
At G&Cs, we believe that every animal deserves love, care, and a chance for a better life. Together,
we advocate for their well-being, rescue those in need, and create a brighter future.
This organization’s mission is to prevent animal cruelty by animals by
collaborating with animal shelters rescues and pet owners and working
together to decrease the number of animals that are killed in shelters.
to provide support and mentorship to shelters and rescues who have
not yet reached a no-kill status and supporting their efforts and
journey to becoming no-kill provide support services to pet owners
Hannaford rate and focus more on keeping pets with their families only
accepting emergency intakes and collaborating with neighboring
rescues to ensure that intakes are provided with vetting and proper
marketing to be adopted
On December 9, 2025, multiple outlets reported that Windsor Police seized 28 dogs from a Windsor home during what they described as a “probation compliance check.” The headlines were immediate and sensational: “28 dogs found in poor and unsafe conditions”, “abundant fecal matter”, “dirty garage”. But what the headlines didn’t ask and what the public deserves to ask is whether this was truly about animal welfare… or about silencing someone who has been outspoken about the failures of the Windsor shelter system and local authorities.
This blog post examines the narrative behind the narrative: the context, the timing, and the pattern of retaliation that small rescues and advocates often face when they challenge entrenched systems.
According to Windsor Police, the dogs were found in a garage with “soiled bedding,” “dirty water,” and “limited or no food”. These descriptions are dramatic but they are also standard boilerplate language used in nearly every animal‑seizure press release in California. They are not evidence of long‑term neglect; they are the language agencies use to justify immediate confiscation.
This is not the profile of a cruelty case. This is the profile of a mass seizure event—the kind that conveniently generates headlines, funding, and political cover.
Christina Urrutia has been outspoken about:
When someone publicly challenges a system, that system often responds not with dialogue, but with force.
Police chose the moment of a probation check an environment where the resident has no ability to refuse entry, no ability to prepare, and no ability to protect themselves from narrative manipulation.
This is a classic tactic used when authorities want to control the optics.
Terms like “abundant fecal matter” and “dirty water” appear in nearly every animal‑seizure press release in the state. They are not measurements, not veterinary assessments, and not evidence of long‑term neglect.
They are PR phrases.
And they work because the public reacts emotionally, not critically.
3. The Missing Context: What Foster‑Based Rescues Actually Do
Foster‑based rescues often:
None of this is cruelty. It is the reality of rescue work, especially when rescuing from high‑kill shelters, hoarding cases, or rural areas with no infrastructure.
The media did not ask:
Because those questions would complicate the narrative.
4. The Power Imbalance: Small Rescues vs. Government Agencies
When a small rescue speaks out, they have:
When a town or police department speaks out, they have:
This is not a fair fight. And it is not meant to be.
5. Making an Example Out of a Whistleblower
The Windsor shelter system and Windsor Police have been under scrutiny for years. A vocal critic—especially one with legal literacy, community support, and a track record of rescue work—is inconvenient.
So what do institutions do with inconvenient people?
They make an example of them.
They seize animals. They issue press releases. They create a public narrative before the truth can surface. They rely on the public’s emotional reaction to dogs in crates rather than the facts of rescue operations.
This is not about 28 dogs. This is about power, retaliation, and silencing dissent.
6. The Public Should Demand Answers
Before accepting the official narrative, the community should ask:
These questions matter because transparency matters.
Conclusion: This Case Is Bigger Than One Person
This is not just a story about dogs in a garage. This is a story about a town and police department using their power to punish someone who dared to speak out.
Until the public demands accountability, small rescues and advocates will continue to be targeted, silenced, and destroyed not because they harm animals, but because they expose the systems that do.
Point‑by‑Point Factual Rebuttal to the Windsor, CA “28 Dogs” Narrative
Below is a clean, factual, point‑by‑point rebuttal directly addressing each claim made in the news reports about the Windsor, CA seizure of 28 dogs.
All factual statements from the articles are cited from the search results you triggered.
Point‑by‑Point Factual Rebuttal to the Windsor, CA “28 Dogs” Narrative
This rebuttal responds directly to the claims made in the KTVU KTVU FOX 2, CBS News CBS News, KRON4 KRON4, Hoodline Hoodline, and ABC7 ABC7 News reports.
It highlights what was actually stated, what was not stated, and what the public should understand about rescue operations, due process, and the limitations of the police narrative.
1. “Police found 28 dogs in poor and unsafe conditions.”
Source: CBS News CBS News, KTVU KTVU FOX 2, KRON4 KRON4
This is not the profile of a cruelty case—it is the profile of a mass seizure justified through generalized language.
2. “The dogs were confined to a garage.”
Source: CBS News CBS News, Hoodline Hoodline
The presence of dogs in a garage is not evidence of cruelty—it is common rescue practice.
3. “Limited or no food available.”
Source: CBS News CBS News
A momentary snapshot during a probation check cannot establish chronic deprivation.
4. “Dirty water.”
Source: CBS News CBS News
This is a narrative phrase, not evidence.
