Heartbroken owner sues for $4.6M after allegedly inexperienced vet yanked 14 teeth from teacup Yorkie — then failed to get help for ailing pup: lawsuit

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A teacup Yorkie named Coco died after an allegedly inexperienced vet inexplicably yanked 16 of its teeth and failed to get emergency help after the dog went into cardiac arrest, according to $4.6 million lawsuit.

Fabiana Franco says Battery Park Veterinary Hospital and vets Douglas Berger and Deianira Huettenmoser allegedly subjected her 3.8-pound, 8-year-old dog to a host of unnecessary procedures and botched care.

“I’m still in shock over it. Devastated,” she told The Post. “I know until all this is over I won’t be able to grieve him properly.”

Franco, 60, a psychologist who specializes in treating patients with complex trauma, adopted Coco as a way to help her most serious patients during therapy, but found the canine consultant quickly pawed his way into her family’s heart.

Coco assisted Fabiana Franco in her psychology practice. Courtesy of Fabiana Franco

“I fell in love with him and he became part of my work as well as my personal life,” she recalled. “He was 9 weeks old when I got him, and one pound. Adorable. . . . He was a perfect personality, so playful.” 

Coco suffered from tracheal collapse, a diagnosis common in the breed in which the trachea is weakened. The condition was managed with laser therapy and medications by his regular vet at the same practice, and didn’t impact Coco’s quality of life, Franco said.

Her regular vet was cautious about putting Coco under anesthesia, so Franco was surprised in January when Berger, who was filling in while the other physician was on maternity leave, allegedly recommended putting Coco under to extract an infected molar.

“When Dr. Berger reassured her that everything would be fine and that he would personally handle Coco’s anesthesia, and that a skilled, experienced vet would perform the surgery, and that he would oversee the entire surgery, she believed him,” according to the Manhattan Supreme Court lawsuit.

But Berger wasn’t there on Jan. 15 when Franco dropped Coco off for the procedure.

Franco wept as she described Coco’s last days, after he went into cardiac arrest and respiratory distress after an allegedly inexperienced veterinarian pulled 16 teeth at once. Helayne Seidman

Huettenmoser called hours later to say Coco had more than one bad tooth and recommended doing extractions in separate procedures, then allegedly went ahead and pulled 16 teeth without informing Franco, according to court papers.

The vet also kept Coco under anesthesia for more than two hours and failed to rush him for emergency care when he suffered cardiac arrest, keeping him at their facility for hours, the psychologist alleged.

Coco “was clinically dead for nearly six minutes,” but Huettenmoser allegedly told Franco “he is fine,” then transferred the dog to a general emergency clinic at Downtown Veterinary Medical Hospital rather than a specialized animal hospital, according to the litigation, which also names Downtown.

Coco was allegedly kept in an ill-equipped clinic for hours instead of rushed to an emergency facility. Courtesy of Fabiana Franco

A nurse at the West Village facility eventually urged Franco to rush the canine herself to Animal Medical Center on the Upper East Side, and even rode with her to administer oxygen to the doomed pooch, who “was visibly in pain,” she said in court papers.

“The worst ride of my life,” she said through tears. “He was making sounds, gasping for air. I was holding him, nurse next to me doing oxygen.”

Once at Animal Medical Center, Coco was rushed into critical care and was placed on a ventilator for days, but died Jan. 19.

Franco claims veterinarians falsified Coco’s medical records to make it seem as if they informed her of the procedures they were doing. Helayne Seidman

When Franco sought Coco’s medical records from Berger and Huettenmoser, they had been altered, including references to communications with her she says never happened, she claimed.

“It’s been really horrific,” said Franco, who was charged nearly $30,000 between all three facilities.

The veterinarians allegedly “sacrificed Coco’s life to protect their professional reputation,” she contended in the legal papers.

“I want to make sure no other pets are hurt,” she said. “Everybody’s devastated: patients, family, friends, neighbors, his groomer. It’s horrific.”

“We are seeking justice for Coco,” said Franco’s attorney, Peggy Collen. “Veterinarians are shielded by laws that treat animals as mere property. It’s time for change. Whether through case law or legislation, we must demand a legal system that holds veterinarians fully accountable and recognizes that animals are far more than property.”

The veterinarians didn’t immediately respond to messages seeking comment.

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