Purple Paws


Purple Paws
Rescue & Adoption
Offering up to 72 hours of care for pets who would be left behind due to domestic abuse.Temporary or permanent housing available after the 72 hours.
Thank you to our generous sponsor for helping us to complete our services for individuals and pets touched by domestic abuse.
Facts About Animal Abuse & Domestic Violence
Why it Matters
- 71% of pet-owning women entering women’s shelters reported that their batterer had injured, maimed, killed or threatened family pets for revenge or to psychologically control victims; 32% reported their children had hurt or killed animals.
- 68% of battered women reported violence towards their animals. 87% of these incidents occurred in the presence of the women, and 75% in the presence of the children, to psychologically control and coerce them.
- 13% of intentional animal abuse cases involve domestic violence.
- Between 25% and 40% of battered women are unable to escape abusive situations because they worry about what will happen to their pets or livestock should they leave.
- Pets may suffer unexplained injuries, health problems, permanent disabilities at the hands of abusers, or disappear from home.
- Abusers kill, harm, or threaten children’s pets to coerce children into sexual abuse or to force them to remain silent about abuse. Disturbed children kill or harm animals to emulate their parents’ conduct, to prevent the abuser from killing the pet, or to take out their aggressions on another victim smaller and weaker than them.
- In one study, 70% of animal abusers also had records for other crimes. Domestic violence victims whose animals were abused saw the animal cruelty as one more violent episode in a long history of indiscriminate violence aimed at them and their vulnerability.
- Investigation of animal abuse is often the first point of social services intervention for a family in trouble.
- For many battered women, pets are sources of comfort providing strong emotional support: 98% of Americans consider pets to be companions or members of the family.
- Animal cruelty problems are people problems. When animals are abused, people are at risk.
Did You Know?
- More American households have pets than have children. We spend more money on pet food than on baby food. There are more dogs in the U.S. than people in most countries in Europe – and more cats than dogs.
- A child growing up in the U.S. is more likely to have a pet than a live-at-home father.
- Pets live most frequently in homes with children: 64.1% of homes with children under age 6, and 74.8% of homes with children over age 6, have pets. The woman is the primary caregiver in 72.8% of pet-owning households.
- Battered women have been known to live in their cars with their pets for as long as four months until an opening was available at a pet-friendly safe house.

Heidi Markow and her adopted Shih tzu, Issabella “Izzy”
Please support our efforts to provide outstanding care and foster homes to animals in need.
According to the ASPCA, half of all of domestic violence victims delay seeking help for the sake of their pets.
Last year, a woman chose not to go to a shelter because she couldn’t bring her dog with her. The next day, her ex-partner stabbed her to death.
Their fears are not unfounded: More than 70 percent of women entering shelters report that their abusers had also threatened, injured, or killed family pets.
Victims of domestic abuse who have pets are put in a tough spot. They not only have good reason to worry about their pets, but they often rely on their companion animals as a source of comfort and support.Yet, most shelters won’t accept pets. Accordingly, the Beginning Over Foundation continues to work to meet the unmet needs of families effected by domestic abuse. Our goal is to provide care for pets until proper housing is found for these families.
Including animals in protective orders is an important step in providing for their safety in domestic violence situations. The lack of current laws may come from the fact that the victim and abuser maintain co-ownership of the companion animals. When a companion animal is not specifically included in a protective order, there is the potential for animals to remain with the abuser because he can claim co-ownership. Leaving the animal with the abuser adds to the risk of the pet’s injury or death. In addition, there is clearly a distinguishable difference between breaking a chair and harming an animal. Most protective orders allow a victim to remove their “essential personal effects” from the home. Common personal effects include keys, wallet, toiletries, etc. Pets are not typically considered a personal effect and are, therefore, now being recognized as a separate category to be protected under the protective order.
Dianna J. Gentry, Including Companion Animals in Protective Orders: Curtailing The Reach Of Domestic Violence, Yale Journal of Law (2001).




