This is an interesting explanation of what happened in court, shown on the Animal Legal Resources Facebook page:
"Animal Legal Resources, LLC One of the factors a court must consider in issuing a temporary order is the likelihood of the success of the moving party. The court would not have ruled this way if the judge thought COSR would be successful in winning the case. When there is a temporary order like this, the other side can keep up the fight, but they are usually not going to get a different ruling unless there are some unknown facts that were not presented at the motion hearing or in previous hearings or documents filed with the court. And, those facts must be compelling to the issue of ultimate ownership and not just a claim the other side is mean to me and said nasty things. That isn't relevant to the issue of ownership. And by the way, this is the second judge that ruled Piper should be returned to her owner. The first have the bond option. This on revoked the bond option.
The facts in the written record have all of the issues spelled out so unless COSR has something the didn't have in the written documents presented at any time prior to the hearing, they are going to loose the case ultimately. And, if the court decides further motions or issues are friviolous, COSR could be responsible for the other side's attorney fees as well. Since the judge already ruled that Sanderbeck is personally responsible and can't be protected by the corporate shield, her personal property could be attached for payment of any fees and costs the court orders if that side looses.Now, that would be true justice."
I haven't seen anything that says Sanderbeck is personally responsible - that is an interesting comment to make.