"Well I guess the gardener's came... and I came to let him back in and
was like, 'Killer! Killer!' like, freaking out." Gregor said. She
immediately went to her car and started driving around the neighborhood.
She taped posters all over the neighborhood and had search parties made
up of friends and family. She also posted a Craigslist advertisement
for her missing dog.
On November 6th she found out her neighbor had found Killer and taken
him to Kern County Animal Services, but she couldn't go to him.
She was at a dialysis appointment because her kidneys have failed.
Gregor found out her organs were failing in the beginning of February and that's when the hospital visits started. Since then she has had a daily regimen of 30 plus pills and a nine-hour dialysis treatment. She was ordered by the doctor to take time off of work. On November 7th Gregor went in to KCAS and sees her best friend, "he was so excited to see me, I was like 'Killer baby!' and you know he's doing his little circles, like so excited, you know whining at me and I'm like 'Don't worry I'm going to get you out!'" Gregor went to the front desk and after an employee looked up her dog, Gregor was told Killer is not legally hers anymore. He had been adopted out two hours previously. "I'm crying I'm like 'no, you don't understand - this dog is very important to me',"
Gregor pleaded with the employee.
Gregor also said Animal Services called the woman who adopted Killer,
but the new owner did not want to know about her and did not care.
Gregor was also told by an employee at the shelter that the new owner
didn't want to give up the dog and that this had never happened before.
Employees have had cases where a dog will be adopted but if the family
comes looking for it, the new owner always returns the dog.
"I'm not supposed to have a lot of stress in my life which I already
have," Gregor said. On top of her medical concerns, she is going through
a divorce.
Her determination to persevere is what keeps her going. "I'm going to
request for the new owner's information and see where that goes," Gregor
said.
Gregor found out her organs were failing in the beginning of February and that's when the hospital visits started. Since then she has had a daily regimen of 30 plus pills and a nine-hour dialysis treatment. She was ordered by the doctor to take time off of work. On November 7th Gregor went in to KCAS and sees her best friend, "he was so excited to see me, I was like 'Killer baby!' and you know he's doing his little circles, like so excited, you know whining at me and I'm like 'Don't worry I'm going to get you out!'" Gregor went to the front desk and after an employee looked up her dog, Gregor was told Killer is not legally hers anymore. He had been adopted out two hours previously. "I'm crying I'm like 'no, you don't understand - this dog is very important to me',"
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