Allen Sullivan Media

  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
96 images found
twitterlinkedinfacebook

Loading ()...

  • The scene of a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-2.jpg
  • Horse vet Mike Privett observes a horse during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl. (803-730-2272 mrprivettdvm@aol.com)
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-58.jpg
  • A dog in a pen during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-52.jpg
  • Kimberly Kelly, South Carolina state director for The HSUS, with a puppy during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-31.jpg
  • Teams are organized during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-19.jpg
  • A penned dog during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-18.jpg
  • Ashley Mauceri, of the HSUS Animal Rescue Team, show pens to veterinarian Judi C Vogt during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl. (Vogt: 704-699-8896)
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-15.jpg
  • The scene of a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-13.jpg
  • Horses wander during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-4.jpg
  • A section of property during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-3.jpg
  • Jennifer Set, a 22-month-old Guatemalan child, at Casa Alegría, a foster home run by the Guatemalan government. Julia Set, a 20-year-old Mayan woman who lives in a small town near San Juan Sacatepéquez, Guatemala, says she sold her baby in August 2003 for 400 Quetzales (about U.S. $52) to a woman introduced to her by a midwife. Her baby and 8 others were found the next month in a Costa Rican house run by an unregistered adoption agency.
    062005_jennifer_set7.dng
  • Julia Set, a 20-year-old Mayan woman who lives in a small town near San Juan Sacatepéquez, Guatemala, says she sold her baby in 2003 for 400 Quetzales (about U.S. $52) to a woman introduced to her by a midwife. Her baby and 8 others were found the next month in a Costa Rican house run by an unregistered adoption agency.
    061905_julia_set019.dng
  • A young woman walks past posters promoting the decriminalization of abortion in the El Centro area of San Cristobal de Las Casas, Chiapas, Mexico on Sunday, June 6, 2021.
    20210606 san cristobal de las casas-...tif
  • Rowdy Shaw, HSUS senior field responder, plays with a dog during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-60.jpg
  • Edgefield County, SC Sheriff Adell Dobey observes a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-61.jpg
  • The scene of a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-56.jpg
  • The scene of a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-54.jpg
  • A dog in a pen during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-51.jpg
  • Scenes at a temporary shelter set up at the Columbia SC airport to house animals taken during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl. during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-49.jpg
  • Scenes at a temporary shelter set up at the Columbia SC airport to house animals taken during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl. during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-47.jpg
  • Scenes at a temporary shelter set up at the Columbia SC airport to house animals taken during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl. during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-45.jpg
  • National Disaster Animal Response Team members Wendy Leonard (left) and Pam Siegler carry a dog into a temporary shelter set up at the Columbia, SC airport after a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl. (Leonard: 478-987-4679 / Siegler 931-438-8987)
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-42.jpg
  • Scenes at a temporary shelter set up at the Columbia SC airport to house animals taken during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl. during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-40.jpg
  • Scenes at a temporary shelter set up at the Columbia SC airport to house animals taken during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-39.jpg
  • Jackie Beckstead, HSUS field responder, carries a dog into a temporary shelter at the Columbia, SC airport after a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-37.jpg
  • Melissa Szumlinksi, shelter manager of the temporary shelter set up at the Columbia, SC airport, speaks with her team after a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-35.jpg
  • Scenes at a temporary shelter set up at the Columbia SC airport to house animals taken during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl. during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-34.jpg
  • Chris Pistolis, facility and safety coordinator for the Humane Society of Charlotte, leads away a dog found during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-33.jpg
  • Puppies found during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-32.jpg
  • Animals are logged during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-30.jpg
  • Kimberly Kelly, South Carolina state director for The HSUS, greets a horse during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-28.jpg
  • Humane Society of Charlotte vice-president of operations Jorge Ortega carries a dog during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-27.jpg
  • Ann-Margerat Johnston, who serves on the Georgia state council of the HSUS, carries a dog during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl. (770-205-2221)
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-26.jpg
  • Volunteer Lori Piper, of Tampa, Fla., carries a dog during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl. (813-966-5674 lorilynpiper@yahoo.com)
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-24.jpg
  • Veterinarian Stephanie Lee, of Charlotte, NC, holds a dog to be photographed during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl. ((704) 588-4400)
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-23.jpg
  • Fowl roam a section of property during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-12.jpg
  • A dog in a pen during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-14.jpg
  • South Carolina Senator Jake Knotts (eft) and Kim Kelly, South Carolina state director for The HSUS, look in a pen during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl. (Knotts: (803) 212-6350)
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-11.jpg
  • Kim Kelly (left), South Carolina State Director at The Humane Society of the United States, and Adam Parascandola, HSUS Director of Animal Cruelty Respnse, beging a map of the property during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-8.jpg
  • The scene of a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-5.jpg
  • Rowdy Shaw (left) and Perry Stone move a mailbox to enable parking of a HSUS rig during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-1.jpg
  • Jennifer Set, a 22-month-old Guatemalan child, at Casa Alegría, a foster home run by the Guatemalan government. Julia Set, a 20-year-old Mayan woman who lives in a small town near San Juan Sacatepéquez, Guatemala, says she sold her baby in August 2003 for 400 Quetzales (about U.S. $52) to a woman introduced to her by a midwife. Her baby and 8 others were found the next month in a Costa Rican house run by an unregistered adoption agency.
