33 Abused Chihuahuas, Rescued From SUV, Had Happy Lives, Says Ex-Owner

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
When the animal
control investigator first got the call, he didn't believe it."What you're saying is just not computing," Jack Breckenridge replied.What
he'd been told, Breckenridge recalled Tuesday, was that 33 abused Chihuahuas had just been pulled from an SUV where they seemed to have been
living for days
stomach full of uncooked rice, plant material and tin foilThe conversation - last fall - started a lengthy investigation that has the dogs'
former owner facing a July trial on 33 counts of animal cruelty."No reasonable person could think that this was okay," Breckenridge said
Tuesday.All 33 dogs were seized by police
One had to be euthanized despite eight hours of emergency medical care after it was rescued
A necropsy of the 4-month-old puppy showed its stomach full of uncooked rice, plant material and tin foil, evidence of "foraging behavior
consistent with an animal that is ingesting anything it can find," according to an affidavit Breckenridge submitted in Montgomery County
District Court.The other 32 dogs were in various states of health, according to court records
Eight appeared to be starving and ten were malnourished
Others were dehydrated or had overgrown nails
Three were pregnant
Breckenridge said all 32 were returned to health and transferred to an out-of-state shelter to be adopted.The dogs' former owner, Javier
Enrique Peralta, 41, of Wheaton, Maryland, strongly disputes the cruelty allegations.He said he had raised the brood over the past 10 years
and thought about giving some away, but favored keeping them for himself, his wife and his five children.They were properly fed in a
sunroom, he said, had the run of a fenced backyard and were bathed twice a week
"The house never smelled," Peralta said
"My dogs were happy and free."On the September day when police found his dogs, Peralta said he had just been evicted from his home
He was moving the dogs to a new residence, he said, and had stopped at a friend's apartment for dinner
"For them to say cruelty," he said, "it's just not true."Peralta said his children worry about the dogs, asking him: "Are we getting them
back Are they dead"A 911 call alerted the county to 20 dogs unattended in a red vehicle.Police and animal services officers shined
flashlights into the SUV
Most of dogs seemed excited by the officers' arrival
There were "more dogs than they could count," according to court records.Peralta came out of an apartment and spoke to officers, court
records show
As he did, animal services officer Cara Thomas noticed a male puppy on its side in the front passenger seat
She asked Peralta to open the door, and she picked up the puppy.The tongue of the dog, later identified as "Chihuahua 2" in court records,
hung slightly out of its mouth, according to Breckenridge's arrest affidavit
Officers saw another puppy - designated "Chihuahua 1" - barely moving on the driver's side."Peralta stated that the two dogs were always
like this, and that there was nothing wrong with them," officers at the scene reported.The former owner said as much on Tuesday in an
interview
One dog, in particular, ate but could never gain weight, he said.Chihuahua 1 and Chihuahua 2 were taken to the Metropolitan Emergency Animal
Clinic
Chihuahua 1 was treated for eight hours "and his condition continued to deteriorate," court records state
After he was euthanized, an exam of its remains showed a body condition score of 2 out of 9, with ribs, lumbar vertebrae and pelvic bones
easy visible, according to police.Chihuahua 2 arrived at the vet center in slightly better condition, but X-rays showed plastic and metal
might be in the dog's stomach and intestines, consistent with foraging
The dog readily began eating food after being taken for medical attention, police said.Breckenridge, the investigator, said the condition of
the SUV led him to believe the dogs had been staying there for days before they were seized
"The primary housing, for these dogs, was inside the SUV," he said.Still, there was an adult female dog - Chihuahua 5 - who seemed fine,
according to court records
Another 13 dogs, while suffering from ailments including dehydration, overgrown nails and scratches - showed no signs of malnourishment or
starvation, according to the records.Breckenridge said "herd dynamics" likely played a role, with the stronger dogs getting to food before
the weaker dogs."He was free-feeding too many dogs," Breckenridge said of Peralta.But Peralta tells a different story
He gave them happy lives, he said, and they were good support for him.Years ago, he explained, he fell from a ladder while painting and
injured his back, leading to surgery.He still endures pain, he said.The Chihuahuas comforted him, gathering in groups on his bed."I still
cry for my dogs," he said
"Every day.(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)