UNCLAIMED

UNCLAIMED

por Devi Brusell
Temporada 1
The Weight of 2025
In this season finale, we reflect on documented animal welfare cases from 2025 where shelters were called in after harm had already occurred. Although this podcast only began in the final months of the year, the same patterns kept appearing: large-scale cruelty, neglect, hoarding, and shelters absorbing the fallout when systems failed upstream. All cases discussed are real, publicly reported, and searchable. Sources and expanded reflections are linked in the companion blog. The podcast will return in January 2026. Content Note This episode discusses animal neglect, cruelty, hoarding, and death. Listener discretion advised. Cases Referenced (2025) • Grass Valley, California: Over 200 animals rescued following a welfare complaint. Nevada County Animal Shelter and Animal Control coordinated emergency care. • Canandaigua, New York: Seventeen animals rescued and taken to Ontario County Humane Society after severe neglect was discovered. • Annandale, New Jersey: Forty-five animals seized from a home connected to a local rescue organization and placed into shelter care. • Elkhart County, Indiana: Elkhart Humane Society reported capacity strain following hoarding cases. • New Castle County, Delaware: Nearly 100 animals seized from a rescue operator’s residence and distributed among shelters. Companion blog with sources and expanded case notes: [LINK TO BLOG] Questions, thoughts, or stories you want to share: theunclaimedstories@gmail.com Looking Ahead Thank you for listening and bearing witness. Unclaimed returns January 2026.
So You Adopted a Pet… Now What?
Today’s episode pulls back the curtain on a part of sheltering that deserves way more conversation: what really happens once an adopted pet goes home. We break down the 3-3-3 Rule, talk through common post-adoption behaviors, explain why decompression matters, and share practical tools that help animals settle into their new lives safely and successfully. If you’ve ever adopted from a shelter (or plan to), this episode is your roadmap for the adjustment period that follows. The 3-3-3 Rule at a Glance Three Days | Survival Confusion, overwhelm, hiding, pacing, reduced appetite, and GI upset are normal. Their system is trying to stabilize. Three Weeks | Learning Confidence grows. Pets explore, test boundaries, and start understanding routines. True energy levels show. Three Months | Connection Trust is established. Pets feel secure, training sticks, and their real personality becomes clear. This rule isn’t rigid, but it’s one of the most helpful guides for understanding the typical emotional timeline of settling into a new home. Have questions about adoption, decompression, or behavior? Want support with a newly adopted shelter pet? You can always reach out. 📧 Email: theunclaimedstories@gmail.com Follow the podcast for more behind-the-scenes shelter education, animal-welfare insights, and real stories from inside the mind of an animal shelter worker.
Whose Cat is That?
In this episode, I break down one of the most common misunderstandings in animal welfare: the cats that live outside. Not every outdoor cat is lost. Not every outdoor cat wants to be rescued. And some of them? They are basically raccoons in cat suits, living their best cryptid life behind the grocery store. This episode covers everything the public needs to know about outdoor cats, feral cats, TNR, ear-tipping, and when you should (or should NOT) intervene. If you’ve ever wondered, “Is that cat okay?” — this is the episode for you. Interested in supporting TNR or helping outdoor cats in your area? Contact your local shelter or rescue to ask about: Low-cost spay/neuter TNR programs Colony caretaking Volunteer trapping days Donations that directly help community cats Got a porch panther? A spooky alley goblin? A neighborhood cryptid who watches you take out the trash? Send me your stories! They might be featured in a future episode. theunclaimedstories@gmail.com
What's More Humane?
This episode dives into one of the hardest truths in animal welfare: sometimes saving a dog means ending their suffering. After seeing a TikTok about euthanasia lists, I unpack what the public gets wrong about “just try harder,” and why shelter workers and trainers often see behaviors the average adopter can’t safely handle. Featuring the story of Badger — a feral dog who spent six months learning to trust, only to be overwhelmed by fear again — this episode breaks down the ethics, the grief, and the weight behind making the most impossible decision: choosing peace over prolonged suffering. ⚠️ Content Warning: This episode includes discussion of euthanasia, behavior-related risk, and difficult shelter experiences. Please listen with care. If this episode moves you, consider supporting your local shelter through adoption, fostering, volunteering, or donations. It makes a difference. Link to Scoob & I: Watch on TikTok (Note: You’ll need TikTok access to view it.)
The Dumpster Puppies
Content Warning: This episode includes descriptions of animal cruelty involving newborn puppies. In this episode of Unclaimed, I share the raw and emotional story of eleven newborn puppies found tied inside a garbage bag and thrown into a commercial dumpster. What follows is told through three intertwined perspectives: the sanitation worker who discovered them, the firefighter who fought to keep them alive, and the foster who stayed awake for days to give them a chance. This episode shines a light on the true cost of animal dumping, the burnout shelter workers quietly live with, and the everyday heroes who step up when the smallest lives need them most. If this episode moves you, consider helping your local shelter: • Foster a litter • Volunteer for a shift • Donate formula, blankets, or supplies • Share adoptable animals • Support the workers who show up every single day Contact: Have a story for Unclaimed? Email: the unclaimedstories@gmail.com
The Raid: The suffering that reshaped animal law
In this episode of Unclaimed, Devi tells the story of the 1981 Silver Spring Monkeys raid — the first police raid on a U.S. research lab. Through Billy and Domino, two monkeys who survived the same nightmare in different ways, this episode breaks down the experiments, the neglect, the raid, and the legal changes that reshaped animal research in America. ⚠️ Content Warning: This episode discusses animal suffering, medical experiments, and historical cruelty that may be distressing for some listeners. Why this episode matters: The Silver Spring Monkeys didn’t just expose a broken system — they changed the laws that protect animals today. Learn more: • Washington Post deep dive: https://tinyurl.com/4h3nm5zp • NIH on CI Therapy: https://www.nichd.nih.gov/newsroom/releases/ci_therapy • Case history: https://www.peta.org/features/silver-spring-monkeys/
WHY WE'RE HERE
Trailer
This episode is an introduction to who I am, how I ended up in animal sheltering, and why this podcast exists. I talk about moving from emergency vet medicine to municipal shelter work, the emotional reality of caring for animals who have been overlooked, mislabeled, or abandoned, and what it means to “claim” an animal when the world already gave up on them. This podcast isn’t about shock value or stories told for entertainment. It’s about compassion, grief, resilience, and the moments in animal care that stay with us long after shift ends. If you’ve ever worked in rescue, veterinary medicine, sheltering, foster, or you’ve simply felt your heart pulled toward an animal who needed help — you’ll understand this episode. Because no animal is truly unclaimed, not while someone is willing to show up. Music Credit: Intro/Outro music: “Modern Classical – Cold Sad Pianos” by makesoundmusic via Pixabay. Used under the Pixabay Content License. https://pixabay.com/music/modern-classical-cold-sad-pianos-150019/