Pet Fail.
Yeah, i'm sure a lot of other people that got charged left them "accidentally" too.
To these people like her animals are like children, so what if it was her baby? Oops, accident, oh well?
To these people like her animals are like children, so what if it was her baby? Oops, accident, oh well?
Originally Posted by tunerjetta29,Aug 26 2009, 10:56 AM
Yeah, i'm sure a lot of other people that got charged left them "accidentally" too.
To these people like her animals are like children, so what if it was her baby? Oops, accident, oh well?
To these people like her animals are like children, so what if it was her baby? Oops, accident, oh well?

You should need to take a IQ test to have pets and kids.
A dog belonging to the CEO of the Richmond, Va., Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals died after accidentally being left alone for four hours in her hot car.
I know this isn't funny but the irony gave me a good chuckle.
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SPCA exec's dog dies after being left in hot car - The 16-year-old dog dies of kidney failure after being left for four hours.
RICHMOND, Virginia - An executive for an anti-animal cruelty group says her 16-year-old blind and deaf dog died after she accidentally left him in her hot car for four hours.
Robin Starr, the CEO of the Richmond Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, says she didn't realize "Louie" was in the car until noon. Starr's husband, Ed, told the Richmond Times-Dispatch he put the dog in her car as she got ready for work Aug. 19. She often took the dog to work with her.
Robin Starr took the dog to two clinics, but he died of kidney failure.
The National Weather Service says the temperature had reached 91 degrees by noon that day.
The board of the SPCA says it still supports Starr, who has been CEO since 1997 and does not plan to resign. It was unclear whether she would be charged.
Robin Starr, the CEO of the Richmond Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, says she didn't realize "Louie" was in the car until noon. Starr's husband, Ed, told the Richmond Times-Dispatch he put the dog in her car as she got ready for work Aug. 19. She often took the dog to work with her.
Robin Starr took the dog to two clinics, but he died of kidney failure.
The National Weather Service says the temperature had reached 91 degrees by noon that day.
The board of the SPCA says it still supports Starr, who has been CEO since 1997 and does not plan to resign. It was unclear whether she would be charged.








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