Terrence Cody, Under Investigation for Dog Abuse, Cut from Baltimore Ravens

MARCH 24, 2016 UPDATE: Terrence Cody was sentenced today to nine months in the Baltimore County Detention Center.

“Deflate-Gate” isn’t the only major NFL story today. Baltimore Ravens nose tackle Terrence Cody, who is currently being investigated for animal cruelty, will be dropped from the team after the Super Bowl.

The official Ravens announcement today made no mention of the investigation by the Baltimore County State’s attorney’s office, however.

According to Cody’s agent, Peter Schaffer, Cody paid $8,000 for a Bullmastiff from Spain. When the dog became seriously ill, Cody took him to a vet. Schaffer said the dog died from worms.

He didn’t mention what kind of worms the dog had or the duration of the dog’s illness before Cody sought treatment. No further details about the investigation have been released.

If the dog had hookworms, PetMD.com notes that they can be fatal, especially for puppies: “These blood-sucking parasites can invade, inhabit and live in the dog’s small intestines. In their fourth-stage larvae, the hookworms can cause anemia and inflammation in the dog’s small intestine. Active worms leave bite sites and those sites continue to seep blood. … Death can come suddenly if the dog is not immediately treated.”

Schaffer is upset with the Ravens for canning his client. “This young man’s dog has died and the Ravens were so worried about possible ramifications from the league that they took a preemptive strike,” he told the Baltimore Sun. “The fact that the NFL has created such an atmosphere of hysteria that tramples on due process rights, the right of law and common decency is a tremendous problem in our league and our society.”

The “atmosphere of hysteria” is in reference to the NFL’s toughened-up personal conduct policy, which followed last year’s suspension of another Ravens team member, running back Ray Rice. In that domestic abuse case, an elevator camera captured Rice punching his fiancée in the face, knocking her unconscious. Rice later won his appeal of the suspension and it was overturned. Yesterday the NFL Players Association filed a grievance against the NFL to challenge the new personal conduct policy, ESPN reports.

Schaffer insisted that Cody loved his dog. “If the dog was being treated cruelly, why take it to a vet?” he said, according to TribLIVE Sports. “When the dog passed away, Terrence was in tears.”

No charges have been filed yet against Cody.

“If I find out that anyone holds anything against my client because of this, I will take every and all legal action to make sure my client’s rights are vindicated and that he’s made whole,” Schaffer told the Baltimore Sun.

Back when he was still whole, in March 2013, dog dad Cody announced on Twitter that he was selling one of his 5-month-old Presa Canario pups for $4,000.

Photo via Twitter

NYPD Officers Rescue Injured Pit Bull on Grand Central Parkway

When NYPD officers Melissa Mezzoiuso and George Morina-Blocker responded to a 911 call Monday morning about a “vicious” dog on Grand Central Parkway during rush hour, what they found was a brindle Pit Bull sitting in the middle of a westbound lane on the busy thoroughfare.

Morina-Blocker blocked traffic with their patrol car, and Mezzoiuso got out and approached the dog.

She realized he “was not ‘vicious’ but rather frightened and injured,” the NYPD News reports.

Mezzoiuso gently lifted the dog and carried him to the side of the busy parkway, then she and her partner decided to drive the 6-month-old pup, who they named “Rocky,” to a local ASPCA office.

Rocky was then transferred to the ASPCA hospital in Manhattan, where veterinarians determined his left front leg had been broken.

Morina-Blocker and Mezzoiuso stopped by for a visit yesterday, before the lucky pooch had surgery on his leg. Rocky “will continue to receive around-the-clock care as he recovers from his injury,” an ASPCA spokeswoman told the Queens Courier.

According to the New York Daily News today, Rocky has been renamed Huxley to avoid confusion with another dog in the hospital who has the same name. He is recovering from his surgery.

The ASPCA is trying to locate his owner, and asking anyone with information about Rocky to call 212-876-7700. In the meantime, adoption offers are flowing in.

