Elizabeth Porn Dog

Elizabeth Porn Dog




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Elizabeth Porn Dog
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Gone to the dogs: the girl who ran with the pack
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SHE bounds along on all fours through long grass, panting with her tongue hanging out. When she reaches the tap she paws at the ground, drinks noisily with her jaws wide open and lets the water cascade over her head.
Up to this point, you think the young woman could be acting — but the moment she shakes her head and neck free of droplets, exactly like a dog when it emerges from a swim, you get a creepy sense that this is something beyond imitation. Then she barks.
The furious sound she makes is not like a human being pretending to be a dog. It is a proper, chilling, canine-like burst of aggression and it is coming from the mouth of a young woman dressed in T-shirt and shorts.
This is 23-year-old Oxana Malaya reverting to behaviour she learnt as a young child when she was brought up by a pack of dogs on a rundown farm near the village of Novaya Blagoveschenka in Ukraine. When she showed her boyfriend what she once was and what she could still do — the barking, the whining, the four-footed running — he took fright. It was a party trick that went too far and the relationship ended.
Miss Malaya is a feral child, one of only about 100 known in the world. The story goes that, when she was three, her indifferent, alcoholic parents left her outside one night and she crawled into a hovel where they kept dogs. No one came to look for her or even seemed to notice she was gone, so she stayed where there was warmth and food — raw meat and scraps — forgetting what it was to be human, losing what toddler's language she had and learning to survive as a member of the pack.
A shameful five years later, a neighbour reported a child living with animals. When she was found, at the age of eight in 1991, Oxana could hardly speak and ran around on all fours barking.
Though she must have seen humans at a distance, and seems occasionally to have entered the family house like a stray, they were no longer her species.
Judging from the complete lack of documentation about her physical and psychological state when found, the authorities were not keen to record her case — neglect on this scale was too shameful to acknowledge — even though it has been of huge and continuing interest to psychologists who believe feral children can help resolve the nature-nurture debate.
What is known about "the Dog Girl" has been passed down orally, through doctors and carers. "She was like a small animal. She walked on all fours. She ate like a dog," is about as scientific as it gets.
Last month, British child psychologist Lyn Fry, an expert on feral children, went to Ukraine with a Channel Four film crew to meet Miss Malaya, who now lives in a home for the mentally disabled. Five years after a Discovery Channel program about her, they wanted to see if she had integrated into society. Ms Fry wanted to find out how far the girl was still damaged — and to see a reunion with her father.
"I expected someone much less human," says Ms Fry, the first non-Ukrainian expert to meet Oxana. "I'd heard stories that she could fly off the handle, that she was very unco-operative, that she was socially inept, but she did everything I asked of her.
"Her language is odd. She speaks flatly as though it's an order. There is no cadence or rhythm or music to her speech, no inflection or tone. But she has a sense of humour. She likes to be the centre of attention, to make people laugh. Showing off is quite a surprising skill when you consider her background. In the film, Miss Malaya looks unco-ordinated and tomboyish. When she walks, you notice her strange stomping gait and swinging shoulders, the intermittent squint and misshapen teeth. Like a dog with a bone, her first instinct is to hide anything she is given. She is only 1.52 metres tall but when she fools about with her friends, pushing and shoving, there is a palpable air of menace and brute strength. The oddest thing is how little attention she pays to her pet mongrel. "Sometimes, she pushed it away," says Ms Fry. "She was much more orientated to people."
After a series of cognitive tests, Ms Fry concluded that Miss Malaya had the mental capacity of a six-year-old and a dangerously low boredom threshold. She can count but not add up. She cannot read or spell her name correctly. She has learning difficulties, but she is not autistic, as children brought up by animals are sometimes assumed to be.
Experts agree that unless a child learns to speak by the age of five, the brain misses its chance to acquire language, a defining characteristic of being human. Miss Malaya was able to learn to talk again because she had some childish speech before she was abandoned. At an orphanage school, they taught her to walk upright, to eat with her hands and, crucially, to talk.
Through an interpreter, Miss Malaya tells Ms Fry that her mother and father "completely forgot about me". They argued and shouted. Her mother would hit her and she would pee herself in terror. She says she still goes off by herself into the woods when she is upset. Although she knows it is socially unacceptable to bark, she certainly can.
Miss Malaya seems to be happy looking after cows at the Baraboy Clinic's insalubrious farm, outside Odessa. "It was dirty, terribly rundown and primitive," says Ms Fry, "but in Ukrainian terms, very desirable. Her carers are good people with the best interests of their charges at heart, though there is no therapy as such. Oxana is doing things she is good at."
It was here that the reunion with her father was staged a few weeks ago.
In the film, they stand awkwardly apart and it is ages before anyone speaks. Miss Malaya breaks the silence. "Hello," she says. "I have come," replies her father. The exchange is moving in its halting formality. "I thank you that you have come. I wanted you to see me milk the cows."
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ShowDays.info - the unofficial guide to dog show information
After reading all the public comments about this judge we almost left and didn’t bother with her. I agree, she tends to reward handlers first. So we switched it up and put a very experienced owner/breeder (who looks the pro part) on a young bitch, and I took in the puppy for experience (and I’m a nobody). Surprisingly, this judge took her time and judged movement and type. She seemed to enjoy the class and out of the blue, placed the young bitch from the classes (with the faux handler) over specials for BOB after having her top special go around together with the bitch to examine movement again. She explained how close it was, but the bitch moved just a smidge nicer. Not many judges will do that when there are so MANY outstanding specials to choose from. Small entry, but many deserving specials; a lineup to die for.
This women is one of the worse judges I have ever seen ! She is also very mean to the people in her ring. She doesn’t judge the dogs! She just puts up her handler friends. She could care less about movement and structure. If you have a ugly terrible moving dog I would give her a try. She is a crook ! I don’t know how she can show her face in the judges lounge.
Rude, clearly does not enjoy the exhibitors or the dogs. Appeared afraid of some breeds. No rhyme or reason to her choices. Goes under the heading of DNS and "not if you paid me "
I watched her judge German shepherds while waiting for my breed to go in. I couldn't believe she gave winners to a dog that had such a bad rear he practically got his rear legs tangled up with themselves. Then she gave him breed over specials! Unbelievable!
Although she is pleasant to exhibitors, makes poor judging decisions. She also lost control of the ring, and the steward had to help.
Picks handlers, not dogs... do not show
she is a joke... terrible judge just putting up handler friends dogs.
We showed to her once. While watching the breeds before our breed we found out why her ratings are so poor. We stood there and watched class after class of very poor judging. She also appeared to be annoyed? to even be there. Maybe not feeling well, who knows? Her poor judging carried through into our breed and beyond that day. DNS. Never again
She is hopeless when handlers are not involved. When they are she is shameless!
I decided to give her another chance after not showing to her for many years. NEVER AGAIN!!!! She gave WB to a puppy so spooky she didn’t even put her hands on it but gave it WB/BOW as she slinked around the ring terrified. In excusable judging.
Rewards only her friends with whatever dog they are showing. Has no knowledge of type in my breed (or doesn't care). Judges the wrong end of the lead completely.
Regardless of the fact she awarded my dog, most of her choices made no sense to me. Breed surely will go to the top handler in the ring, the rest of awards... You figure out. I can't.
She was pleasant , if what she likes is in the ring she will put it up and will cross over it was a small enter and she seemed very nice and was good with puppies. Both dogs/bitch were above what the standard call for
I agree with the recent Expert comment. Not sure why she put up the dogs she did - but her picks were quite different from typical results in this region. Heard many negative comments from other breeds as well.
Does not enjoy judging. Needs breed education. Selected dogs that did not have correct structure along with Breed Type. Rude to exhibitors during photos. Not sure how she was selected for the panel of judges based on her past reviews.