    062005_jennifer_set5.dng
  • Jennifer Set, a 22-month-old Guatemalan child, at Casa Alegría, a foster home run by the Guatemalan government. Julia Set, a 20-year-old Mayan woman who lives in a small town near San Juan Sacatepéquez, Guatemala, says she sold her baby in August 2003 for 400 Quetzales (about U.S. $52) to a woman introduced to her by a midwife. Her baby and 8 others were found the next month in a Costa Rican house run by an unregistered adoption agency.
    062005_jennifer_set4.dng
  • Jennifer Set, a 22-month-old Guatemalan child, at Casa Alegría, a foster home run by the Guatemalan government. Julia Set, a 20-year-old Mayan woman who lives in a small town near San Juan Sacatepéquez, Guatemala, says she sold her baby in August 2003 for 400 Quetzales (about U.S. $52) to a woman introduced to her by a midwife. Her baby and 8 others were found the next month in a Costa Rican house run by an unregistered adoption agency.
    062005_jennifer_set3.dng
  • Jennifer Set, a 22-month-old Guatemalan child, at Casa Alegría, a foster home run by the Guatemalan government. Julia Set, a 20-year-old Mayan woman who lives in a small town near San Juan Sacatepéquez, Guatemala, says she sold her baby in August 2003 for 400 Quetzales (about U.S. $52) to a woman introduced to her by a midwife. Her baby and 8 others were found the next month in a Costa Rican house run by an unregistered adoption agency.
    062005_jennifer_set2.dng
  • Jennifer Set, a 22-month-old Guatemalan child, at Casa Alegría, a foster home run by the Guatemalan government. Julia Set, a 20-year-old Mayan woman who lives in a small town near San Juan Sacatepéquez, Guatemala, says she sold her baby in August 2003 for 400 Quetzales (about U.S. $52) to a woman introduced to her by a midwife. Her baby and 8 others were found the next month in a Costa Rican house run by an unregistered adoption agency.
    062005_jennifer055.dng
  • Julia Set, a 20-year-old Mayan woman who lives in a small town near San Juan Sacatepéquez, Guatemala, says she sold her baby in 2003 for 400 Quetzales (about U.S. $52) to a woman introduced to her by a midwife. Her baby and 8 others were found the next month in a Costa Rican house run by an unregistered adoption agency.
    061905_julia_set2.dng
  • Julia Set, a 20-year-old Mayan woman who lives in a small town near San Juan Sacatepéquez, Guatemala, says she sold her baby in 2003 for 400 Quetzales (about U.S. $52) to a woman introduced to her by a midwife. Her baby and 8 others were found the next month in a Costa Rican house run by an unregistered adoption agency.
    061905_julia_set1.dng
  • Julia Set, a 20-year-old Mayan woman who lives in a small town near San Juan Sacatepéquez, Guatemala, says she sold her baby in 2003 for 400 Quetzales (about U.S. $52) to a woman introduced to her by a midwife. Her baby and 8 others were found the next month in a Costa Rican house run by an unregistered adoption agency.
    061905_julia_set018.dng
  • Julia Set, a 20-year-old Mayan woman who lives in a small town near San Juan Sacatepéquez, Guatemala, says she sold her baby in 2003 for 400 Quetzales (about U.S. $52) to a woman introduced to her by a midwife. Her baby and 8 others were found the next month in a Costa Rican house run by an unregistered adoption agency.
    061905_julia_set008.dng
  • Julia Set, a 20-year-old Mayan woman who lives in a small town near San Juan Sacatepéquez, Guatemala, says she sold her baby in 2003 for 400 Quetzales (about U.S. $52) to a woman introduced to her by a midwife. Her baby and 8 others were found the next month in a Costa Rican house run by an unregistered adoption agency.