“We urge anyone with information about Rocky to please come forward,” the ASPCA spokeswoman said. “Thank you to the officers of the 110th Precinct who rescued a dog in need and brought him to safety at the ASPCA.”

Photos via TwitterTwitter

‘In Dog We Trust’ Rug Auctioned off for $9,650

It’s said we learn from our mistakes. A dog rescue group has earned from one well-publicized error.

It took two months (!) for anyone to notice, but the typo “In Dog We Trust” was printed on a new rug in the lobby of the Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office in Largo, Fla.

(That’s the rug in the photo, with K-9 officers Axel and Riggs.)

A sheriff’s office spokesperson told WFTS the error was made by the rug’s manufacturer, American Floor Mats, which promised to make a replacement.

Instead of simply disposing of the $500 “In Dog We Trust” rug, Sheriff Bob Gualtieri decided to auction it off and donate all the proceeds to Canine Estates Inc., a non-profit adoption and sanctuary facility in Palm Harbor, Fla.

“The Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office will not ‘sweep anything under the rug,'” notes the auction page. “Due to extensive interest regarding our plans for the ‘doggone’ rug, you can bid on it here.”

The auction ended at 4 p.m. Eastern Time today. Thanks to someone at American Floor Mats accidentally transposing a “g” and “d” (although I kind of hope it was intentional), Canine Estates Inc. will get a check for … drumroll, please … $9,650, the winning bid.

Dog bless the Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office, the generous winner (who hasn’t yet been identified) and all 83 bidders.

Photo via Facebook

Rescued Pit Bull Saves Pennsylvania Family from House Fire

A Pit Bull named Lou, who had been saved from an abusive owner, apparently decided to “paw” it forward to the family who rescued him.

When a fire broke out early Saturday morning in Chris Julian and Kelly Yarbrough’s Carbondale, Penn., house, Lou woke them by barking frantically.

“There`s a fire behind the door. I grabbed the door. It was red hot,” Julian told WNEP. “All I screamed was, ‘Call 911! There`s a fire,’ and by the time I got back to the room, there was no time to think.”

“The fire was coming through the door and the dog saved our lives,” Yarbrough said. “If it wasn’t for him, we’d all be dead right now.”

Although they lost almost everything they owned, the couple, their two younger children and Lou were able to escape without any injuries.

The couple’s two older children weren’t home at the time. Yarbrough told WNEP it was very fortunate that the family had watched a movie together in the master bedroom Friday night, and the two younger children had fallen asleep on the floor. Had they been in their own bedrooms, “I probably wouldn’t have been able to get them out,” she said.

“I’m grateful for God and the way that it did happen,” Yarbrough said. “I’m grateful God gave me Lou, our dog, and I’m grateful for the Red Cross to help us as much as they could.”

The cause of the fire is under investigation.

Photo: WNEP

Adoption Offers Pour in for Dog Abandoned When Owners Moved

A family moved out of their Phoenix house Wednesday, leaving behind a sofa by the curb for trash pickup — along with their pet dog.

When a neighbor got home from work late Thursday afternoon, she noticed the 3-year-old Pit Bull hunkered down between the sofa cushions, and snapped a picture of him.

“I guess the old owners left him there,” the neighbor, who declined to be identified, told ABC15.

After unsuccessfully trying to contact a rescue, the neighbor called Mariposa County Animal Care & Control (MCACC), which picked up the dog and then transferred him to the Arizona Humane Society.

In the meantime, the neighbor posted her photo on Facebook. It has gone viral, with thousands of shares.

“We’ve been inundated with calls, people, rescue groups, people that want to step up and help,” the MCACC’s Melissa Gable told ABC15.

When Gable saw the photo, her reaction was probably similar to that of most animal lovers.

“I almost cried,” she told ABC15. “He looks so pitiful and tiny.”

The Phoenix Police Department is investigating the case. The dog’s owner, if he’s found, may be (should be) facing animal cruelty charges.

Gable told azfamily.com the dog is doing well. “We just want to let the public know that he’s okay,” she said.

Photo via Facebook

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