Rescue & Adoptions
2005 Featured Rescues
Chickens Find Health and Happiness
SPCA
Animal Cruelty Officer, Scott Mazzo, first investigated the property of
Ernesto Diaz after receiving a complaint from a humane agency in another
New York county where Mr. Diaz had brought chickens to sell. Concerned
by what he saw on his initial inspection, Mazzo obtained a search warrant
for the property.
When he returned to the Diaz property with the warrant (and several other
SPCA officers), he found dozens of sick, injured, and emaciated animals
living outdoors without shelter, alongside the corpses of many poor
creatures who had already succumbed to neglect.
All of the surviving animals were malnourished and suffering from exposure to cold
temperatures. The roosters, in particular, were suffering from severe
frostbite in their toes and combs, and many other chickens appeared to
have eye and respiratory infections.
When
Officer Mazzo confronted Mr. Diaz and showed him the warrant, Mr. Diaz
agreed to surrender his animals into the care of the SPCA. In what was
soon to be hailed as one of the largest animal rescue efforts in the history
of Steuben County, Officer Mazzo and the other SPCA officials on the scene
seized 57 neglected animals from the Diaz property. Garnering a great
deal of local attention, the rescue was first reported in the Corning
Leader on February 1 and then again on February 12. Immediately after they were removed from the Diaz property, all
of the rescued animals were taken to the SPCA shelter in Bath, New York,
where employees were already calling around to find homes for the rescued
critters. When the SPCA staff called Farm Sanctuary, we happily agreed
to take in the all of the chickens and a duck found on the Diaz property.
When the
birds arrived at our New York Shelter, they were in even worse shape than
we had imagined. We immediately offered them food and water, which
they happily accepted, and began treating their frostbite and various
bacterial infections. The frostbite we found on one of the roosters,
named Mini-May, was so bad that it had started to turn his feet black
and green. We rushed him to Cornell University's Veterinary Hospital along
with a hen, named Marmalade, who was experiencing severe respiratory distress.
The doctors told us that Mini-May's feet would heal in time, but that
he might lose a few of his toes to the frostbite. They diagnosed Marmalade
with an upper respiratory infection caused by Pasteurella, but seemed
quite optimistic that she would recover with proper treatment.

Before
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After
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Unfortunately,
several of the roosters rescued in this case did eventually lose some
of their toes to the frostbite. Many of the other roosters and hens lost
part, or all, of their combs. Despite this, all of the chickens recovered
well from their ordeal. Here at our New York Shelter, they ate their fill
of nourishing food and quickly gained much-needed weight. As their health
improved, they began to grow in beautiful new feathers and gradually regained
their strength.
Mini May,
the rooster with the worst frostbite in the rescued flock, made a remarkable
recovery and moved into a loving adoptive home outside the sanctuary as
soon as he was well enough to travel. Four other roosters, named Tangelo,
Schilling, Smith, and Matty, have settled in well with a group of older
hens on the farm, and Pedro has become close friends with another rooster
named Mayfly and a hen named Grackel. Marmalade, the hen who was suffering
from a respiratory infection, is now breathing easy and living happily
with several other rescued Prattsburgh hens and a handsome rooster named
Parinya. The rest of the Prattsburgh roosters are sharing their own private
bachelor pad.
Thanks
to the hard work and dedication of SPCA Officer Scott Mazzo, these lucky
birds have been given a new lease on life. Unfortunately, though,
the perpetrator in this case escaped with a slap on the wrist. Ernesto
Diaz pled guilty to 1 count of animal cruelty, which is a class A misdemeanor.
He received a 3-year term of probation during which animal control officers
may inspect his premises at any time to ensure compliance of animal care.
He also must pay several hundred dollars in restitution. Although we wish
Mr. Diaz had received prison time for his crime, we are at least thankful
that the precious birds rescued in this case can never be hurt by him
again.
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