Thursday, April 11, 2013
MCCRACKEN COUNTY, KY APRIL 10, 2013
McCracken Man Cited for Animal Cruelty
Published 05:45 AM, Thursday Apr. 11, 2013
MCCRACKEN CO, KY - A McCracken Man has been cited for animal cruelty, after authorities seized two adult horses they say were emaciated and neglected.
According to the Paducah Sun, the horses were taken after calls to animal control described them as starving and lethargic. McCracken County Animal Control Director Chryss George told the Paducah Sun that when she got to the Chapel Road property, the horses were in their stalls and George said it appeared they had been treated poorly. Both of the horses appeared to be very emaciated, according to George.
George cited horse owner Donald Peck for cruelty to animals. The animals were then taken into county custody. Peck said he had been allowing a friend to care for the horses.
The Sun reports Coda and Moriah spent the rest of Wednesday eating hay and oats in their stalls.
A date for Peck's court appearance has not yet been scheduled.
Star.com
Friday, April 5, 2013
SCOTT COUNTY, KY APRIL 2013

Investigation Continues In Possible Scott County Animal Cruelty Case
Posted: Apr 1, 2013 5:49 PM
LEX 18
Video
Thursday, February 28, 2013
MCCRACKEN COUNTY, KY 22 FEBRUARY 2013
McCracken Man Faces Animal Cruelty Charges
Updated 12:34 PM, Monday Feb. 25, 2013
PADUCAH, KY - An investigation by McCracken County Animal Control has led to the arrest of a McCracken County man on charges of animal cruelty.
A search warrant was obtained Thursday afternoon to search property on Bonds Road in southern McCracken County belonging to 28-year-old Chad A. Phillips.This after animal control responded to complaints of a neglected horse.
Officers discovered the horse, reportedly emaciated and tied to a log with no access to food, water, or shelter. Additionally, multiple dead chickens were located in the yard, in cages and other locations on the property. A dead calf was located in a stock trailer.
The horse was seized by animal control and taken to a secure location for treatment. The calf was removed by the county road department.
Phillips was arrested on five counts of second-degree animal cruelty and taken to the McCracken County Regional Jail.
westkentuckystar
GARRAD COUNTY, KY FEBRUARY 27 2013
More Than A Dozen Horses Rescued From A Garrard County Farm
Posted: Feb 27, 2013 7:06 PM
Video
More than a dozen horses had to be rescued from a Garrard County farm from, what one animal rescue group called, a catastrophic situation.
This started yesterday when animal control, a vet and others received calls about horses not being cared fro properly.
LEX18 is told it got so bad they had to euthanize a couple of the horses right away
LEX 18 cameras were rolling as the rescue was underway, loading 13 of the horses into trailers.
Garrard County Animal Control says about four of the horses died on the property from malnutrition and starvation.
The person who owned the horses told officials he fell on hard times and was trying to do the best he could to care for the animals.
Buckland Equine Rescue was the re and said this is a problem they are hearing more of lately. They'd like to hear from people struggling to take care of their horses sooner rather than later.
"It's much harder for us to do our job then. If you call and say 'hey I'm in trouble, I need to get rid of them,' it lets us set up to find places before they get into trouble," said Chris Takacs from Buckland Equine Rescue. "The problem, you see, here nobody got in touch with anybody that could help them out."
This case is still under investigation by Garrard County Animal Control. They say once the rescued horses are back up to health they'll be ready for adoption
Lex18
centralkynews
Monday, February 25, 2013
WOODFORD COUNTY, KY FEB 25th 2013
Sixteen dead horses, a dead donkey and numerous dead dogs, cats and chickens were found in a barn on a Woodford County farm Monday afternoon.
The farm at 1975 Woodlake Road is leased by Cheryll Jeffers, who also goes by the last name Ford, said Sgt. Keith Broughton of the Woodford County Sheriff's Department.
Woodford County animal control officers, the sheriff's office and representatives of the Kentucky Department of Agriculture visited the farm about 3:30 p.m. and found the animals.
