama shelter were rolling when a man carried puppy after defenseless puppy by the scruffs of their neck and left them outside the front door. Scared and confused, the puppies scrambled under the man's truck as their heartless owner drove off.

Just four of the six puppies were ever found.

INSIDE EDITION obtained surveillance footage from an Oregon Humane Society shelter that caught a different man ditching a diaper box at the front door; written on the front of the box: "Free Dog." That's right, the man had taped shut the box with an adorable pooch inside.

But Greenwood and Norton may be the worst serial dog dumpers in the U.S.A.

Despite clearly posted warning signs, night after night, Norton and Greenwood abandoned dog car loads of sick and mangy animals at the Capitol Area Animal Welfare Shelter (CAAWS) in Baton Rouge, LA.

But what the dog dumpers didn't know was that a surveillance camera was recording them every time they showed up.

And shockingly, over the past year alone, the camera caught Norton and Greenwood abandoning almost one hundred animals all in the dead of night.

"I'm 100% positive they knew they were doing something wrong. All of the animals that we've received have been in horrible, horrible condition," said Glenda Parks, who manages CAAWS.

They only dumped the sick, old, dying animals. 

Another CAAWS volunteer told INSIDE EDITION's Lisa Guerrero, "You get angry, you get very angry. They need help. They're obviously hoarders."

So where did all those abandoned dogs come from?

INSIDE EDITION has learned that Jean Norton and Bev Greenwood, who have been convicted of animal cruelty charges in the past, surprisingly run their own animal adoption program at their farm located in Mississippi – a two hour drive from CAAWS.

When INSIDE EDITION's Lisa Guerrero caught up with them, the dog dumpers had a hard time explaining themselves.

Guerrero asked, "Why would you do this?"

"All I'm doing is the best I can do for these animals," said Greenwood.

"But you do admit that you have been dumping animals?" asked Guerrero.

"Oh yeah. Of course. I was wrong, it was illegal. I shouldn't have done it," answered Greenwood.

Sadly, Parks says many of the dogs they abandoned were so sick they had to be euthanized. But there is some good news: CAAWS volunteers say a handful of dogs have been nursed back to health and are now in loving homes.

Jean Norton has since plead guilty to animal cruelty charges for the dumping incidents and was banned from owning any pets for eighteen months. 

There is still an outstanding warrant for the arrest of Beverly Greenwood.

(Inside Edition - February 28, 2012)