"The judge was biased against me, I believe, because he's Jewish and I'm Catholic," Connolly told The Post in a phone interview - still fuming after losing her battle to get the canines back.
"My dogs are in grave danger ... She doesn't show tender loving care, she only cares about money," Connolly wrote in a handwritten declaration to the court.
"I'm out of work and I live on social security disability," said Connolly, who lives in supportive housing on the Upper West Side. "All I do is pace, drink water and go to Dunkin Donuts all day. This is very hard - I'm devastated."
The judge, who appears to be the borough's arbiter of doggie justice, compared the two dogs' lifestyles with the feuding fur-parents and ordered the dogs to not be returned, ruling that Connolly's ability to care for them was "questionable."
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