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Irish Wolfhound History
An áit a bhuil do chroí is ann a
thabharfas do chosa thú.
Your feet will bring you to where your heart is.
DNA tracks mutilated dog’s owner
Mark Tighe
The Sunday Times August 13, 2006
THE Irish Greyhound Board (IGB) is using DNA
profiling for the first time to bring to book an owner who allegedly
hacked off the ears of his racing dog so it could not be identified.
The greyhound, which was abandoned in the Co Waterford resort after
being mutilated, is being kept at a secret location until
disciplinary hearings by an IGB panel conclude.
The IGB will also hand its evidence to gardai in Tramore who are
expected to bring criminal proceedings against the man for animal
cruelty.
A hair sample from the dog was analysed and compared to genetic
records held in a central database of all Irish greyhounds, which
revealed its identity along with that of its Munster-based owner.
The two-year-old dog, now named Aoife after the vet who treated her,
is being kept hidden by the Waterford Society for the Protection of
Cruelty to Animals (WSPCA) which fears the animal may be kidnapped
while the case is still in progress.
“We don’t want to expose her to undesirables, who could find out
where she is,” said Andrew Quinn of WSPCA. “We just relocated her
again to keep her safe. Until the case comes to a conclusion she
won’t be re-homed officially. But she is extremely happy where she
is with other greyhounds. She is fit and has put weight back on.”
Last month, a Sunday Times investigation revealed that thousands of
greyhounds in the UK were slaughtered after they underperformed at
races. Last year just under 24,000 greyhounds were bred in Ireland,
about 60% of which were exported to Britain.
Aoife first came to the attention of the WSPCA after it received
dozens of calls from motorists who spotted her wandering around
Tramore in a “frightened state”. It took more than eight hours to
capture her. “As you can imagine she is some runner,” said Quinn.
“She had the whole of Tramore chasing after her but eventually she
got tired and went to ground. She was afraid of people but not cars
so we drove up to her and caught her on the snatch poll from the van
and then threw a duvet over her.”
After she was caught the greyhound was brought to a vet who treated
her for dehydration and loss of blood from her severed ears.
Following local media attention the WSPCA received over €2,000 in
donations from people appalled at her condition, including money and
a card from children at a pre-school in Kerry. The money will be to
pay veterinary bills.
“People like this — and they are the exception in the greyhound
community — are mean bastards who wouldn’t even spend the money on
an anaesthetic. It’s sickening what some people do to dogs,” said
Quinn.
All racing greyhounds are required to have identifying tattoos in
their ears. Animal welfare groups have reported finding several
abandoned dogs with their ears mutilated by their owners who don’t
want the dog traced back to them.
The Irish Coursing Club (ICC) now requires all breeding sires
(males) and bitches (females) to have their DNA registered in a
central database. This enabled the investigation by IGB stewards,
who took a sample of Aoife’s hair for analysis and were able to
confirm, “100%”, the dog’s sire and its registered owner.
The ICC is responsible for keeping the greyhound stud book and
records of greyhounds bred in Ireland each year. The DNA records,
kept at Weatherbys Laboratory in Kildare, have been used to
guarantee a dog’s pedigree but this is the first case of DNA being
used to track an abusive owner.
The DNA evidence was used to back up interviews conducted after the
IGB received a tip-off from somebody familiar with Aoife’s markings
who saw them in a photograph of the dog on the front of Greyhound
Weekly. This led the team in the direction of a Munster-based
greyhound owner.
The investigation team will present its evidence to the IGB control
committee within two weeks. If Aoife’s owner is convicted with the
charge of cruelty and maltreatment of the greyhound, the man will be
hit with a fine and banned from owning greyhounds and attending
greyhound venues. The maximum fine is set at €2,000 but the
committee is authorised to increase this if the case is deemed
sufficiently serious.
“It is important for this case to be resolved,” said DJ Histon,
welfare manager at the IGB. “We abhor any act of cruelty on any dog
and the feeling on the ground is that this must be fully prosecuted.
DNA is a great source of information and hopefully this will send a
strong message to anyone who would contemplate such an act in the
future.”
Jerry Desmond, ICC chief executive, denied that there was an
oversupply of greyhounds in Ireland. “It’s like any industry, supply
meets demand. Demand has fallen in the UK so we have seen the number
of dogs born in Ireland fall in the last year.”
Source: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/newspapers/sunday_times/ireland/article607524.ece