US Pet Shop That Sold Sick, Hurt Puppies Will Repay Nearly 200 Customers

Mei Mei, a three-pound Shih Tzu whom Meaghan Huber bought from Shake A Paw, died just before her second birthday. Credit...Meaghan Huber
Mei Mei, a three-pound Shih Tzu whom Meaghan Huber bought from Shake A Paw, died just before her second birthday. Credit...Meaghan Huber
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US Pet Shop That Sold Sick, Hurt Puppies Will Repay Nearly 200 Customers

Mei Mei, a three-pound Shih Tzu whom Meaghan Huber bought from Shake A Paw, died just before her second birthday. Credit...Meaghan Huber
Mei Mei, a three-pound Shih Tzu whom Meaghan Huber bought from Shake A Paw, died just before her second birthday. Credit...Meaghan Huber

By Erin Nolan

The owners of a Long Island pet store accused of knowingly selling hundreds of sick and injured puppies, including some that died days after being bought, will pay $300,000 to about 200 customers under a settlement announced by New York’s attorney general.

The settlement resolves a lawsuit filed by the attorney general, Letitia James, in December 2021 after an investigation by her office determined that the store, Shake A Paw, was acquiring and selling puppies from so-called puppy mills, large-scale commercial breeders with reputations for abuse, inbreeding and filthy conditions.

Ms. James’s inquiry also found that the store and its owners, Marc Jacobs and Gerard O’Sullivan, had failed to disclose animals’ serious medical conditions and had illegally refused to reimburse customers for veterinary bills incurred after they had been sold sick pets, according to court documents.

In addition to repaying the $300,000, Mr. Jacobs and Mr. O’Sullivan agreed to stop the store’s misleading advertising, including claims that puppies sold by Shake A Paw were the “healthiest” and from the “most trusted breeders”; to buy animals only from reputable breeders; and to provide customers with disclosures certifying the health of their puppies, according to court documents.

All pet stores in New York will be prohibited from selling dogs, cats and rabbits starting in December under a law passed in 2022.

The settlement was not an admission of wrongdoing by Shake A Paw, according to a news release provided by Richard Hamburger, a lawyer for the pet store, late Friday night. Shake A Paw would continue to operate in accordance with the law, the news release said, “which is exactly what it has been doing for the past 30 years.”

The agreement marks the end of “an otherwise failed lawsuit” and vindicates Shake A Paw, the news release said, noting that “there was no consumer fraud” and that the store was “released from any claims arising from the sale of more than 22,000 puppies” over an eight-year period.

“Shake A Paw will continue to remain open for business in order to spread joy by uniting adorable puppies with loving New York families,” the release said.

Erin Laxton, who bought her Chihuahua-dachshund mix, Merlin, at Shake A Paw in 2020, described the settlement as a “huge relief.” Ms. Laxton said Merlin had begun coughing the day she brought him home from Shake A Paw and had died of respiratory illnesses five weeks later, according to court documents.

“I feel like I was able to get justice for my poor puppy,” Ms. Laxton said in a statement, adding, “I miss my puppy every day, but I am proud to have been part of this process.”

Shake A Paw has locations in Hicksville and Lynbrook, both of which opened in 1994, according to court documents. Customers paid $2,500 to $8,000 on average for a puppy, along with what the attorney general’s office said were hundreds of dollars of unnecessary additional goods and services.

Ms. James said in the lawsuit that from 2016 to 2021, her office had received 99 complaints from Shake A Paw customers who said they had been sold puppies with serious physical injuries, congenital and hereditary disorders or infectious diseases. Similar complaints were made with the New York Better Business Bureau, according to Ms. James’s office.

One customer’s puppy died six days after a Shake A Paw employee said the pet was “fine,” according to court documents; another was hospitalized for severe double pneumonia just two days after it had been bought. Some customers said they had spent thousands of dollars on veterinary bills in the days and weeks after buying puppies from Shake A Paw, court documents show.

An analysis by the attorney general’s office of over 400 veterinary records of puppies sold by Shake A Paw found that more than half had upper respiratory infections or other breathing problems — both, in some cases — or were infected with parasites.

