Crime & Safety

Women Sentenced For Hoarding 180 Dogs, Cats In Ocean County Home

Aimee J. Lonczak, 51, and Michele Nycz, 60, also have been banned from owning or working with animals for the rest of their lives.

Michele Nycz (center) and Aimee J. Lonczak (right), with their attorneys when they rejected a plea deal in 2023. The two have been sentenced to jail in the animal hoarding case.
Michele Nycz (center) and Aimee J. Lonczak (right), with their attorneys when they rejected a plea deal in 2023. The two have been sentenced to jail in the animal hoarding case. (Karen Wall/Patch)

TOMS RIVER, NJ — A pair of Brick Township women have been sentenced to jail and banned from owning and working with animals for hoarding 180 animals in uninhabitable conditions in a Brick Township home, the Ocean County Prosecutor's Office announced Friday.

Aimee J. Lonczak, 51, and Michele Nycz, 60, both were sentenced by Superior Court Judge Guy P. Ryanto serve 364 days in the Ocean County Jail and to four years of probation for their guilty pleas to two counts each of animal cruelty in the hoarding that was uncovered Dec. 2, 2022, Prosecutor Bradley D. Billhimer said.

In addition, both women were banned from ever owning or working with animals for the rest of their lives, and to perform community service that does not involve animals, Billhimer said.

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Lonczak additionally was sentenced to 364 days in jail on a charge of child neglect in connection with the case, for having her then-16-year-old daughter living with them in the unsanitary conditions at the home. That sentence will run concurrently with the animal cruelty sentence.

Nycz pled guilty before Judge Ryan on June 24, and Lonczak pled guilty before Judge Ryan on June 25, Billhimer said.

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Lonczak and Nycz were arrested Dec. 2, 2022, after Brick Township Patrolman Scott Smith, the township's humane law enforcement officer, and Patrolman Brennan Lanni discovered the dogs and cats living in cages stacked on cages and filthy, unsanitary conditions when they went to investigate an anonymous call about dogs in the house. Read more: 180 Dogs, Cats Removed From Brick Home, 2 Arrested: Police

The conditions in the Arrowhead Park Drive home owned by Nycz were so bad that authorities and animal rescue volunteers who were called in to help wore hazmat suits and had to work in shifts. The house was later condemned by the Brick Township code enforcement.

The initial information from authorities said 135 dogs and 45 cats were removed, along with two dead dogs. Eight animals were sent for emergency veterinary care, authorities said at the time. Of those, 175 animals went to the Ocean County Health Department's animal facilities.

The prosecutor's office said the final tally was 129 dogs and 43 cats in the house, and two dead dogs. Six dogs and a cat were removed from a vehicle parked in the driveway, authorities said.
The child neglect charge stemmed from the fact that Lonczak's then-16-year-old daughter was living with them in conditions described as beyond unsanitary.

Authorities said feces and urine were 3 and 4 inches deep throughout the house, and animals in the cages were subjected to and in some cases covered in the feces and urine of the animals above them.

The fumes in the home were so strong that people had to put on hazmat suits to enter and retrieve the animals, and the house was condemned by Brick Township code enforcement. Two of the dogs removed from the house were dead.

The animals all went to the Ocean County Animal Facilities, where volunteers bathed the animals and those in need of immediate care received attention from veterinarians. The animals, once vetted and stabilized, were adopted into homes.

Lonczak and Nycz at one point tried to get animals they considered their personal pets returned to them, but later agreed to relinquish their claims to the animals.

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