
More than 400 guinea pigs found in hoarder's Los Angeles home, says animal charity
The rescue group, Southern California Guinea Pig Rescue, is asking for the public's help adopting or fostering the animals or for donations to fund their recovery and care.
The owner of the home where the guinea pigs were found was facing eviction if she did not remove the animals from her house. A Los Angeles Animal Services coordinator emailed the SCGPR to alert them to the situation, hoping they could help.
The coordinator believed the woman had approximately 200 guinea pigs in her home, but when volunteers arrived to collect the guinea pigs they found the real number was double the coordinator's estimate.
Valerie Warren, chief executive and co-founder of SCGPR, told the Los Angeles Times that they were told the guinea pigs belonged to a previous tenant who moved out but left the animals behind.
'They just continued to breed and breed and the rest of the people in the house were just overwhelmed,' Warren, who visited the home, said.
Some of the animals were found sick, injured, dehydrated, malnourished, or dead, but many others were found alive and in need of a home and care.
The animals, which typically eat grass hay, vegetables, or animal pellets, were living primarily off of corn husks.
Animal shelters are already struggling for space. After the pandemic, many people gave up pets they'd adopted during lock down. Now, the rescue has hundreds of guinea pigs to care for — and it's taking steps to make sure they don't have any more to deal with by separating the male and female guinea pigs.
Warren said the animals could number nearly 1,000 by November if they're allowed to continue breeding.
'This is a dire situation,' she said. 'This is just a cycle that's not going to end until these guys are all taken in.'
In the meantime, it's unclear if the animals are actually going to be removed from the home. They were reportedly told that an LA Animal Services lieutenant visited the home and determined the animals were healthy and had proper food, water, and shelter — a view the SCGPR does not share.
They put out a press release asking the city to take action to protect the animals.
'We urge City officials and the animal welfare community to fully investigate this case and improve systemic response protocols. Shelter officials must be accountable if anything happens to these animals,' the group said in a press statement.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
3 hours ago
- Reuters
Titan sub disaster was preventable, US finds in scathing report
WASHINGTON, Aug 5 (Reuters) - The catastrophic implosion of the Titan submersible that killed five people in 2023 could have been prevented, a U.S. Coast Guard investigative board found on Tuesday, calling the vessel's safety culture and operational practices 'critically flawed.' The Titan vanished during a descent to the Titanic wreck on a tourist expedition, losing contact with its support ship. After a tense four-day search, its shattered remains were discovered strewn across the seabed 1,600 feet (488 meters) from the bow of the legendary ocean liner that sank in 1912, claiming more than 1,500 lives. OceanGate, the U.S.-based company that managed the tourist submersible, suspended all operations after the incident. A company spokesperson said on Tuesday the company again offered its deepest condolences to the families of those who died "and directed its resources fully towards cooperating with the Coast Guard's inquiry through its completion." The chair of the U.S. Coast Guard Marine Board of Investigation, Jason Neubauer, said the accident was preventable. "There is a need for stronger oversight and clear options for operators who are exploring new concepts outside of the existing regulatory framework," he said in a statement with the release of the 300-page report. Chloe Nargeolet, whose father, French oceanographer Paul-Henri Nargeolet, died on the submersible, said she was satisfied with the investigation. "The OceanGate boss didn't do his job properly and obviously my father didn't know any of that," she said. "It was not random or bad luck, it came from something. It could have been avoided.' The board determined that the primary contributing factors were OceanGate's "inadequate design, certification, maintenance and inspection process for the Titan." It also cited "a toxic workplace culture at OceanGate," an inadequate regulatory framework for submersibles and other novel vessels, and an ineffective whistleblower process. The report added "for several years preceding the incident, OceanGate leveraged intimidation tactics, allowances for scientific operations, and the company's favorable reputation to evade regulatory scrutiny." The board found that OceanGate failed to investigate and address known hull anomalies following its 2022 Titanic expedition. It said data from Titan's realtime monitoring system should have been analyzed and acted on during that expedition. It also criticized OceanGate for failing to properly store the Titan before the 2023 Titanic expedition. The report faulted the absence of a timely Occupational Safety and Health Administration investigation into a 2018 OceanGate whistleblower's complaint combined with a lack of government cooperation, calling them a missed opportunity and added "early intervention may have resulted in OceanGate pursuing regulatory compliance or abandoning their plans."


