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Video: Puppy left to die is saved by a blog

  1. Transcript of: Puppy left to die is saved by a blog

    MEREDITH VIEIRA, co-host: Back at 8:43. And this morning on TODAY'S PETS , a rescued puppy who's warmed hearts across the globe. Our resident animal lover Jill Rappaport is here with the very touching story. Good morning to you, Jill . This is a great one.

    JILL RAPPAPORT reporting: Oh, this is -- this is incredible.

    VIEIRA: Yeah.

    RAPPAPORT: This is the ultimate example, Meredith , of the healing power of love. This was an abandoned abused puppy with no hope, left for dead, but his will to live was stronger than his injuries. It was Easter Sunday and little did Alex Darcy know that on that day an abandoned puppy named Walter would change his life forever.

    Mr. ALEX DARCY: A car had driven up and deposited him on the sidewalk and then sped away.

    RAPPAPORT: Threw him out of the car?

    Mr. DARCY: Yeah. Basically opened the door, like shoveled him out and then took off.

    RAPPAPORT: And he had no fur at that point. He was a really...

    Mr. DARCY: He was -- yeah, he was basically a scab and his feet were abnormally huge and he just -- he looked really messed up and I didn't think there was any chance of him making it.

    RAPPAPORT: The prognosis for Walter was grim. He had suffered severe animal cruelty when he was tossed out of a car and virtually left to die. You were going to try to save this dog at any cost, correct?

    Mr. DARCY: We were going to put ourselves heavily in debt.

    RAPPAPORT: With the medical bills climbing, Alex reached out to friends for assistance. Together, they started a little blog called Help Save Walter .

    Ms. RO JUSKA (Walter's Co-Owner): Once we made a Facebook page, once we started his blog, his health kind of -- his spirit, I should say, turned around kind of overnight.

    Mr. DARCY: It still bewilders me how this all kind of became what it -- what it has, but it's wonderful.

    RAPPAPORT: Not only was little Walter now on the road to recovery but the outpouring of love and support for this puppy was emotionally and financially overwhelming. This little blog literally exploded around the world. Thousands of people...

    Mr. DARCY: Yeah.

    RAPPAPORT: ...opening up their hearts, opening up their wallets, thousands of dollars all of a sudden poured in to save Walter . Mr. DARCY ; Yeah. Yeah, yeah. Just the warm feeling from people. Receiving e-mails from New Zealand and Australia and Italy and, you know, people were sending pictures of their dogs and sharing stories about rescues that they had been a part of.

    RAPPAPORT: Walter has left such an indelible mark on so many people.

    Ms. JUSKA: We are so touched by how the world has reached out. I mean, I feel like he could really be an ambassador for the breed. Rescue...

    RAPPAPORT: For pit bulls .

    Ms. JUSKA: Yeah, for pit bulls .

    RAPPAPORT: Here at the Veterinary Emergency and Referral Group in Brooklyn , the staff that saved Walter couldn't be happier about his recovery.

    Dr. BRETT LEVITZKE (Veterinary Emergency and Referral Group): You're a good boy.

    RAPPAPORT: Not only has Walter doubled in weight...

    Dr. LEVITZKE: Thirty-six pounds.

    RAPPAPORT: ...but his coat has completely been restored.

    Dr. LEVITZKE: He's definitely a miracle. He was at death's door and he's back and wagging his tail.

    Ms. JUSKA: It's amazing to think that anything bad ever happened to him, that anybody was ever cruel to him because all he gives is love, you know, he's not afraid of anybody, he's not, you know, he doesn't shy away from anybody.

    RAPPAPORT: Obviously.

    Ms. JUSKA: Oh, you want to come back?

    RAPPAPORT: Right on cue.

    Ms. JUSKA: You want to come back? Huh? Huh?

    RAPPAPORT: That was perfect.

    Mr. JUSKA: You know, he really...

    RAPPAPORT: `He doesn't shy away,' here he is.

    Mr. DARCY: I think he understands what he went through. I feel like he expresses his gratitude all the time through his lovingness.

    VIEIRA: And Walter is here along with his co-owners, Alex Darcy and Ro Juska . Good morning to you both.

    Mr. DARCY: Good morning.

    Ms. JUSKA: Morning.

    VIEIRA: I can't believe that is the same dog from three months ago.

    RAPPAPORT: Amazing.

    VIEIRA: It's an amazing story. Is he back to 100 percent at this point, Alex , or...

    Mr. DARCY: I mean, yeah, he's completely healed. But he was just cleared of all his last skin scrapings that he has no signs of mange. So it's all kind of moving forward now.

    VIEIRA: And you guys co-own him for financial reasons, it's just easier that way, and also time constraints, right?

    Ms. JUSKA: And we both love him.

    VIEIRA: Love him so much, yeah.

    Mr. DARCY: Yeah. Yeah.

    Ms. JUSKA: I mean, he's like -- you know, we really went through something with him, you know, as friends and it just -- yeah. I mean...

