The Orange County Register ran a story last week on the legal action filed in September by some local rescue advocates against Orange County Animal Care. (We’ve uploaded most of the court documents, below.)
The action includes some trap-neuter-return, community cat issues, and also demands reopening of the animal shelter to potential adopters. It demands the shelter stop euthanizing tiny, motherless kittens, which the shelter allegedly puts to sleep rather than invest the labor required to feed them.
6Time Financial Felon Sharon Logan was not invited to participate in this action, notwithstanding her efforts to tout herself as the grand poobah of OCAC criticism.
That freeze-out may have inspired Logan’s online bashing and outing, last month, of a former shelter employee who provided an evidentiary declaration in support of the action.
Logan called her “delusional and a hypocrite,” apparently because she found press reports of criticisms about the shelter where the woman works now. (So, don’t advocate for change at your former workplace unless your current workplace is perfect?)
Go figure. Logan never misses a chance to mention her own 2014 lawsuit against OCAC. It’s why anyone’s ever heard of Logan outside of her extensive history of felonious thievery and embezzlement.
Logan didn’t explain why she opposes the new legal action, or even state clearly that she does. Our guess is that 6Time only cares about shelter reform when it means publicity for 6Time. Or donations to Paw Protectors.
It’s not clear to us whether Logan took it upon herself to track down the identity of the “Jane Doe” declarant, or whether someone at OCAC slipped it to her hoping Logan would embarrass the declarant. If it’s the latter, that’s a lousy thing for the shelter to do. It looks like the reason “Jane Doe” wanted to be anonymous is because she doesn’t want her current shelter employer to know she’s helping sue her former shelter employer. That makes sense.
Why would Logan want to do that to another shelter reform advocate?
We hope the local public interest animal rights attorneys have finally wised up to the fact that, with six financial felony convictions (that we’ve found so far), Logan is a highly impeachable witness. That means her testimony is not believable. And there appear to be plenty of respectable, credible potential plaintiffs out there to pick from.
And, fortunately for the general public, that would remove the main means 6Time has of linking herself publicly with attorneys, and of grabbing mainstream publicity.



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