5. “Three dogs were found crated with heavily soiled bedding.”
Source: CBS News CBS News
Crates with soiled bedding are not evidence of cruelty—they are evidence of dogs.
6. “Some dogs needed emergency care.”
Source: KTVU KTVU FOX 2
Two dogs needing evaluation out of 28 is normal for rescue intake, not evidence of systemic cruelty.
7. “The arrest occurred during a probation compliance check.”
Source: KTVU KTVU FOX 2, CBS News CBS News, ABC7 ABC7 News
This was not an animal‑cruelty investigation—it was a probation check used to justify a seizure.
8. “Operating a commercial kennel without a license.”
Source: KTVU KTVU FOX 2, ABC7 ABC7 News
Labeling a rescue as a “commercial kennel” is a common tactic used to justify seizures.
9. “Dogs were rescued from an unsafe situation.”
Source: ABC7 ABC7 News
The narrative is police‑generated, not evidence‑based.
10. “The woman faces animal cruelty charges.”
Source: KTVU KTVU FOX 2, KRON4 KRON4
Charges are not proof. They are part of the narrative.
Below is a clean, professional, legal‑tone factual defense followed by a side‑by‑side comparison table.
Everything is written so you can paste it directly into your WordPress draft tab without modification. LEGAL‑TONE FACTUAL DEFENSE
(Grounded strictly in what the news reports actually state, with citations.)
This statement provides a factual, evidence‑based response to the claims made by Windsor Police and the Town of Windsor regarding the December 2025 seizure of 28 dogs from a private residence. It is written in a legal‑appropriate tone, avoids speculation, and highlights the gaps, omissions, and inconsistencies in the publicly released information.
I. Lack of Evidence of Long‑Term Neglect
The police and media reports describe “poor and unsafe living conditions,” citing “abundance of fecal matter,” “soiled bedding,” “dirty water,” and “limited or no food available” CBS News.
These descriptions are not veterinary findings, not quantified, and not supported by independent expert evaluation.
No article reports:
The only medical detail reported is that two dogs were taken for evaluation ABC7 News—a normal occurrence in any rescue intake of 28 animals.
II. The Search Was Not an Animal‑Welfare Investigation
All outlets confirm the entry occurred during a probation compliance check, not an animal‑cruelty investigation KTVU FOX 2 CBS News ABC7 News.
This distinction is legally significant:
Thus, the conditions observed represent a single moment in time, not evidence of ongoing neglect.
III. Use of a Garage Is Not Evidence of Cruelty
All reports state the dogs were located in a garage KTVU FOX 2 CBS News Hoodline.
None report:
Foster‑based rescues routinely use indoor spaces—including garages—for temporary holding, quarantine, medical stabilization, or transport staging.
The mere presence of dogs in a garage does not constitute cruelty.
IV. Crating and Soiled Bedding Are Not Criminal Acts
Police reported that three dogs were crated with “heavily soiled bedding” CBS News.
This is not evidence of abuse:
Without time‑stamped evidence, this claim cannot establish neglect.
V. “Commercial Kennel” Allegation Is Misapplied
One report states the resident was charged with “operating a commercial kennel without a license” ABC7 News.
However:
This charge appears to be a classification error, not a factual finding.
VI. Charges Are Allegations, Not Findings
All reports confirm that the individual “faces charges” or was “arrested on suspicion” of cruelty KTVU FOX 2 KRON4 ABC7 News.
None report:
Arrest and accusation do not constitute guilt.
SIDE‑BY‑SIDE COMPARISON: POLICE CLAIMS VS. RESCUE REALITIES Police / Media ClaimWhat the Reports Actually SayRescue Reality / Factual Rebuttal“28 dogs found in poor and unsafe conditions” KTVU FOX 2 CBS NewsNo veterinary findings reported.Boilerplate language; no evidence of chronic neglect.“Abundance of fecal matter, soiled bedding, dirty water” CBS NewsSubjective descriptions; no measurements.Normal in temporary intake or pre‑cleaning stages.“Limited or no food available” CBS NewsNo timing or context provided.Feeding schedules cannot be inferred from a single moment.“Dogs confined to a garage” KTVU FOX 2 CBS News HoodlineNo duration or purpose stated.Garages commonly used for quarantine, intake, or staging.“Some dogs needed emergency care” KTVU FOX 2Only two dogs taken for evaluation ABC7 News.Normal for any intake of 28 dogs; not evidence of systemic cruelty.“Heavily soiled bedding in crates” CBS NewsNo duration or cause reported.Crates become soiled quickly; not evidence of neglect.“Operating a commercial kennel without a license” ABC7 NewsNo evidence dogs were part of a business.Foster‑based rescues are not commercial kennels under CA law.“Arrested on suspicion of animal cruelty” KTVU FOX 2 KRON4Charges only; no findings.Allegations are not proof; investigation incomplete.“Dogs rescued from unsafe situation” ABC7 NewsBased solely on police statements.No independent veterinary or third‑party assessment reported.