Debt Collector Seizes Family’s Prized Pug and Sells It on eBay

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BERLIN — When a debt collector came calling on a family in a northwestern German town about unpaid bills, the official was looking to seize the family’s most valuable asset.

The collector considered other items but settled on a prized female pug named Edda and seized the dog — which the city then sold on eBay for 750 euros.

The city spokesman called it “a pragmatic solution” to an outstanding debt.

But the case has prompted outrage from animal rights activists and others in the city of Ahlen, population 57,000, and raised questions about the cruelty of the seizure, prompting debate about whether any German laws had been broken.

“I didn’t know what was more outrageous, the fact that they seized the dog, or the fact that they put it on eBay,” said Birgitt Thiesmann, an activist at Vier Pfoten, a German animal protection charity.

The unidentified family of five — including three young children — had fallen behind on their bills. The husband was left a paraplegic after a work-related injury, according to local news reports. The family owed the city dog taxes, which are levied by cities and communities across Germany, among their other debts to the city. In Ahlen, the tax for having one dog is nearly $90 a year.

“In general, it’s illegal to seize pets for payment,” said Nicoline Schuleit, a lawyer who specializes in animals in the neighboring town of Bielefeld. But she noted that exceptions can be made for particularly valuable pets.

The city insisted that the confiscation and subsequent sale of the animal were legal and justified the decision to seize the dog as an asset. Officials said the price of the pug — set at 750 euros (roughly $850) or best offer on eBay, which some called a steal — met the legal test of whether the pug was valuable.

“The employee tried to find a pragmatic solution within the scope of his discretion and decided on the course of action now in question,” said Frank Merschhaus, a spokesman for the city of Ahlen.

But the city said that the fact that the worker had used a private eBay account to list the dog was a “questionable decision.” It also strongly denied local news reports that the debt collector had first considered taking the father’s wheelchair.

The story came to light only after the police officer who purchased the pet pug on eBay, Michaela Jordan, went to local newspapers to announce plans to sue the city for veterinarian bills and the nearly $800 she had paid for the year-old, purebred pup because she discovered that the animal was quite sick.

“I’m really upset,” she told the German tabloid Bild. “The dog had to be operated on four times. In two weeks the fifth operation is scheduled.”

So far, it appears that the officer is keeping the dog. But the local press had reported that the family wants the animal back. And the city of Ahlen is left to debate whether a pug’s commercial value should be used to pay off debts.

Ms. Thiesmann, who has spent nearly a decade rescuing puppies from puppy mills, said what was particularly galling about the case was that the German authorities were usually not so quick to confiscate animals.

Germany’s passions for pets is well known and billions of euros are spent in the country each year on cats, guinea pigs, canaries, parakeets and the like.

So selling a family pet, Ms. Thiesmann said, would be “like putting grandfather on eBay.”



Source : Nytimes