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Dogs Are Dying On Skid Row and City Officials Are Letting It Happen, Animal Activist Says

Dogs Are Dying On Skid Row and City Officials Are Letting It Happen, Animal Activist Says

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Dogs Are Dying On Skid Row and City Officials Are Letting It Happen, Animal Activist Says originally appeared on L.A. Mag.
City officials are being accused by a prominent animal rights activist of ignoring horrifying abuses being inflicted on Skid Row dogs that include being injected with drugs by addicts, caged under heavy tarps in sweltering temperatures, beaten, stabbed and even sexually attacked. Rebecca Corry, the nationally recognized founder of Stand Up For Pits Foundation, said her pleas with the Los Angeles Police Department, Mayor Karen Bass and Animal Services, to do something about pain being inflicted on dogs on Skid Row have gone unanswered even after the body of a woman was found in a homeless encampment where her remains were being eaten by dogs."The rage I have, the sadness is unbelievable. We have seen Skid Row rampant with dog abuse, but the City of Los Angeles has done nothing. Mayor Bass, stop ignoring us," Corry told Los Angeles in a passionate interview. Her foundation also posted a video containing a number of the allegations she says are being ignored by officials.
The city's budget could cut $4.8 million from the Animal Services department. Bass's office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Social media is ablaze with videos of some of the ongoing dog abuse, but there is no enforcement or police response whatsover Corry says, even after she bombards the LA Animal Services Department and the North Central Animal Shelter, which services the areas being reported, with calls for help.
The city dismantled its animal cruelty task force in 2021, making it even harder to stop the horrendous mistreatment of dogs in plain view amid the poverty and despair that stretches over the 54 blocks that comprises Skid Row. Corry also had harsh words for Los Angeles District Attorney Nathan Hochman, who has vowed to make the pursuit of animal cruelty cases a key initiative for his office.
"He promised the public he would do more to protect animals, and no one is going to Skid Row and doing anyone," Corry said. Hochman's office said that it remains "firmly committed to the aggressive prosecution of animal cruelty," and points to the 25 animal cruelty cases currently being prosecuted. Among the most egregious cases include: a Los Angeles man is charged with drugging and killing a female bulldog in April; a man in Hollywood is charged with tossing a terrier to its death from a fourth-floor balcony; and in Sante Fe Springs another man is charged with stabbing a German Shepherd with a sickle. "It is important to understand that under the law, law enforcement agencies are the first to investigate these crimes," Hochman's office said in a statement. "A case must be presented to our office for legal review and consideration before we can act. That is the required legal procedure, and we follow it diligently. Animal cruelty is a serious crime, and this office will continue to treat it as such."
Corry insists that she called the LAPD and Animal Services about the dogs caged under a tarp and no one responded. "These dogs could die out there. Why don't we care? Empty promises are no longer going to be tolerated by the animal welfare community."
This story was originally reported by L.A. Mag on May 30, 2025, where it first appeared.

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