Former Employee Exposes Alleged Abuse Inside Pet Grooming Shop

Side-by-side image showing a woman grooming a small dog inside a shop on the left and The Corner Pet Grooming roadside business sign on the right.

Dogs sent to a Greenville grooming shop for baths and trims are now at the center of an animal mistreatment case. Two owners of Corner Pet Grooming, Linda and Donald Gilstrap, face charges after video evidence allegedly showed dogs punched or handled violently inside the business, FOX Carolina reports.

Woman reaching toward a small dog secured on a grooming table inside a pet grooming area.

YouTube/FOX Carolina News

Videos Led Police To The Grooming Shop

The case began after Greenville Police Department Animal Control received complaints on March 16, according to WYFF. After officers reviewed video evidence, they executed a search warrant at the East North Street business and arrested the owners.

Warrants accused Linda Gilstrap of punching a small Shih Tzu-type dog while the animal was suspended in a body hammock. Another warrant alleged she grabbed a dog by the muzzle and ears and forced its neck backward. Donald Gilstrap was accused of punching a dog in the ribs during a bath and striking the dog from above, WYFF reports.

Roadside sign for The Corner Pet Grooming at 1605 E. North Street with a phone number displayed below.

YouTube/FOX Carolina News

A Former Employee Kept Recording

A former employee told FOX Carolina she recorded the alleged abuse to give investigators evidence. She said 36 videos were gathered over about a month and a half, though only three had led to charges at the time of the report. Corner Pet Grooming did not respond to the station’s request for comment, and a sign said the business was closed until further notice.

Woman grooming a small fluffy dog on a grooming table inside a pet grooming shop.

YouTube/FOX Carolina News

Grooming Needs Trust And Oversight

South Carolina law makes it a misdemeanor to intentionally ill-treat an animal or inflict unnecessary pain, according to the South Carolina Legislature. Yet groomers themselves have not been licensed or regulated in the way barbers, cosmetologists, and tattoo artists are, a gap examined by ABC News 4 after another South Carolina grooming video stirred public alarm.

The stakes are not abstract. Grooming is a basic health need for many pets, Frontiers in Veterinary Science reports. Poor grooming can cause pain, skin infections, ear and eye problems, parasites, and severe matting injuries. In some cases, hair mats can even restrict blood flow and damage tissue.

Pets Cannot Report What Happens Behind Closed Doors

The grooming trade has also wrestled with abuse prevention from within. Groomer to Groomer has warned that unseen abuse may go unreported, even as most groomers enter the field because they care about animals.

For Greenville pet owners, the case leaves one hard question. When a dog is handed across a counter, who makes sure it is treated gently once the door closes?

Matthew Russell

Matthew Russell is a West Michigan native and with a background in journalism, data analysis, cartography and design thinking. He likes to learn new things and solve old problems whenever possible, and enjoys bicycling, spending time with his daughters, and coffee.

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