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Fugitive animal rescue operator who had dead, emaciated dogs at Dumont house jailed

YOU READ IT HERE FIRST: The owner and operator of a Newark non-profit animal rescue charged with having two dead dogs and a half-dozen emaciated canines at her Dumont home is no longer a fugitive: She was arrested this morning.

Photo Credit: Courtesy BERGEN COUNTY SHERIFF
Photo Credit: Courtesy BERGEN COUNTY SPCA
Photo Credit: Courtesy BCSPCA
Photo Credit: Courtesy BERGEN COUNTY SPCA
Photo Credit: Courtesy BERGEN COUNTY SHERIFF

PHOTOS: Courtesy BERGEN COUNTY SPCA

ANOTHER CVP SCOOP: A judge in Hackensack today ordered the owner and operator of a Newark non-profit animal rescue back to jail and set another court appearance for next Tuesday on charges stemming from the discovery of two dead dogs and a half-dozen emaciated canines at her Dumont home. READ MORE….

Gabrielle Ganter was being held on $5,000 bail in the Bergen County Jail following her transfer just after noon from Belleville, where police picked her up.

She’d chopped her hair, leaving bald spots in some places, officers said.

A judge in Hackensack nine days ago issued a warrant for the arrest of Ganter after she failed to show up for what had already been a postponed court hearing.Ganter, 30, who operated Pit Bull Kisses Rescue out of Newark, requested an extension in writing from a Central Municipal Court judge so that she could hire an attorney, courthouse sources in Hackensack told CLIFFVIEW PILOT.

She then skipped court on June 30, and the judge issued the $5,000 bench warrant.

As CLIFFVIEW PILOT reported exclusively, Bergen County SPCA investigators early last month filed 26 charges of animal cruelty and neglect against Ganter following an investigation that included necroposies.

Gabrielle Ganter / IMAGE: Courtesy BERGEN COUNTY SPCA

The complaints include not providing food, water, proper shelter or veterinary care under Title 4:22-17.

Police alerted SPCA investigators after finding the dead animals in plastic garbage bags in the house and the live dogs — as well as a starved cat — chained in the yard without proper shelter.

Courtesy BERGEN COUNTY SPCA

“They were were extremely thin,” one law enforcement official told CLIFFVIEW PILOT, adding that conditions inside the house were “horrid.”

Bergen County Animal Control removed the carcasses and live animals from the Brook Avenue residence on May 13. An investigation leading to the charges against Ganter followed.

The live dogs and cat continued to be held at the Bergen County Animal Shelter pending the closure of the case, after which authorities said there could be adoptions.

MUGSHOT: Courtesy BERGEN COUNTY SHERIFF

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REPORT animal cruelty or neglect in Bergen County (CALL 201-573-8900 or CLICK BANNER below)



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