Very disappointing choices in a large entry. Did not appear to enjoy judging or to have any care for the breed standard. She can judge well, but often chooses not to. She needs to rethink her priorities.
Sent a lab to the group with a pro whose movement was beyond bizarre. Better choices available.
Withheld WB. Disappointing but not completely undeserved due to lovely bitches showing very poorly.
Not at all impressed by her judging. Did not see clear faults and put up several lesser animals - perhpas because of the human end of the lead influence.
Seemed to go with handlers in the classes and breed. Would think twice before entering under her again.
Entered under her husband, but when he overdrew we got her instead. I believe she's still provisional in GSMD, and it shows. Just very inconsistent...not sure if she knows what a good front or good rear look like, didn't seem to care about toplines, and don't think she was selecting for breed type either. Just left some of us wondering what she likes (even if they don't judge to the standard across the board, at least give me consistency). Wishing I got the judge change refund, but oh well. Finally, I would say that she also did take care of handlers, and maybe that had a lot to do with the lack of consistency. Wish I had looked at the comments here, as I probably would have submitted for the refund. I might give her another shot in a few years, we'll see, but for now I feel like she needs a lot more breed education.
Get a handler for this judge!! All handlers, did not even look at the oh's
(*update June 2013* Put a handler on my bitch this time and she went wb/bw for 2 pts.)
According to standard she checked FULL dentition and bite. Expressed annoyance when I had trouble showing the right side of my dog's bite but she did help and that was appreciated. She gave clear directions. Seemed to like color.
Knows her handlers, and uses them. When they're out of the picture, she has a good eye.
Appeared very considerate of both dogs and handlers at a recent show where temps reached the 90's. Had all dogs stack in the shade and kept them out of the sun as much as possible. Each dog got equal attention regardless of whether they were showing well or not. Could be a bit handler oriented, but is not obvious about it. Very soft spoken and hard to hear, pay attention to where she wants you and when. Seems to like good movers.
Sad, she is not nearly the quality judge as her husband. I wish they’d leave her off panels. She doesn’t know squat about my breed, and apparently doesn’t care to learn.
Won under her but it seemed apparent to all that she did not know our breed standard particularly well. Put up a class dog that the owner had to hire a handler to get finished.
Prefers a small, compact, pretty, and cute Pom if she can find it, but if she can't she will go for a larger specimen of good quality. Will consider blacks.
Very stern and runs her ring as such. In a large breed ring, she got very impatient when handlers were not exactly where she wanted them, even though she gave no instruction. Thoroughly examined the dogs but did not seem to always pay attention when the dogs were moving. Not sure I would show to her again.
Was paying close attention in the ring, just not the ring that she was judging in, but the adjoining ring. It is pretty hard to judge the dogs that are being exhibited to you, if you are not looking at them. Will not give her an entry again.
OBH - pros in the ring but this judge chose to put my class girl over my moved up special and another special for a 4 pt. major. This was my first time showing to her so she had no idea who I was. My move up won 4 pt. majors all previous 3 days. At another show we didn't do so well under her. I'll show to her again and see how it goes.
JUST PLAIN AWFUL DO NOT WASTE YOUR MONEY
No sound dogs required here!! No Breed Standard dogs here!! IF THEY should be pets!!
GO FOR IT