    VIEIRA: As do thousands of people love him because when you -- when you put out that blog, I don't think you expected the response that you got.

    Ms. JUSKA: No.

    Mr. DARCY: No, not at all.

    Ms. JUSKA: We didn't. I mean, realistically we were hoping to reach out to, like, close friends and family that lived out of town and just kind of get a little bit of help, let people know his story, and it was overwhelming overnight.

    RAPPAPORT: And to this day still, Meredith , people all over the world are still inquiring. They want updates constantly.

    Ms. JUSKA: Oh, yeah. I mean, updates, new photos, new videos. I mean, just it's...

    RAPPAPORT: Quite a celebrity.

    VIEIRA: Yeah. What does that say to you, do you think?

    Ms. JUSKA: I think that, you know, there's a lot of people out there that are animal lovers and, you know, there's a lot of cruelty towards animals .

    VIEIRA: Yeah.

    Ms. JUSKA: And I think that this story has kind of reached so many people that I think hopefully it'll just help, you know, and...

    VIEIRA: Yeah. And I know you're going to use some of the extra money to donate.

    Ms. JUSKA: Yeah. We raised quite a bit of money. It was kind of overwhelming. And we've put aside money to give to the ASPCA . But we're also starting a nonprofit at the hospital that he was treated at in Walter 's name to help other animals that are abused and neglected.

    VIEIRA: Ro and Alex , that is fantastic.

By
TODAY contributor
updated 8/4/2010 1:43:58 PM ET 2010-08-04T17:43:58

Seeing the dog splayed over the laps of owners Alex Darsey and Ro Juska on TODAY Wednesday, contentedly gnawing on a chew toy, it’s hard to imagine that not so long ago he was a severely abused pup dumped off and left to die on a Brooklyn street.

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But the appearance of the pit bull named Walter on the show was happy testament to the giving spirit of animal lovers everywhere.

Speaking with Meredith Vieira as 6-month-old Walter chewed away, Juska said she and Darsey tried to save Walter’s life when he was found abandoned as a pup, but discovered the medical bills were too high for them to afford. So they started a blog, “Help Save Walter,” and a Facebook page to rally support and money.

“We were hoping to reach out to close friends and family that lived out of town to just kind of give a little bit of help, let people know his story,” Juska told Vieira. “[But] it was overwhelming overnight.”

From around the world
Within days Darsey and Juska received notes of encouragement and donations from people all over the U.S. and even from far away Australia, New Zealand and Italy. “People were sending pictures of their dogs and sharing stories of rescues that they had been a part of,” Darsey told TODAY correspondent Jill Rappaport in a report preceding Walter’s national television debut.

Walter’s saga of survival began April 4. Darsey was walking in his Brooklyn neighborhood when he spotted a puppy being abandoned. “A car deposited him on the sidewalk, then sped away,” he told Rappaport.

allDAY: ‘Help Save Walter’ proves healing power of love

The puppy’s smell was so bad that Darsey could detect it 50 yards away. A severe case of mange had robbed him of his fur, and his feet were swollen more than twice their normal size. “I didn’t think there was any chance of him making it,” Darsey said.

But Darsey was determined not to let him die on the street. He took the pup to the Veterinary Emergency and Referral Group in the Cobble Hill section of Brooklyn. A veterinarian was dubious about the dog’s chances of survival.

Undeterred, Darsey enlisted the help of Juska in starting a cyber campaign to raise money for the pup, who Darsey named Walter because his wrinkled features reminded him of the hangdog look of late actor Walter Matthau.

Road to recovery
Juska said a wonderful thing happened to Walter just about the time the campaign started: “Once we started a Facebook page, once we started his blog, his spirit turned around overnight.”

And money rolled in — more than Darsey and Juska needed. Now, four months after Darsey first found him, he’s close to a picture of health.

“It’s amazing to think that anything bad ever happened to him, that anybody was ever cruel to him,” Juska told Rappaport. “All he gives is love. He’s not afraid of anybody; he doesn’t shy away from anybody.”

Added Darsey: “I think he understands what he went through. I feel like he expresses his gratitude all the time through his lovingness.”

Currently, Walter splits time between the homes of Darsey and his girlfriend, and Juska and her husband. The extra money the pair raised is being donated to the ASPCA as well as the Cobble Hill vet office, where it will be used to help other pups who find themselves abused and abandoned like Walter.

While Walter is just one happy ending among the thousands of cases of animal cruelty each year, Juska told Vieira she hopes her pet’s success story will inspire others.

“There are a lot of people out there that are animal lovers, and there’s a lot of cruelty toward animals, and I think this story has reached so many people hopefully it will help,” she said.

And in Brooklyn, one thankful dog now has two loving homes. “He’s definitely a miracle,” his vet Dr. Brett Levitzke told TODAY. “He was at death’s door and he’s back and wagging his tail.”

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