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'Crazy Rescue Ladies' Who Had 170+ Pets In Disgusting NJ Home Sentenced, Prosecutors Say

Two Brick Township women who called themselves the "Crazy Rescue Ladies" will spend nearly a year in jail after admitting to having more than 170 pets in deplorable conditions, authorities said.

Aimee Lonczak, 51, and Michele Nycz, 60, both from Brick Township, NJ, were sentenced after pleading guilty to animal cruelty charges.

Aimee Lonczak, 51, and Michele Nycz, 60, both from Brick Township, NJ, were sentenced after pleading guilty to animal cruelty charges.

Photo Credit: Ocean County Jail (top left and right), Ocean County Health Department (bottom left and right)

Michele Nycz, 60, and Aimee Lonczak, 51, were sentenced on Friday, Aug. 16 to 364 days in Ocean County Jail, county prosecutor Bradley Billhimer said in a news release. The women pleaded guilty on Monday, June 24 to two counts of animal cruelty, and Lonczak also entered a guilty plea for child neglect.

Brick Township police responded to a complaint of a suspected puppy mill run at a home on Arrowhead Park Drive on Friday, Dec. 2, 2022. Officers smelled a strong odor and heard barking from the house while speaking with Lonczak and Nycz in the driveway.

Police were allowed to enter the home and immediately saw it was in unsanitary condition with animal waste. Officers found dogs and cats in crates stacked on top of each other.

A hazmat team was called because of the home's conditions. Rescuers spent about 10 hours removing about 129 dogs and 43 cats from the house, along with the bodies of two dead dogs.

A veterinarian was at the scene to assess each animal as it was taken from the home. About eight pets were sent for emergency veterinary care.

Lonczak and Nycz were arrested at the home, which is also where Lonczak's 16-year-old daughter lived. They were brought to the Ocean County Jail and released on bail.

The women ran a now-private Instagram page called "Crazy Rescue Ladies Inc." It claimed to be a nonprofit "responsible rescue" that saved injured and unwanted street animals and depended on PayPal donations.

Some rescued pets were available for adoption after receiving medical treatment. Prosecutors said the women showed up at an animal shelter to get their dogs back on Thursday, Jan. 19, 2023.

Lonczak and Nycz were also given four years probation and lifetime bans on owning, working with, or performing community service around animals.

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