Broughton said it was unclear whether Jeffers would face charges.
"We're still in the investigative stage," he said.
Broughton said the animals "were all in various stages of decomposition," including some that were skeletonized or mummified.
"Some of them have been dead for several months," he said.
In addition to the dead animals, there were about 15 horses and "numerous" cats, chickens and dogs on the property.
Broughton said a local farm had donated hay for the horses.
"They probably are a little bit neglected," he said, adding that water was being taken from the house on the property to the horses because there was no running water to the barn.
He said Jeffers had agreed to turn over the dogs to animal control officers, who were taking them to the Woodford County animal shelter.
Broughton said Woodford County Animal Control was in charge of the investigation.
kentucky.com
.
.UPDATE:
Woman Pleads Guilty In Woodford County Animal Cruelty Case
Aug. 05, 2013
A woman accused in a Woodford County animal cruelty case has pleaded guilty.
Cheryl Ford was charged with second-degree animal cruelty after authorities found 16 dead horses, along with dead dogs, chickens and donkeys at a farm off Woodlake Road in Midway. Ford surrendered about 50 dogs and cats to authorities.
In the plea deal, Ford pled guilty to four counts animal cruelty second degree and two counts of failure to dispose of a carcass. She was sentenced to six months jail time, with 90 days served in jail and the remainder on home incarceration. Ford's attorney claims she's not medically able to stay in jail.
Ford's attorney says she's a woman who got in over her head after a nasty divorce and couldn't care for herself... much less the animals.
Ford will be on probation for two years, and is not allowed to own animals during her probation.
Formal sentencing in the case is set for September.
LEX18
The farm at 1975 Woodlake Road is leased by Cheryll Jeffers, who also goes by the last name Ford, said Sgt. Keith Broughton of the Woodford County Sheriff's Department.
Woodford County animal control officers, the sheriff's office and representatives of the Kentucky Department of Agriculture visited the farm about 3:30 p.m. and found the animals.
Broughton said it was unclear whether Jeffers would face charges.
"We're still in the investigative stage," he said.
Broughton said the animals "were all in various stages of decomposition," including some that were skeletonized or mummified.
"Some of them have been dead for several months," he said.
In addition to the dead animals, there were about 15 horses and "numerous" cats, chickens and dogs on the property.
Broughton said a local farm had donated hay for the horses.
"They probably are a little bit neglected," he said, adding that water was being taken from the house on the property to the horses because there was no running water to the barn.
He said Jeffers had agreed to turn over the dogs to animal control officers, who were taking them to the Woodford County animal shelter.
Broughton said Woodford County Animal Control was in charge of the investigation.
kentucky.com
.
.UPDATE:
.
Aug. 05, 2013
A woman accused in a Woodford County animal cruelty case has pleaded guilty.
Cheryl Ford was charged with second-degree animal cruelty after authorities found 16 dead horses, along with dead dogs, chickens and donkeys at a farm off Woodlake Road in Midway. Ford surrendered about 50 dogs and cats to authorities.
In the plea deal, Ford pled guilty to four counts animal cruelty second degree and two counts of failure to dispose of a carcass. She was sentenced to six months jail time, with 90 days served in jail and the remainder on home incarceration. Ford's attorney claims she's not medically able to stay in jail.
Ford's attorney says she's a woman who got in over her head after a nasty divorce and couldn't care for herself... much less the animals.
Ford will be on probation for two years, and is not allowed to own animals during her probation.
Formal sentencing in the case is set for September.
LEX18
Thursday, February 7, 2013
UNION COUNTY, KY FEBRUARY 2013
UNION CO., KY (WFIE) -

Two horses were found dead near a creek in Union County late Monday night, and right now, authorities are not sure who dumped them there.
The horses were found in the Highland Creek area, just off Kentucky 360 near the community of Hitesville.
On Tuesday, a member of a local saddle club tells 14 News, many residents are unsure of who to contact when they discover a situation like this one.