The Guardian
4 hours ago
- The Guardian
Exiled child returns to Miami's Freedom Tower: ‘They massacred my teddy bear'
Jorge Malagón Márquez's first sighting of Miami's iconic Freedom Tower, the so-called Ellis Island of the south for its role in processing more than half a million Cubans fleeing Fidel Castro's communist revolution, was through a flood of tears. It was May 1967, and his family had just arrived from Havana on one of the first so-called Freedom flights ferrying refugees allowed to escape the dictator's tightening grip on the island. His parents, Eduardo and Irma, held in their hands two small suitcases and his seven-year-old brother Ed. The bewildered Jorge, aged five, clutched the shredded remains of what just two hours previously had been his beloved teddy bear. 'At the airport in Havana, the military people there would check you to make sure that you weren't smuggling out jewelry, diamonds, whatever,' he said. 'They took my teddy bear, they took a razor blade. You see why I was traumatized? They cut all the stuffing out of it and handed it back to me, just without any stuffing or whatever, just limp. 'At the Freedom Tower, once we got there, we were separated from our parents. They took my brother and myself to one side, they took our parents to another place for a few hours. And of course we don't speak the language. It's crowded, there's all these strange people. We don't understand what they're saying. All we know is that they massacred my teddy bear, and now they took my parents.' Malagón Márquez's emotional memories of his stressful arrival in Miami as a child are among hundreds captured for a new exhibition of history at the 100-year-old tower, known to the exiles as el refugio (the shelter). The building, a national historic landmark, reopens to the public in September after a multi-year refurbishment. 'The tower is linked culturally and artistically with everything that Miami has become,' he said. 'When it was built it was a beacon out into the bay, the Freedom Tower that ships would use for guidance. 'In images from 1925 it's the dominant feature of the skyline, the tallest building. Now it's dwarfed by everything around it. But that's part of the building's story as well, because the people who came through started to create all of these networks and forge the Miami we have today.' While room after room of static displays and interactive exhibits tell the entire story of the 289ft (88metre) tower, including its early years as the home of the Miami Daily News, and its status as an emblem of the nation's fastest-growing city following the 1920s Miami land boom, its designation as the Cuban Refugee Center from 1962 to 1974 holds the most fascination. The tower's cavernous, pillared reception hall, the first glimpse the new arrivals had of its interior as they awaited medical checks and immigration processing in adjacent rooms, has been painstakingly restored in original Mediterranean revival style. The centrepiece is the attention-grabbing New World Mural 1813, replicating Ponce de León's landing that year in what was later to become known as Florida. The hall contains a display of artefacts of Miami's history. Beyond lie exhibition spaces collectively known as Libertad (freedom), a recreation of the journey Cuban refugees took both in the tower and beyond as they began their new lives in an unfamiliar country. Upstairs, visitors learn of other famous milestone moments in Cuban emigration to Florida, such as the Operación Pedro Pan exodus of 14,000 unaccompanied minors between 1960 and 1962; and the 1980 Mariel boatlift when 125,000 refugees arrived in Miami by sea. Malagón Márquez, now a professor in his 60s teaching history at Miami-Dade College (MDC), the tower's owner since 2005, admits he cried when he saw the period restoration, recreated largely from photographs and the knowledge of historian Paul George, an expert in the development of downtown Miami. Especially poignant, he said, was the black-and-white checkered floor of the reception and processing room. 'The moment we walked in I immediately became that five-year-old little boy again. I got choked up and the tears were just flowing because it was that strong a memory,' he said. 'We were checked out medically. I remember going to a dentist. They gave us food. The most significant memory I have is the government cheese, a big cheap block of it, I guess like Velveeta, in a plain cardboard box. 'Now I love good cheese and wine, but to this day there's nothing like a grilled cheese sandwich with the cheapest possible American processed cheese that there is.' On a wall is la pizarra de la suerte (lucky noticeboard), a pinboard where scores of newcomers would find advertisements for accommodation and jobs, while others learned of limited assistance available through the government's Cuban Refugee Assistance Program – 'a terrible, terrible acronym', Malagón Márquez said. His mother found work as a sewing machinist in a clothing factory, and his father, who had been a political prisoner in the early days of the Castro regime, worked two other lowly paid jobs, one washing dishes in a hotel kitchen. It was, he said, a time of opportunity, but blended with challenges that threatened to overwhelm them. 'I recall the difficulty my parents had finding us a place to live. In Miami in 1967 you'd open the newspaper to find an apartment and it would say, 'no blacks, no Cubans, no dogs',' he said. It is those human tales of survival, fortitude and hope that those behind the tower's anniversary reopening said they sought to pry out. Madeline Pumariega, MDC's president, said that when the restoration project began in 2021, the year following her appointment, she directed its planners to incorporate personal stories such as Malagón Márquez's, and those of her own parents, who also passed through el refugio decades earlier. 'There were these poster boards with pictures of what happened, but there wasn't this real experience, and I thought, 'how does my daughter hear this story as a 21-year-old? And how will her kids hear the story?'' she said. 'We wanted to leverage technology and the way that so many consume their experiences and information along with the first hand storytelling of those that came through here and experienced it.' To that end, one gallery features a giant video wall where visitors can choose any of more than 350 personal stories recorded by those who lived them, or heard them from relatives. The collection is expected to grow. 'We wanted to create Libertad as an exhibit that leads multiple generations through feeling what it is to seek freedom, what it is to search for hope and opportunity, and how this great nation has given their families, their abuelitos, that opportunity,' Pumariega said. The restoration project was funded with a $25m state grant and further awards from groups including the National Endowment for the Humanities and National Trust for Historic Preservation. Opening day will be early in national Hispanic Heritage month, beginning 15 September.