Shake A Paw also refused to reimburse customers for veterinary care they sought for pets that were already sick when they were sold, Ms. James said in a news release.

Shake A Paw also lied about where it had obtained the puppies it sold. The store claimed on its website that it worked with “the most trusted breeders” and handpicked “the best of the bunch,” but financial records showed that thousands of puppies from known puppy mills had been shipped to Shake A Paw’s owners.

Meaghan Huber bought a three-pound Shih Tzu that she named Mei Mei at Shake A Paw in 2014. She said in an interview on Friday that she was glad the store and its owners were finally being held accountable for the pain they had caused her and others.

Ms. Huber said Mei Mei had begun to have trouble breathing just days after she brought her home. For two years, Mei Mei was in and out of veterinary hospitals being treated for various illnesses and birth defects. She died in Ms. Huber’s arms just before her second birthday.

“It was so horrendous,” Ms. Huber, 35, said of trying to get Shake A Paw to compensate her for selling her a sick puppy.

“Dogs are our children,” she said. “We want the best for them. We did the best for Mei Mei that we could. We loved her with all of our hearts.”

The New York Times



Japan's Space Agency Halts Epsilon S Rocket Engine Test after Fire

Smoke and fire is seen during a combustion test of an engine for a new small Japanese rocket Epsilon S at Tanegashima Space Center, Kagoshima prefecture, southern Japan, Tuesday, Nov. 26, 2024. (Kyodo News via AP)
Smoke and fire is seen during a combustion test of an engine for a new small Japanese rocket Epsilon S at Tanegashima Space Center, Kagoshima prefecture, southern Japan, Tuesday, Nov. 26, 2024. (Kyodo News via AP)
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Japan's Space Agency Halts Epsilon S Rocket Engine Test after Fire

Smoke and fire is seen during a combustion test of an engine for a new small Japanese rocket Epsilon S at Tanegashima Space Center, Kagoshima prefecture, southern Japan, Tuesday, Nov. 26, 2024. (Kyodo News via AP)
Smoke and fire is seen during a combustion test of an engine for a new small Japanese rocket Epsilon S at Tanegashima Space Center, Kagoshima prefecture, southern Japan, Tuesday, Nov. 26, 2024. (Kyodo News via AP)

Japan's space agency aborted an engine test for the Epsilon S rocket on Tuesday following a fire at the test site, a failure that could push the rocket's debut launch beyond the March-end target and cause further delays in the national space program.
An explosion could be heard and a blaze could be seen shortly after the ground combustion test started at the Tanegashima Space Center in southwestern Japan, according to footage from public broadcaster NHK.
The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) said the engine test encountered a "combustion abnormality" 49 seconds after the ignition. It said there was no indication of injury or damage to the outside facility, Reuters reported.
"JAXA will conduct a thorough investigation into the cause of the problem and consider countermeasures," Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshimasa Hayashi said at a regular press briefing.
Hayashi, the top government spokesperson, said rocket development is "extremely important" to ensure the autonomy of Japan's space program.
JAXA partnered with the aerospace unit of heavy machinery maker IHI to develop Epsilon S, the next generation in the Epsilon solid-fuel small rocket series. Shares in IHI were down as much as 6% in Tokyo trade. An IHI Aerospace spokesperson said the company is investigating the cause.
Epsilon S's debut flight was slated by the end of the fiscal year through March 31 depending on the success of Tuesday's engine test.
The test was conducted after previous failures triggered months of investigation that have delayed space missions and satellite launch plans.
In July last year, an Epsilon S engine test failed due to thermal damage to its ignition systems. That followed a launch failure in 2022.
JAXA's larger flagship rocket H3, built by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, failed at its first launch last year but has succeeded in three flights this year, launching Japanese satellites and winning orders including from French satellite operator Eutelsat.
The H3 and Epsilon S are central to JAXA's ambition to build cost-competitive rockets amid the rise of American commercial launch providers such as market leader SpaceX and small rocket maker Rocket Lab.
In the private sector, IHI-backed Space One is set to attempt the second launch of its Kairos small rocket on Dec. 14 after the first flight exploded in March. It aims to become the first Japanese business to put a satellite in orbit.