"This just, this is awful," Jarrad Rudd said.
Union County resident Jarrad Rudd belongs to a local saddle club and says, Tuesday morning, he was fielding a lot of calls from concerned residents who saw the two ponies, one of those, not completely intact late Monday night.
"People here don't want to treat their horses like this. I didn't understand what happened to them. They looked like they were well cared for," Rudd said.
Rudd tells 14 News that he put in a call to the state veterinarian, but with no animal control in the county, he wasn't sure who was responsible for taking care of the situation.
14 News called Judge-Executive Jody Jenkins who says he hadn't heard about the horses.
"It was obviously careless and reckless on whoever that animal owner was," Jenkins said.
Jenkins tells 14 News that he contacted the Kentucky Department of Agriculture and their employees came to check out the scene.
Jenkins says he's never seen anything like this in Union County.
Animal lovers like Rudd are just hoping nothing like this happens again.
"What's happened here, we don't understand it," Rudd told 14 News.
The judge-executive says if residents see something like this in the future, they can contact his office or the sheriff's office.
14News
Update 02/10/2013:
According to locals, the owner of the two dead horses is known and he currently has another horse starving on his property. Picture that was taken of the starving horse:
Sunday, January 13, 2013
KENTUCKY JANUARY 2013
State senator cited for violating Horse Protection Act
Published: January 12, 2013
By Janet Patton — jpatton1@herald-leader.com
A high-profile walking horse proponent and padded horse
rider, Kentucky state Sen. Robin Webb, D-Grayson, has suffered an equine
black eye.
At the North Carolina Walking Horse Association championships in October, Webb was cited for violations involving two horses.
"Senator Robin Webb Busted" read the headline Dec. 4 on an anti-soring blog called "For the Tennessee Walking Horse."
According to the USDA's database of Horse Protection Act violations, Webb was ticketed for violating the "scar rule," which establishes criteria to look for certain scars on the horse that are considered evidence that a horse has been "sored" and is ineligible to compete. Webb, as owner, was cited as a responsible party for two horses, Air Force One and Showstopper.
In an interview last week with the Herald-Leader, Webb denied soring either horse and said she did not see anything wrong with the animals at the time of the competition.
"I don't sore my horses," Webb said. "I love my horses, and my horses love me."
She said Showstopper is a young horse whom she bought not long before the show; Air Force One is a prize-winning horse she has ridden in shows for years without incident, including a week after he failed the inspection.
"They were turned down on a scar rule and sent back to the barn," she said. "The scar rule is very subjective."
She said she did not appeal because she never received paperwork on either violation and, as far as she knows, she was not suspended.
Her trainer, Donald Stamper of Richmond, also was cited. Stamper confirmed Webb has horses in his barn but said he did not recall the incident.
"Where was this at, now?" Stamper asked in response to a reporter's question. He hung up when asked for comment on his role.
Webb also has been a vocal opponent of federal legislation, filed by U.S. Rep. Ed Whitfield, R-Hopkinsville, to ban the use of pads and chains, called "action devices," on horses.
"The Whitfield bill is extreme," Webb said last week.
Whitfield said in a statement Friday that his bill "eliminates the self-policing system currently employed, allowing for a more uniform enforcement. ... It is far from 'extreme,' which is why it carries the support of the American Veterinarian Medical Association, the American Association of Equine Practitioners and numerous others."
The American Association of Equine Practitioners, headquartered at the Kentucky Horse Park, has said the ban is necessary to end soring.
Dr. René A. Carlson, president of the American Veterinarian Medical Association, said in June that her group is asking for a ban on "the use of action devices and performance packages in the training and showing of walking horses, because they appear to be facilitating soring."
The U.S. Equestrian Federation, also headquartered at the Horse Park, also does not allow the use of action devices in the show ring.
At the annual meeting of the Tennessee Walking Horse Breeders and Exhibitors Association in December, Webb criticized the AAEP and other veterinary groups who have called for a ban, dubbing them "agenda-driven entities."
