Pet shop faces investigation for possible animal abuse
by Michelle Camerlingo / Press-Banner
Apr 08, 2010 | 1843 views | 9 9 comments | 18 18 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Round Up Pet Center is the target of an investigation after dead rodents and fish were found there last week, more than a month after the business shut its doors.

Santa Cruz County Animal Services officials said it is uncertain whether the animals and fish were already dead when the business closed or died because of abandonment.

“Right now, we’re still reviewing the case thoroughly,” animal control officer Todd Stosuy said.

It’s uncertain what charges the owners will face, Stosuy said.

State law requires that pet store owners check on all animals in their care at least once a day and provide adequate food, water and sanitation, as well as enough space for the creatures. Violations are punishable by fines of as much as $1,000 per abuse.

“I’m definitely looking at this pretty aggressively and will interview anyone and everyone I can,” Stosuy said.

A former employee, who asked to remain anonymous but provided a pay stub as proof of employment, said the animal conditions at Round Up were gruesome. The employee said there were often dead birds, large rodents, fish and reptiles in the shop. Many of the mice were kept in fish aquariums instead of cages, the employee said, and they would often die from the ammonia fumes from their urine.

Animals that clients dropped off for boarding would go unfed, and the aviaries in which birds were kept were never cleaned, according to the employee.

“They just told us to add another of layer of bedding so no one would see. Once a coworker and I cleaned out an aviary in one of the backrooms, and the bedding was 3 feet high filled with dead birds. It was pitch black in there, and birds need light to survive,” the former employee wrote in an e-mail.

Round Up Pet Center’s former owners, Brenda and Brian Sanders, could not be reached for comment.

Round Up operated out of King’s Village Shopping Center on Mount Hermon Road before it went out of business in late February, because the owners could not afford the rent.

Kings Village Shopping Center maintenance workers had gone in to clean out the 5,000-square-foot commercial space when they discovered fish, snails, crabs and crawfish in aquariums March 31.

The Sanders, who purchased Round Up in 2005, removed a lot of the store’s inventory but left behind other stock, such as pet food, aquarium accessories, display racks and shelves.

Representatives from an auction house went through the property last week to determine what could be sold to pay back the bank, Kings Village management said.

There has been some confusion about Round Up’s ties to the recently opened Animal House on Scotts Valley Drive. Signs were posted outside of Round Up a couple of weeks ago urging customers to go to Animal House for their pet needs.

But Animal House manager Brian Perea said his outfit has no affiliation with Round Up Pet Center.

Perea said Brenda Sanders put up the signs so former customers would know they had somewhere to get food for their pets.



At a glance

• WHAT: People who are unable to care for their pets can take them to Santa Cruz County Animal Services Authority shelters in Live Oak, 2200 Seventh Ave., or Watsonville, 580 Airport Blvd.

• INFO: www.scanimalservices.us
Comments
(9)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
Molly Golly
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April 19, 2010
Good golly. Looks like "half truths" are the words of the week.
SV Resident
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April 19, 2010
Please stay on top of this story, Press-Banner. The Sentinel appears to have given it up after several fluffy stories repeating the "not me" half-truths spouted by the participants. Please continue to investigate and share your results.
Apply Hugh Jass
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April 14, 2010
to oversee the library. Sounds like the right critic to balance out the zealots. It is like earmarks keep getting added that increase the cost.
Hugh Jass
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April 14, 2010
This comment was removed for the use of profanity. Please refrain from using profanity in posts on the Press-Banner Web site. Thank you!
APPLY Taylors
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April 12, 2010
comments to the Library purchase, plans for remodel, etc. Looking forward, these are million dollar decisions that could use attention to the smallest creature/amount, before it is too late. Finding one cost savings could result in cost savings much greater than $10 worth of feed animals. Looking back, whats done is done,and plenty of exposure to help prevent it happening again. Your attention on the expenditures might make you a hero for preventing a SAD, or disastrous situation.
Hugh Jass
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April 11, 2010
This incident has been tried in the press.

I think that the landlords ( the Ow's) are as much or more to blame than Brenda and Bryan.

Why did they take so long to re-enter the property?

Why was it left after weeks of closure?

If your a landlord and illegal activity (meth lab,whorehouse, crack house), you can be charged as an accessory even if you are not aware of your tenants activities.

Where is the oversite of your own property?

I'm sure you collected money from them, ever pop in and see how your property was being used? Most good landlords do that...
Taylor Cooper
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April 10, 2010
This is to "Let's Talk Budgets" an oversight is when you forget to send a card,or forget to pay a

bill. The Round Up Pet store committed a crime. No one is trying to persecute them or cause them financial ruin, but every action has a reaction.

Scotts Valley had been very tolerant of that gross pet store.

The owners filled their cage with bedding and now they have to sleep in it, just like the birds and hamsters.

It is also illegal to board pets and not feed or care for them, that is stealing.

You are forgiven, feel better? Don't read the story if it upsets. Go to the library and pick up the book on "Animal Care for Dummies".

Lets talk Budgets
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April 09, 2010
Library remodel, stuff that will be weighing upon our budgets for years. How about you forgive someone an oversight, and let God sort them out. Are you just trying to keep comments on city budget, and future of this city buried? It was sad occurrence. We can only assume this is another attack on someone you dislike, who offended you, and you are obsessed with destroying them financially, and other ways. This has become a pattern in this town, when certain person targets one individual, over, and over, and over, and over, and over. What is your real motivation?
Scotts Valley Sal
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April 09, 2010
Who owns the Animal House pet store on Scotts Valley Drive? At their Grand Opening, before all the bad publicity with Round Up Pet Store, Brian at The Animal House Pet Store was very clear that they were partners with the Round Up people, now they deny any affliation with Round Up. Brian also claimed he was the owner of the store.


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