    061905_julia_set005.dng
  • Julia Set, a 20-year-old Mayan woman who lives in a small town near San Juan Sacatepéquez, Guatemala, says she sold her baby in 2003 for 400 Quetzales (about U.S. $52) to a woman introduced to her by a midwife. Her baby and 8 others were found the next month in a Costa Rican house run by an unregistered adoption agency.
    061905_001julia_set.dng
  • A young woman walks past posters promoting the decriminalization of abortion in the El Centro area of San Cristobal de Las Casas, Chiapas, Mexico on Sunday, June 6, 2021.
    20210606 san cristobal de las casas-...tif
  • A property map is drawn during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-62.jpg
  • Fowl roam a section of property during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-63.jpg
  • Horse vet assistant Snuffy Sharpe watches a horse during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl. (803-920-1725 gunnersnuf@aol.com)
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-59.jpg
  • Tia Pope, manager of puppy mill investigations, marks a pen during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-57.jpg
  • The scene of a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-55.jpg
  • Animal bones on the ground during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-53.jpg
  • Scenes at a temporary shelter set up at the Columbia SC airport to house animals taken during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl. during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-50.jpg
  • Cages set up to recieve hundreds of animals at a temporary shelter at the Columbia, SC airport after a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-48.jpg
  • National Disaster Animal Response Team members Dave Hall (left) and Lee Smith transport a dog to a temporary shelter after a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl. (Smith: 704-363-8887 / Hall: 919-614-5278)
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-46.jpg
  • National Disaster Animal Response Team members Lee Smith (left) and Dave Hall transport a dog to a temporary shelter after a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl. (Smith: 704-363-8887 / Hall: 919-614-5278)
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-41.jpg
  • National Disaster Animal Response Team member Karen Reed carries a dog into a temporary shelter at the Columbia, SC airport after a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl. (727-271-1498)
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-43.jpg
  • Scenes at a temporary shelter set up at the Columbia SC airport to house animals taken during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-38.jpg
  • Perry Stone, HSUS driver and responder, sorts paperwork in a transport rig after a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-36.jpg
  • ID collars on a vet table during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-29.jpg
  • Humane Society of Charlotte vice-president of operations Jorge Ortega (center) carries a dog during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-25.jpg
  • Dogs are checked at the vet tables during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-22.jpg
  • An animal skull found tied to fence during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-17.jpg
  • The scene of a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-16.jpg
  • Ashley Mauceri, of the HSUS Animal Rescue Team, plays with dogs during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-10.jpg
  • Tia Pope, manager of puppy mill investigations, marks a pen during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-9.jpg
  • A row of dog pens during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-6.jpg
  • The scene of a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-7.jpg
  • Jennifer Set, a 22-month-old Guatemalan child, at Casa Alegría, a foster home run by the Guatemalan government. Julia Set, a 20-year-old Mayan woman who lives in a small town near San Juan Sacatepéquez, Guatemala, says she sold her baby in August 2003 for 400 Quetzales (about U.S. $52) to a woman introduced to her by a midwife. Her baby and 8 others were found the next month in a Costa Rican house run by an unregistered adoption agency.
    062005_jennifer_set6.dng
  • Jennifer Set, a 22-month-old Guatemalan child, at Casa Alegría, a foster home run by the Guatemalan government. Julia Set, a 20-year-old Mayan woman who lives in a small town near San Juan Sacatepéquez, Guatemala, says she sold her baby in August 2003 for 400 Quetzales (about U.S. $52) to a woman introduced to her by a midwife. Her baby and 8 others were found the next month in a Costa Rican house run by an unregistered adoption agency.
    062005_jennifer_set1.dng
  • These children at Casa Alegría, a foster home run by the Guatemalan government, are some of those found in 2003 in a Costa Rican house run by an unregistered adoption agency.
    062005_guate_children.dng
  • FACTS reporter Bals Rigendinger speaks with Julia Set, left, and her mother at their home in a small town near San Juan Sacatepéquez, Guatemala. Julia Set, a 20-year-old Mayan woman who lives in a small town near San Juan Sacatepéquez, Guatemala, says she sold her baby in 2003 for 400 Quetzales (about U.S. $52) to a woman introduced to her by a midwife. Her baby and 8 others were found the next month in a Costa Rican house run by an unregistered adoption agency.
