Demand Plainfield, NJ Stop Sending Homeless Pets to Be Abused


Demand Plainfield, NJ Stop Sending Homeless Pets to Be Abused
The Issue
At the beginning of 2024, the Plainfield City Council unanimously approved by resolution a $156,000/year contract for Aranwood Kennels for animal control services. Homeless pets began being shipped over an hour from Plainfield to Mahwah, NJ where they had no hope of being adopted because it was a boarding facility and not a rescue or adoption agency. Now we have come to find out that the animals at Aranwood are being abused, starved, kept in filthy conditions, and thrown into dumpsters alive.
Join me in demanding that the City of Plainfield immediately contract with a safe, reputable animal control services provider while it collaborates with the Plainfield Area Humane Society to ensure that there is a long term, sustainable plan in place to house, feed, and find homes for animals in need. Further, demand that the City act against this man and his business for abusing our animals.
Full details of the abuse and charges against this kennel operator:
Authorities took Richard A. DuBarton III, 57, into custody and removed 47 malnourished and severely weakened dogs from the Aranwood Kennels after finding them locked outside in freezing temperatures, they said.
They'd been left in dog runs "with feces and urine that [DuBarton] failed to clean up," a complaint filed by Mahwah police says. "Multiple dogs were seen shivering and unable to stand up."
The dogs who were removed from the kennel on Stag Hill Road "were all vetted and given to local dog rescues for the time being," Mahwah Detective Sgt. Eric Larsen said on Wednesday, Feb. 28.
Most of those being boarded were released to their owners, according to law enforcement sources who added that some were to be euthanized because of bite history and aggression.
DuBarton retains more than two dozen personal dogs of his own, they noted.
It all began when a customer who boarded a dog at Aranwood called police after hearing whimpering coming from inside the parking lot bin and making the horrific discovery, Larsen said.
Stuffed into a garbage bag, the Dutch Shepherd was barely alive and "appeared to be malnourished and near death," he said.
The dog was taken to a nearby animal hospital and police seized DuBarton, who "claimed someone must have dumped the dog there," the sergeant said.
Animal Humane Officers Nicole DiPasquale, Sean Hayes, and Micheal Silano learned that DuBarton had taken custody of the dog in Irvington, one of the towns for which they said he works as an animal control officer.
The owner told them the dog was turned over months earlier to Irvington police, who, in turn, summoned DuBarton, Larsen said.
The Mahwah officers contacted all of the jurisdictions that employ DuBarton "and advised [them] of what had occurred at his facility," the sergeant added.
DuBarton, a retired Marine who is also a certified police K-9 instructor, previously made headlines when he was fired as Fair Lawn's animal control officer for posting a video on YouTube in 2011 showing an albino cobra whose bite left a man close to death.
Last week, members of the township police and health departments, the Bergen County SPCA and Tyco Animal Control went to Aranwood and found 47 dogs "locked outside in temperatures below 32 degrees...without access to heat and water," a complaint filed in Superior Court in Hackensack says.
"Multiple dogs were seen shivering and unable to stand up," the complaint written by Silano says.
Many "appeared to be malnourished," it says.
DuBarton was charged with:
Exposing an animal to adverse conditions;
Failing to provide medical care to an animal, resulting in serious bodily injury;
Failing to provide a sanitary environment;
Failing to provide water.
He was released pending a March 8 date in Central Judicial Processing Court in Hackensack.

The Issue
At the beginning of 2024, the Plainfield City Council unanimously approved by resolution a $156,000/year contract for Aranwood Kennels for animal control services. Homeless pets began being shipped over an hour from Plainfield to Mahwah, NJ where they had no hope of being adopted because it was a boarding facility and not a rescue or adoption agency. Now we have come to find out that the animals at Aranwood are being abused, starved, kept in filthy conditions, and thrown into dumpsters alive.
Join me in demanding that the City of Plainfield immediately contract with a safe, reputable animal control services provider while it collaborates with the Plainfield Area Humane Society to ensure that there is a long term, sustainable plan in place to house, feed, and find homes for animals in need. Further, demand that the City act against this man and his business for abusing our animals.
Full details of the abuse and charges against this kennel operator:
Authorities took Richard A. DuBarton III, 57, into custody and removed 47 malnourished and severely weakened dogs from the Aranwood Kennels after finding them locked outside in freezing temperatures, they said.
They'd been left in dog runs "with feces and urine that [DuBarton] failed to clean up," a complaint filed by Mahwah police says. "Multiple dogs were seen shivering and unable to stand up."
The dogs who were removed from the kennel on Stag Hill Road "were all vetted and given to local dog rescues for the time being," Mahwah Detective Sgt. Eric Larsen said on Wednesday, Feb. 28.
Most of those being boarded were released to their owners, according to law enforcement sources who added that some were to be euthanized because of bite history and aggression.
DuBarton retains more than two dozen personal dogs of his own, they noted.
It all began when a customer who boarded a dog at Aranwood called police after hearing whimpering coming from inside the parking lot bin and making the horrific discovery, Larsen said.
Stuffed into a garbage bag, the Dutch Shepherd was barely alive and "appeared to be malnourished and near death," he said.
The dog was taken to a nearby animal hospital and police seized DuBarton, who "claimed someone must have dumped the dog there," the sergeant said.
Animal Humane Officers Nicole DiPasquale, Sean Hayes, and Micheal Silano learned that DuBarton had taken custody of the dog in Irvington, one of the towns for which they said he works as an animal control officer.
The owner told them the dog was turned over months earlier to Irvington police, who, in turn, summoned DuBarton, Larsen said.
The Mahwah officers contacted all of the jurisdictions that employ DuBarton "and advised [them] of what had occurred at his facility," the sergeant added.
DuBarton, a retired Marine who is also a certified police K-9 instructor, previously made headlines when he was fired as Fair Lawn's animal control officer for posting a video on YouTube in 2011 showing an albino cobra whose bite left a man close to death.
Last week, members of the township police and health departments, the Bergen County SPCA and Tyco Animal Control went to Aranwood and found 47 dogs "locked outside in temperatures below 32 degrees...without access to heat and water," a complaint filed in Superior Court in Hackensack says.
"Multiple dogs were seen shivering and unable to stand up," the complaint written by Silano says.
Many "appeared to be malnourished," it says.
DuBarton was charged with:
Exposing an animal to adverse conditions;
Failing to provide medical care to an animal, resulting in serious bodily injury;
Failing to provide a sanitary environment;
Failing to provide water.
He was released pending a March 8 date in Central Judicial Processing Court in Hackensack.

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Petition created on February 28, 2024