Abused Puppy Thrown in L.A. River Makes an Amazing Recovery (VIDEO)

It’s really a miracle that a horrifically abused puppy named Jordan is alive today.

Someone saw the puppy being thrown 30 feet into a concrete portion of the Los Angeles River. The eyewitness contacted L.A. on Cloud 9, a local charity that helps homeless people and their pets.

That group contacted Hope for Paws, which made a video of its rescue of the starved, mange-covered puppy from the riverbed.

“Oh my god,” gasps Eldad Hagar, founder of the non-profit, as he lifts the frail puppy into his arms. “Someone literally cut off his foot.”

Hagar gently puts the puppy in a basket, and volunteers raise him to street level. On the way to an animal hospital, Hagar names the puppy Jordan.

The hospital staff bandaged Jordan’s rear leg and gave him a bath. He received a blood transfusion from Laila, a dog Hope for Paws had rescued earlier that week.

Four days later, Jordan was strong enough to have surgery on his leg. Unfortunately, it had to be amputated.

Jordan was released from the hospital and began to thrive at the home of his loving foster mom, Lisa Chiarelli. His fur-legged foster sisters, Lola and Frankie, were also happy to look after him.

After a few weeks of physical therapy, you’d never know that Jordan has fewer than four legs. The small pup has no problem keeping up with his big (literally) sisters.

“Though Jordan lost his leg, he never lost HOPE,” reads a title on Hagar’s video of the puppy’s amazing recovery.

Hope for Paws is asking for a $5 donation; click here to help them make more miracles come true. Remember the viral 2012 video of a matted, blind Poodle named Fiona getting an amazing makeover? That was also the work of Hope for Paws.

Be warned that parts of this video are very graphic and difficult to watch. A longer, 9-minute version can be viewed on the Hope for Paws website.

Photos via YouTube

White House Fence Jumper Faces Felony Charges for Assaulting Secret Service Dogs

For the seventh time this year, someone has jumped the fence surrounding the White House. But the latest trespasser, Dominic Adesanya, didn’t get very far yesterday. Secret Service dogs Hurricane and Jordan immediately chased him down.

When the dogs confronted him, Adesanya punched and kicked them — one of them severely. So, along with other charges, he is also facing two felony counts for animal assault, thanks to the Federal Law Enforcement Animal Protection Act of 2000. This act makes it a federal felony to kill or inflict serious bodily injury on any federal police dog or horse.

“This person didn’t just illegally enter White House grounds — he attempted to seriously injure two law enforcement animals doing their duty,” Humane Society of the United States President Wayne Pacelle stated today in a press release.

“We support his prosecution under the Federal Law Enforcement Animal Protection Act, and hope that a conviction and prison sentence deters other would-be criminals from hurting dogs or horses doing their work to protect our country.”

After being treated by a veterinarian for minor bruising, Hurricane and Jordan are doing fine. “Both K-9s were cleared for duty by the veterinarian,” Edwin Donovan, a Secret Service spokesman, wrote in an email to the Washington Post.

Like all 25 Secret Service dogs, Hurricane and Jordan are Belgian Malinois. The agency prefers this breed because they are intelligent, strong and obedient, and can run twice as fast as a human. Plus, the agency says on its website, these dogs are more agile and have more energy than German Shepherds, another popular K-9 breed.

According to the @SecretService Twitter account, Hurricane is 6 years old and “enjoys playing with his Kong toy.” Jordan is 5 and “enjoys walks around White House.”

So where were Hurricane, Jordan and other Secret Service dogs last month, when Omar J. Gonzalez jumped the White House fence and made it all the way inside to the East Room?

The dogs were not released during that incident, the Washington Post reports. That decision is part of the review of Department of Homeland Security breakdowns that is currently being conducted by security and operations experts.

The Secret Service started using dogs in 1975. The dogs and their handlers train for 20 weeks at a facility in Maryland. As part of the agency’s Uniformed Division, each dog is trained for a specific skill, such as bomb sniffing.

The only duty of Hurricane, Jordan and other dogs who work on the grounds of the White House is to subdue intruders.

“Once you release the dogs to their objective, there’s not much that can stop them,” former Secret Service Director Ralph Basham told the Washington Post. “Take them down, slam into them. There are certain parts of the body they are trained to attack. They are trained to stop the intruder and give the handler time to respond.”

Photos via Twitter

 

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