Submitted by Erik_Scheibe on

Dog Day Cont'd

Categories
Health

OK, so Scraps is now gone all night Sat, all day Sunday (I call but few places are open) and now Monday morning I start making calls again.  The Islip town shelter gives me the name and number of a young woman who picked up a dog of similar description late Sat. and I call the woman around 10am.  She grills me a bit on describing the dog and asks me for papers (for which I have none), but our convo about how/where the dog usually gets out and where she found her less than 500 feet from my home seems to convince her that the dog is indeed mine.  She agrees to go home and bring me the dog.  I tell my son who had been devastated and he is quickly relieved.

I am waiting for nearly an hour and a half, when I text her that I'd be happy to come pick her up if she prefers.  I then get a call from an older man who grills me about the dog and says that the young woman has no transportation and that he'd have to bring the dog by when he gets home from work that evening.  This is frustrating, but the thought that the young woman might not feel comfortable interacting with a strange man makes sense and we agree to meet up when he gets home from work.  Then, a half-hour later, an older woman calls me and starts grilling me about the dog, including asking about identifying characteristics.  Now I am getting annoyed.  I ask her who she is and the answer was the young girl's mother.  Finally I say to her, please have the gentleman I spoke to call me.

Next, a half-hour later I get the young girl responding to my text message, telling me that what she'd really like is paperwork or a picture of the dog, explaining that the dog is really awesome and she wants to make sure the dog is really mine because there are a lot of bad people out there.  I get a picture from my wife and send it to her via text, explaining that considering our first conversation and how she "took" the dog less than 500 feet from my home, that my thankfullness and appreciation was turning to frustration.  There is no response.

It's around 2pm and I call my wife ready to take this to the next level.  She asks me to calm down, takes the young woman's phone number and calls.  No answer, she leaves a message, no response for another half hour.  I think of my convo with the man (who turned out to be her step-father) and I call him back.  The convo is quick, consisting of me explaining that I sent a picture and that I could get paperwork from the Rescue Dog Foundation, but that if I did, I was taking it to the police.  He tells me that he will call me back right away.

A few minutes later, I get a text back from the woman apologizing if I was "offended", and saying that when her boyfriend got back, they'd bring the dog home.  She reminds me that she is jut looking out for the best interests of the dog and how this is the eighth dog she has reunited with their family.  Eight!?!  That creeped me out more than I can describe.  When she brought the dog back around 6pm that night, she offered me the food she got for him, but I told her to hang on to it as she might need it again.

As I recapped later that night with my wife, I came up with the term..."not-for-profit, serial dognappers."  What an odd and harrowing day!

Comments

Nancy Schess

That is quite a story! But with a happy ending! I was worrying about this all week! Remind me to tell you the story about my dog when I was young being held for ransom by a local business owner!
Rona Gura

So glad you got your dog back!! But that is a strange story. Lately, I've been commenting a lot that people appear to be reacting stranger and stranger. Your story proves my point.
Fred Klein

My blog on Friday will be about our dog Charcoal. You did not say whether it was your dog and if it was how wonderful the reunion was...

Submitted by NULL (not verified) on Thu, 08/29/2013 - 02:13

Permalink

I'm also very glad that you got your dog back, but want to mention that more & more dogs are being stolen from their families' yards. If your dog is outside alone, s/he, unfortunately has become fair game for despicable thieves like these.

Submitted by NULL (not verified) on Thu, 08/29/2013 - 02:15

Permalink

I didn't mean for my comment above to be anonymous - this is Dana Charlton. Every day dogs are stolen for profit. And, every day many dogs are killed by NYC's Animal "care &" Control without even waiting for families to find their dogs. It's a frightening situation.
Riva Schwartz

Give that girl our card - chances are good she will need a criminal defense attorney

Submitted by CatherineAvery on Wed, 09/11/2013 - 01:38

Permalink
Catherine Avery

Erik, do you have a microchip for Scraps? It is a pretty simple procedure though I am sure momentarily painful (my apologies to animal lovers who may not like that I temporarily hurt my cat). But we rest easier knowing that if Bridget is lost, there is a simple way to ID that she is ours and be able to find her again.

Add new comment

Restricted HTML

  • Allowed HTML tags: <a href hreflang> <em> <strong> <cite> <blockquote cite> <code> <ul type> <ol start type> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <h2 id> <h3 id> <h4 id> <h5 id> <h6 id>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.