Did you read the information on the warrant or listen to the radio shows?
The police received a complaint. They knock on the door. Someone answers the door and identifies himself as living there and lets them into the barn.
That was the ex-husband who has lived on the property for years. He never even bothered calling the owner of the property, her neighbor did. The police found the conditions, and a dead rabbit, and they told Debbie that the dead rabbit changes everything. Now, taken out of context that comment seems reactionary and odd. We all have animals just drop dead sometimes.
Now that you know the cages are piled deep in feces and the matting is pretty ridiculous, and the (independent) vets have examined rabbits to find eye infections and tacky gums proving dehydration, it starts to make a little more sense. The reason the dead rabbit changed everything is because of the laws in place, if they were just violations, she probably would have been let off with a fine.
Once animals are dying seemingly as a cause of bad conditions, the officer's hands are tied. More than likely they go to the yellow pages to find a rescue group who is willing and able to take that amount of rabbits. Do I think the HRS is right in some of their views? No, I don't. I haven't seen them tied to any lobbying or legislation that shows they are trying to outlaw meat rabbits or anything like that, however.
I think some of the sites really vilified the officers involved now that the whole picture is emerging.