Pet relocation services handle the relocation of pets to different countries when their owners either migrate or move.

Pet relocation requires a significant amount of work that includes quarantine receipts, dealing with agents and a lot more paperwork.

Problems start to arise when the experts on these matters become almost negligent in their handling of the relocation process.

Enter Gabriel See, and his Full of Fun House PTE LTD.

Now, there are currently a lot of negative reviews floating around the Internet about this particular service.

Allegations of absconding with fees and blocking client numbers, but we are going to focus on one particular incident that has been confirmed by See himself.

Death of a Golden Retriever

A Facebook user who had recently migrated to Australia posted this comment on another victims Facebook page.

While the story is sad, there is a glaring logistical leap that is made in the comment.

Namely, that the dog isn't dead, and that the company is hiding the truth for some reason.

That might have been the end of the story, until the owner of the relocation company spoke up on local forum Hardware Zone to give his side of the story.

Proof

Before we begin, here is his proof that the user, StarfishHK85, is indeed Gabriel See.

Stubbornness

First, he confirms that the dog had died, and blamed the stubbornness of the owners who refused to believe him.

But why wouldn't the owners believe him?

This might be why

This is the man's version of the story.

That might seem plausible, so the question is, where is the death certificate?

He doesn't have one.

Some people called him out on this non answer.

He rejected the need for a death certificate by asserting the place of death.

Didn't take the dog to a vet

The above screenshot makes one thing abundantly clear, the man didn't take the dog to any medical authority at any given time.

He assumed the dog was dead and promptly cremated it.

Without the presence of a death certificate, the inability of the owners to accept the death makes a bit more sense.

So is there no proof?

Not exactly.

See, even though the man did not consult any medical professional, he did make it clear that he had cremated the dog in a mass cremation procedure.

That would mean there would be records of the cremation right?

Nope.

It wasn't any official cremation service, just some '3rd party guy'.

Why a 3rd party guy? This might be why.

Cost.

Ok, so there isn't any record of the cremation, but what about a receipt at least.

Here's a tl;dr version of the story

1) Man gets entrusted by clients to relocate dog to Australia.

2) Wakes up one day to find dog dead.

3) Does not call any medical service at all.

4) Instead, calls a 3rd party cremation guy to handle cremation.

5) Loses the receipt for said cremation.

6) Calls the clients to tell them dog is dead.

7) Wonders why clients have hard time believing him.

Top image from Flickr

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