ASPCA Sues USDA for Enabling Cruel Puppy Mill
Despite a long and troubled history of animal care violations, USDA continues to license
The Animal Welfare Act (AWA) was enacted to protect animals who are used in for profit businesses, including high-volume commercial dog dealers who breed and sell dogs wholesale to pet stores or research facilities. The ASPCA's complaint alleges that USDA routinely licenses dog dealers like Kruse, despite the agency's direct knowledge and observation of conditions, care, and practices that fall far below the meager standards required by the AWA. The USDA's own inspection reports detail horrific treatment of breeding dogs kept caged in Kruse's massive
"The USDA's handling of Steve Kruse is emblematic of the agency's continued failure to protect dogs in puppy mills, and the agency's outright refusal to simply do its job," said
In addition to licensing Kruse directly, the USDA has knowingly and unlawfully issued separate licenses for commercial kennels on properties owned by Kruse, which are operated by other licensees and pre-stocked with Kruse's dogs – enabling him to maximize the number of dogs he produces while keeping his risk low. Hundreds of Kruse's dogs cycle through these businesses every month and thousands of these puppies flow from
"Records obtained by the ASPCA revealed that the USDA is fully aware that Kruse's agents are acting under the control and direction of Kruse, yet the USDA continues to license these facilities, enabling Kruse to shield himself from all risks and liability when violations of the Animal Welfare Act are discovered at his properties," said Hensley. "Since 2022, the ASPCA has filed nine complaints with the USDA concerning Kruse and his associates. Yet, the USDA has consistently refused to respond to this unlawful licensing arrangement. By sanctioning Kruse's massive breeding scheme, the USDA has violated its own regulations and is continuing to endanger the welfare of countless animals."
One breeder who operated a puppy mill under this arrangement with Kruse is the notorious
The ASPCA Legal Advocacy department focuses on increasing legal protections for animals across the country and shaping stronger animal welfare laws through the judicial system. In recent years, the ASPCA has successfully sued the USDA under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) for the agency's failure to fulfill its legal obligation to disclose animal welfare records related to the treatment of dogs warehoused by federally-licensed commercial breeders, and the organization also has an ongoing lawsuit against the USDA, challenging the agency's non-enforcement policies that allow dog dealers to violate the law. A recent ASPCA report analyzing the USDA's own data shows that last year, USDA inspectors documented over 1,000 violations of care at more than 400 of the dog breeding facilities that the agency licenses but only took action against four dog dealers.
For more information on the ASPCA's efforts to protect dogs in commercial breeding facilities, visit www.aspca.org.
About the ASPCA®
Founded in 1866, the ASPCA® (The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals®) was the first animal welfare organization to be established in
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SOURCE ASPCA
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