Males born to dairy cows are regarded as useless by milk producers and sell at livestock auctions for only a few dollars each when they are just a few days old. Even spending so little to acquire these baby boys, their new owner would not pay the few dollars it would have taken to provide them with needed medical care.
The calves had contracted pneumonia and their health was quickly dwindling. For all 11 calves, it would have cost approximately $20 to provide proper treatment. However, the purchaser decided instead to shoot the young bulls. By the time authorities intervened, he had already killed six of them. This man was arrested, but not for animal cruelty – he had violated his probation by discharging a firearm.
As soon as the surviving calves could be confiscated, the local SPCA contacted us and we rushed to the scene. As we stood at the door of a dank and fetid barn, the flashlights of SPCA agents played over the faces of the five calves who had escaped the brutal fate of the others, peering out at us from the darkness. Going in to gather them, we found the young animals unfed and severely underweight. Their milk replacer was moldy. Their pneumonia had become severe, and they were dehydrated. We drove them all straight to Cornell University Hospital for Animals, arriving at 2:00 a.m.
At the hospital, the calves received ultrasounds to determine the extent of their pneumonias and were started on IV antibiotics and fluids. Though some struggled to overcome the ailments caused by cruel neglect, all are now home at our New York Shelter. We named them Arnold, Tweed, Conrad, Milbank, and Orlando.