Three of five husky puppies are the only ones to have survived after they were seized from deplorable conditions last week by animal control in Baltimore.The puppies were found Friday night in a car in horrific conditions at a BP gas station on Hanover Street, officials said. A tip called in by someone who was concerned after seeing the car for days led animal control officers to what they described as a nightmare."The man had noted to animal control that what he had done was bought them in South Carolina at 4 weeks old, separated them from their mom and was traveling up the coast and had buyers for them in various states along the way. But, obviously, these puppies were underage, not vaccinated and dying," Baltimore Animal Rescue and Care Shelter spokeswoman Bailey Deacon said.At only 4 weeks old, the husky puppies were not legally old enough to be adopted.The puppies were found covered in their own excrement, which became their only source of food and water. They were deathly ill, officials said, and were rushed to a veterinary ER and into the care of BARCS. "That's when we learned they tested positive for (canine parvovirus) -- all five of them," Deacon said. "With (canine parvovirus), you can't wait. You have to start immediately treating it. It's very expensive to treat."BARCS authorized treatment through their Franky Fund, which pays for medical care for animals that come through needing special attention.By Saturday night, two of the puppies -- named Clove and Sky -- had died. Two others, which they named Rainbow and Milton, are in critical condition. Only Noki was well enough to go into foster care.The pups' story is generating donations to the Franky Fund on social media and BARCS leaders said they are grateful to the person who called for help."There's no way that any of them would've survived if that car had either stayed at the gas station for another day or even continued on to its destination," Deacon said.WBAL-TV 11 News reached out to Baltimore City Animal Control for an update on the investigation but has yet not received a response.