When Titles Hide the Truth: A Judge, a Breeder, a Factory

by | Jul 17, 2025

The disturbing truth behind an FCI judge’s hidden puppy empire.

Balihara Ranch promotes itself as a “family breeder” – but the numbers tell a different story.
In reality, it’s a large-scale puppy production operation—producing triple-digit numbers of puppies each year.

And yet, despite being officially registered as a breeder, the owner of Balihara Ranch never presents herself as one.

On her website and in public profiles, she lists titles such as Ministry of Justice employee, FCI judge, certified mediator, and court expert. Nowhere does she openly acknowledge that large-scale dog breeding isn’t just a passion project—but her primary source of income.

On the surface, she doesn’t appear to be a breeder at all—but rather a legal professional with public credibility.
But why go to such lengths to hide the truth? Related read: https://balihararanch.review/the-hidden-lives-of-dog-breeders-a-closer-look-at-jana-stefancova/

Why Hide?

Maybe it started innocently—genuine love for dogs.
One female. One litter. Pure joy.

But as the number of dogs grows, so do the expenses.
And once someone realizes that puppy sales can bring in thousands per month, everything changes.

Suddenly, there’s no time for a real job.
Suddenly, it’s easier to live off puppy sales—no 9-to-5 needed.

That’s when the mask appears.
A fake profession. A carefully staged persona. A business behind a curtain.
A lie—to avoid admitting that dogs have become a source of income.

Profit First. Dogs Last.

When profit—not animal welfare—is the goal, cuts always follow. And they’re always in the same places:

  • Less space.
  • More frequent litters.
  • No rest between litters.
  • Cheap, low-quality food.
  • No screening of potential owners.

The owner poses as a “non-breeder” while selling dozens of puppies—completely off the radar.
And the outcome? Dogs treated as merchandise.

Annual income from dog breeding climbs into the hundreds of thousands—well beyond anything that qualifies as a hobby breeder.

Why Are We Writing This?

Because this isn’t a one-time case.
Because Balihara Ranch isn’t an exception—it’s just the most visible example in the world of Swiss Mountain Dogs.

And most importantly:
Because love for dogs doesn’t need to hide.
True love for dogs doesn’t lie about what puts food on the table.

An ethical breeder is never ashamed to say: “Yes, I’m a breeder.”

Official Titles on Paper. A Puppy Factory in Reality.

On paper, the owner of Balihara Ranch appears to be a civil servant. A certified court expert. A mediator. An FCI judge.

But in truth, she is the owner of Balihara Ranch—an operation that produces around 100 to 150 Swiss Mountain Dog puppies per year.

No oversight. 
No transparency. 
No ethics.

And breeding practices that are miles away from anything resembling responsible dog breeding—all hidden behind closed doors that no one’s allowed to see.

Is it really just a “hobby fueled by passion”?
Or a carefully constructed system designed to keep you from looking too closely?

Breeding is not shameful. 
Mass production without ethical rules is.

You can love dogs. You can even breed them.
But if you’re ashamed of how you earn your income, it’s not breeding.
It’s business. And a dark one.
And in the end, it’s the dogs who pay the price—silently. 

Related read: https://balihararanch.review/the-year-2024-on-balihara-ranch-review-full-of-shocking-revelations/

Send a comment

* name and email address are optional, you can send the comment anonymously

CONTINUE READING

When Numbers Start Calling the Shots: The Economics Turning Breeding Into a Production Model (Part I)

When breeding is driven by numbers, its underlying logic shifts. Available data on Balihara Ranch indicate repeated use of the same sire–dam combinations, yielding dozens of puppies from the same pair. This article examines where responsible breeding selection ends and a production model begins—and why, without firm guardrails, the system naturally steers breeders toward volume over thoughtful selection.

read more

A New Year’s Wish – If Dogs Could Speak

As we enter the New Year, our wish is not for more, but for less. Fewer litters and fewer dogs where breeding has become an industry. Less silence around large commercial breeding operations. Because not everything that is legal is also right—and dogs have no way to say so out loud.

read more

The Cost of a Career Built on Dogs

When dog breeding becomes the primary source of income and identity, stepping back without losses becomes impossible. A large commercial breeding operation like Balihara Ranch requires constant escalation, the concealment of reality, and the defense of a system that can no longer be acknowledged as problematic. This is not an individual failure, but the logical outcome of a career built exclusively on dogs.

read more

The Qaiser van’t Stokerybos Case: Paper Exports as an Illusion of Oversight Part II: How a System Can Appear Lawful While Being Circumvented in Practice

The Qaiser van’t Stokerybos case shows how easily exports in dog breeding can be used not for cooperation between breeders, but to bypass the rules. A dog may be officially registered abroad while being physically used to breed females elsewhere—without the system addressing that contradiction.

read more