    061905_bals_rigendinger.dng
  • Floyd and his wife Leigh, a couple from North Carolina in the United States, sit with their newly adopted baby, Blake, in the Marriott hotel in Guatemala City, Guatemala on Saturday, June 18, 2005. Floyd, who declined to give his last name, said he expects that he and his wife will pay about U.S. $30,000 in total for Blake's adoption process, then the same again for another Guatemalan baby they plan to adopt.
    061805adoptive_parents.dng
  • A dog awaits entry to a temporary shelter at the Columbia, SC airport after a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-44.jpg
  • Sára Varsa, director of operations for The HSUS' Animal Rescue Team, plays with dogs at the vet tables during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-21.jpg
  • Field responder Jackie Beckstead pets a dog during a raid on a puppy mill in Johnston, SC on Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012. HSUS workers found over 200 dogs, nine horses and 30-40 fowl.
    HSUS SC Puppy Mill-20.jpg
  • Guatemalan youth hang out on a corner in Zona 8 of Guatemala City, Guatemala on Monday, June 13, 2005. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    delacalle010.dng
  • Guatemalan youth hang out on a corner in Zona 8 of Guatemala City, Guatemala on Monday, June 13, 2005. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    delacalle023.dng
  • Sandra Guamux, 21, sits with her five-month-old son, Alfredo, at an abandoned gas station in Zone 4 of Guatemala City, Guatemala. About 20 otherwise homeless people live inside the station, and most are addicted to huffing paint thinner to numb the cold and their hunger pains. Guamux said a baby was stolen from her five days after it was born last year, and she is convinced the baby went into an illegal adoption system. She added that the police told her they would not investigate the situation since she had no photograph of the child.
    delacalle014.dng
  • Guatemalan youth hang out on a corner in Zona 8 of Guatemala City, Guatemala on Monday, June 13, 2005. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    061305 guate233.dng
  • Guatemalan youth hang out on a corner in Zone 8 of Guatemala City, Guatemala on Monday night, June 13, 2005 as Doctors Without Borders workers gather their names. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    061305 guate247.dng
  • Sandra Guamux, 21, sits with her five-month-old son, Alfredo, at an abandoned gas station in Zone 4 of Guatemala City, Guatemala. About 20 otherwise homeless people live inside the station, and most are addicted to huffing paint thinner to numb the cold and their hunger pains. Guamux said a baby was stolen from her five days after it was born last year, and she is convinced the baby went into an illegal adoption system. She added that the police told her they would not investigate the situation since she had no photograph of the child.
    delacalle013.dng
  • Guatemalan youth hang out on a corner in Zone 8 of Guatemala City, Guatemala on Monday night, June 13, 2005 as Doctors Without Borders workers gather their names. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    061305 guate263.dng
  • Guatemalan youth hang out on a corner in Zone 8 of Guatemala City, Guatemala on Monday night, June 13, 2005 as Doctors Without Borders workers gather their names. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    061305 guate261.dng
  • Guatemalan youth hang out on a corner in Zone 8 of Guatemala City, Guatemala on Monday night, June 13, 2005 as Doctors Without Borders workers gather their names. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    061305 guate259.dng
  • Juan Carlos Figueroa spends his nights on a corner in Gautemala City's Zone 8. In his cupped hand he holds a ball of cloth soaked with paint thinner for huffing. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    delacalle015.dng
  • Street teenagers Julio and Aura make out in Guatemala City's Zone 8. Pilar Lopez, coordinator of Medicos Sin Fronteras, said street kids often come to her clinic with sexually transmitted diseases. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    delacalle027.dng
  • Guatemalan youth hang out on a corner in Zona 8 of Guatemala City, Guatemala on Monday, June 13, 2005. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    061505 guatekids123.dng
  • Guatemalan youth hang out on a corner in Zone 8 of Guatemala City, Guatemala on Monday night, June 13, 2005 as Doctors Without Borders workers gather their names. Many of "los niños de la calle,"--the children of the streets--are addicted to paint thinner, soaking balls of cloth with it and holding the toxic rags to their mouths. The children and young adults prefer solvent to glue because it is cheaper and helps them forget their hunger pains and cold. Carlos Toledo, director and founder of Nuestros Derechos--Our Rights- a Guatemalan non-governmental organization that tries to help the children off the streets and into society, said there are about 10,000 children living without homes or stable lives in Guatemala. "These children are illegal in their own country," Toledo said, since most have no legal documentation and are not recognized as existing by the government.
    061305 guate291_1_1.dng