Won't share the points, and kind of cruel to newbies. There is really no harm in giving Best of Winners to a quality dog who wouldn't otherwise get any points, but this judge just won't do it.
I'm relatively new to the dog show world but I was impressed with her consideration. She was the only judge who recognized that due to the lighting she needed to have the dog's stop opposite from their normal ring position. She was deliberate and I didn't see any particular bias to handlers...and FYI, she didn't put us up.
Was pleasantly surprised by specialty judging. Could follow her results and had no real quarrel with her winners. Polite to handlers, kind to young dogs, rings were well run.
forget this one unless you hire a known handler.
Her ring procedures and judging made a total fiasco of our National Specialty Show Best of Breed competition. Chose to judge in catalog order mixing dogs and bitches then pulled only 3 (rarely 4) from each set of 15. If the 15 had 10 deserving specials then 7 of them walked. If all 15 were not deserving she still pulled 3. Also withheld 2 AOM's or totally forgot about them. DUH!! Yes, faces were definitely prominent in her cuts. If you value your specialty hire another judge. VERY POOR JUDGE.
ps- This is not sour grapes as I won a class under her at the show.
If you want to win, hire a big name to show your dog! She is both rude and hard handed in the ring.
Stay home and watch a movie instead!
She is "just okay." If you have a nice entry and you REALLY want that win use a face. She usually seems to do what is right but you can tell it pains her to dump certain faces so don't give her any excuses to dump you!
She chose correctly in my breed. I was very impressed with her, chose the correct dogs regardless of who was on the end of the lead.
Not a good judge of Frenchies and has consistently gone for bitches wholly lacking in substance
She was nice to show to, easy on a young male that squirms, he went reserve. Made it a point to look at each exhibit in turn and took her time with selections.
knows good setters - now if she would only judge them and not the other end of the lead!!!

2nd time this year - this time she gave everything to the 'FACE' and dumped the dogs she put up the last time she was here!! Takes your chances judge....






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Dog kennel owner charged with bestiality after videos discovered
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Published: 18:33 BST, 16 October 2018 | Updated: 22:12 BST, 16 October 2018
A former Virginia dog kennel owner has been charged with bestiality after she and her husband allegedly had sex with their Doberman named Demon.
Federal agents discovered graphic video of the couple engaging in 'sexual activity' with their dog in their master bedroom. 
Christina Patterson, 42, has been charged with six cou
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