Webb was honored by Tennessee Walking Horse Breeders and Exhibitors Association as its 2012 Performance Horse Ambassador for her participation in USDA discussions.
Last week, Webb told the Herald-Leader that the Tennessee walking horse has been "demonized," particularly in light of a video, shot by an undercover investigator from the Humane Society of the United States, showing top walking horse trainer Jackie L. McConnell abusing horses in his Tennessee barn.
Webb said the footage, in which McConnell was shown striking tied-up horses in the face, was taken out of context.
"You don't know what happened five minutes before or five minutes after. ... These are animals that are very dangerous," Webb said. "Every breed has training techniques that animal-rights groups find offensive."
At the North Carolina Walking Horse Association championships in October, Webb was cited for violations involving two horses.
"Senator Robin Webb Busted" read the headline Dec. 4 on an anti-soring blog called "For the Tennessee Walking Horse."
According to the USDA's database of Horse Protection Act violations, Webb was ticketed for violating the "scar rule," which establishes criteria to look for certain scars on the horse that are considered evidence that a horse has been "sored" and is ineligible to compete. Webb, as owner, was cited as a responsible party for two horses, Air Force One and Showstopper.
In an interview last week with the Herald-Leader, Webb denied soring either horse and said she did not see anything wrong with the animals at the time of the competition.
"I don't sore my horses," Webb said. "I love my horses, and my horses love me."
She said Showstopper is a young horse whom she bought not long before the show; Air Force One is a prize-winning horse she has ridden in shows for years without incident, including a week after he failed the inspection.
"They were turned down on a scar rule and sent back to the barn," she said. "The scar rule is very subjective."
She said she did not appeal because she never received paperwork on either violation and, as far as she knows, she was not suspended.
Her trainer, Donald Stamper of Richmond, also was cited. Stamper confirmed Webb has horses in his barn but said he did not recall the incident.
"Where was this at, now?" Stamper asked in response to a reporter's question. He hung up when asked for comment on his role.
Webb also has been a vocal opponent of federal legislation, filed by U.S. Rep. Ed Whitfield, R-Hopkinsville, to ban the use of pads and chains, called "action devices," on horses.
"The Whitfield bill is extreme," Webb said last week.
Whitfield said in a statement Friday that his bill "eliminates the self-policing system currently employed, allowing for a more uniform enforcement. ... It is far from 'extreme,' which is why it carries the support of the American Veterinarian Medical Association, the American Association of Equine Practitioners and numerous others."
The American Association of Equine Practitioners, headquartered at the Kentucky Horse Park, has said the ban is necessary to end soring.
Dr. René A. Carlson, president of the American Veterinarian Medical Association, said in June that her group is asking for a ban on "the use of action devices and performance packages in the training and showing of walking horses, because they appear to be facilitating soring."
The U.S. Equestrian Federation, also headquartered at the Horse Park, also does not allow the use of action devices in the show ring.
At the annual meeting of the Tennessee Walking Horse Breeders and Exhibitors Association in December, Webb criticized the AAEP and other veterinary groups who have called for a ban, dubbing them "agenda-driven entities."
Webb was honored by Tennessee Walking Horse Breeders and Exhibitors Association as its 2012 Performance Horse Ambassador for her participation in USDA discussions.
Last week, Webb told the Herald-Leader that the Tennessee walking horse has been "demonized," particularly in light of a video, shot by an undercover investigator from the Humane Society of the United States, showing top walking horse trainer Jackie L. McConnell abusing horses in his Tennessee barn.
Webb said the footage, in which McConnell was shown striking tied-up horses in the face, was taken out of context.
"You don't know what happened five minutes before or five minutes after. ... These are animals that are very dangerous," Webb said. "Every breed has training techniques that animal-rights groups find offensive."
Kentucky.com
Read more here: http://www.kentucky.com/2013/01/12/2473994/state-senator-cited-for-violating.html#storylink=cpy
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)