Daily Mail
6 hours ago
- Daily Mail
I was the last person to see man who suffered 'worst death imaginable' - this is why I couldn't save him
A rescuer who was the last person to see a man suffer the 'worst death imaginable' after he became stuck upside down in a cave has revealed the heartbreaking reason why he could not save him. John Jones died after becoming trapped for more than 24 hours in the Nutty Putty Cave in Utah in 2009 after he and his friends decided to explore it. The 26-year-old medical student, who considered himself a keen and experienced explorer, was described to have 'essentially crawled into his own grave' upon his death more than 15 years ago. After setting out to explore the extremely tight 'Birth Canal' area of the cave, John, who stood at 6ft tall, took a wrong turn and mistakenly entered a tiny passageway head-first which measured just 10 inches by 18 inches and became stuck. Trapped in the crevice and unable to turn or move backwards, the 26-year-old father endured '27 hours of claustrophobic hell' while his brother Josh could only watch on helplessly. Cave explorer and YouTuber Brandon Kowallis was the last person to see John alive and despite his tireless efforts to save him, he explained how the rescue mission was impossible from the start. Brandon has spoken about the doomed ordeal in a blog post, recalling the mission on November 25, 2009 at Nutty Putty. By the time he joined, rescuers had already been working to save John for several hours, but he was 'quickly going downhill'. Having been stuck upside down for several hours, the blood in his body that normally flowed to his feet had instead rushed to his head. He was starting to have trouble breathing and his heart was beating twice as fast in order to counteract the gravity to push the continuous flow of blood out of his brain. 'He was in and out of consciousness and had started talking about seeing angels and demons around him', the cave explorer explained. Brandon was asked to crawl down the impossibly tight shaft to check on John, along with fellow rescuer Debbie. What he found haunts him to this day. Brandon could hear a gurgling breath - an indication that fluid was building up in John's lungs, and his legs were twitching violently. 'It looked very bleak. I wondered if it was even possible to get him beyond this point', Brandon said. The rescuer studied the rigging that had been set up by other emergency workers and John's position, trying to find hope. But the reality was cruel. 'It looked like he could only be lifted another foot or two in his current position because of where the webbing was anchored around his knees. After a foot or two his feet would hit the ceiling. And then once he reached the ceiling, there was no way to tilt him to a horizontal position', Brandon explained. 'And then once he reached the ceiling, there was no way to tilt him to a horizontal position. He would have to do it himself, but he was now unconscious. 'And even if we could get him into a horizontal position, he would then have to maneuver the most difficult sections of the passage he was trapped in. 'If he were conscious and had his full strength there was a minute chance he could possibly do it. But even if that was the case it looked grim'. The only remaining solution was to use a jackhammer to widen the narrow tunnel - a desperate, brutal option that could have left John with shattered bones. 'He would be cut up very badly and probably end up with several broken bones, but if nothing else would work, that seemed like the best option.' Brandon spent hours chipping and hammering away at the rocks, but even that proved difficult. 'My estimate was anywhere from three to seven days to get back to where John was'. During this time, a radio was brought down so that John's family could speak to him. 'I think it was his father, mother, and wife who spoke to him, telling him that they loved him and were praying for him and that his father had given him a blessing. 'His wife mentioned a feeling of peace, that everything would be OK. She talked to him about 5 to 10 minutes before I told her that we needed to get back to working at getting him out', Brandon said. Rescuers had to think of their next step, but just before midnight struck, Brandon was asked to check John's vitals, and noticed how his body was close to the temperature of the rocky walls of the cave. He reported his findings to a paramedic who was able to get down to John. 'John Edward Jones was pronounced dead at 11:52, I believe it was.' John's death was put down as cardiac arrest and suffocation. Although John's wife Emily insisted that her husband's body be recovered, it was soon decided that it was too dangerous to recover it. To prevent a future accident the entrance to the passage was collapsed with controlled explosives and filled with concrete. The entrance to the cave was turned into a makeshift memorial for the family with a plaque also installed in memory of John. John left behind his wife Emily and their baby daughter Lizzie. Emily was also expecting their second child at the time of the accident. A baby boy was born the following year who she named after his father.