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California’s Brutal Underground Market for Puppies Exposed in L.A. Times Investigation

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Following the Southwest Dog Auction, dogs in cages are transported inside a packed white van in Bentonville, Arkansas. (Francine Orr/Los Angeles Times)

After California made it illegal for pet stores to sell puppies in 2019, a vast underground market developed supplied by breeders in the Midwest that ship truckloads of puppies here. A new Los Angeles Times investigation found that often those puppies had been born in mass breeding facilities where they were neglected and not given adequate medical care. Families, who paid thousands of dollars for pets they were told were bred locally, often ended up with sick animals. Over the course of 14 months, the Times investigated how these unscrupulous puppy supply chains operate, the lack of protections for dogs, and why abusive breeders and brokers face few consequences. We’ll talk with the reporters about their investigation and how you can avoid getting duped by unscrupulous sellers.

Guests:

Melody Gutierrez, investigative reporter, Los Angeles Times

Alene Tchekmedyian, investigative reporter, Los Angeles Times

Melanie Sadek, president, Valley Humane Society

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