FARM A New Breed of Horse Thief

Loretta Van Riet

Trying to hang out with the cool kids.
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20090731/D99PC9UO0.html



Horse slaughters have Miami-area owners on edge
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Jul 31, 6:18 AM (ET)

By SARAH LARIMER

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MIAMI (AP) - Someone is killing the horses of Miami-Dade County.

Since January, police say at least 17 horses have been butchered, their carcasses left on roadsides or in stalls or rural pastures.

Police tiptoe around questions about who is doing the killing and why, but animal rights advocates believe the meat is being sold on the black market to people from other countries where horse is a delicacy.

"It's a real ugly problem we're trying to take hold of and eliminate," said Richard Couto, an investigator with the South Florida Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, which has recently looked into six horse killings. "Extremely, extremely difficult to find the people that are doing the slaughtering."

Ivonne Rodriguez had never heard the horror stories, never seen the pictures, until her horse, Geronimo, disappeared from his pasture one February morning. She missed work to post fliers and canvass her neighborhood, asking others if they had seen the good-natured pinto who liked apples and was friendly around children.

A few days later, she got a call from her father. The horse's remains had been discovered under a palm tree, partially hidden by fronds. It had been decapitated and butchered, apparently by thieves who took its meat.

"Not only is it disturbing, it's hurtful," Rodriguez said. "It's a pet for God's sake. It's not been raised to suffer a death like that."

The killings have continued, the latest over the weekend. On Monday, Couto stood over a horse carcass with about 200 pounds of meat removed. Its owner found it butchered over the weekend, its cappuccino-colored foal alive and still nuzzled against its body.

The horse's remains were burned, but a nauseating stench still lingered around the body, which lay just a few feet from its old home.

Miami-Dade Police Capt. Scott Andress, whose agency is among those investigating the horse slaughters, said the cases are tough to solve because they usually happen in rural areas where there are no eyewitnesses. He said his officers are working to confirm whether the horse meat is being sold to consumers.

"We had received anecdotal evidence in the past that there might be some sort of black market activity," said Andress, commander of department's Agricultural Patrol Section. "We started hearing more about it after Jan. 11, which was the first case we got this year."

Couto says the black market for horse meat is both active and profitable.

"Miami-Dade and South Florida is a melting pot," Couto said. "We have a lot of people, we have a lot of international people, from Asia, Europe, South, Central America and the islands. A lot of these countries, horse meat for human consumption is legal. These people grow up eating this meat."

Investigators have discovered animals with slit throats and slashed tendons. Some have been stabbed to the heart, and some might have been butchered alive. The meat is often harvested in unsanitary conditions - on the sides of roads, in dirty barns, with tools that might not be clean - but Couto says some people are still willing to pay $7 to $20 a pound.

Horse thefts aren't unique to Miami-Dade County, but in other parts of the country, the horses are sometimes not seen again and it's tough to prove what happened to them, said Laura Bevan, director of The Humane Society of the United States' Eastern Regional Office. Not so here, where carcasses have turned up close to where horses were taken.

Until a few years ago, as many as 100,000 horses were killed annually in the United States for meat for foreign markets. In Florida, it is legal for horse owners to kill and eat their own horses on their own land, but horses cannot be slaughtered and sold to others for human consumption.

A 2007 federal court ruling closed the nation's last horse-processing plant, though some groups are currently pushing to renew the slaughter of horses in the U.S. Horses that are sold for meat are now sent to processing plants in Mexico and Canada.

In Miami-Dade, horse owners are still looking for answers. Two years have passed since Allen Owens' blue-eyed horse, Comanche, was found slaughtered in his stall. Owens' wife discovered the grisly scene in August 2007, when she went to feed the animal grain and hay at daybreak.

"As long as it's been since it happened, it just drags out really powerful emotions," he said. "I'm not a violent person, but you wouldn't believe what goes through your mind."

Owens believes thieves used a wheelbarrow to cart meat from the stable, out a wooden gate, past a red horse trailer, across another patch of land, and through a chain link fence before the reached a wooded area and a nearby roadway. Owens and his wife were left with Comanche's head and bones, which are now buried under a Florida Holly, a few feet from a round horse pen Owens fashioned out himself out of electric poles.

"It just was the most gruesome thing I had ever seen in my life," Owens said. "It's a memory that never goes away. I've learned to live with it, but it never goes away."

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LONEWOLF

Deceased
Okay, so let's have it on the table shall we? Which "cultures" might be responsible for stealing horses/pets and hacking them up for a few bucks??
 

Loretta Van Riet

Trying to hang out with the cool kids.
The article said people were willing to pay upward of $20.00 per pound. Say 200 lbs of horse meat at $20.00 per pound. That thief made a cool $4,000 probably in cash.

LONEWOLF... I know what you're thinking. Thought about it myself. I prefer to think it is a "prepper gone bad".

Loretta V.
 

Foothiller

Veteran Member
Hmm

In 2005, the eight principal horsemeat producing countries produced over 700,000 tonnes of this product.

Major Horsemeat Production Countries, 2005 Country ↓ Animals ↓ Production in Metric Tons ↓
China 1,700,000 204,000
Mexico 626,000 78,876
Kazakhstan 340,000 55,100
Mongolia 310,000 38,000
Argentina 255,000 55,600
Italy 213,000 48,000
Brazil 162,000 21,200
Kyrgyzstan
150,000 25,000
Worldwide
Totals 4,727,829 720,168

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse_meat
 

WalknTrot

Veteran Member
I heard about this last night. Scary for horse owners. but actually will be a problem for all livestock owners soon. I worry about my old geldings who are so trusting..and to most people they look like they are 6 instead of 27 and 28. Sounded like the a-holes who are doing this have no regard for the animals, in some cases literally butchering them alive. I do bring the guys up to the barnyard pasture at night, but during the day, they range to the far end of the farm. I have talked to other owners who are doing the same thing these days. Bring 'em in close at night.

One reason I won't have sheep or cattle here on the place again until one of us is retired and home all day to keep and eye on things. Even then, they will be brought up close to the house in the evening and locked up.

I have no problem with eating horse meat if the critters are handled, put down and butchered humanely, but this crap is just sick.
 

Publius

TB Fanatic
This was reported happening last year and the law enforcement I do not believe is trying that hard to catch these people they can catch poachers faster than this.
 

Wise Owl

Deceased
People need to start either keeping a guard at night near the horses or a video cam up in their barns that is hidden from view. Once they catch and convict them it will stop for awhile.

I can almost bet it is hispanics or chinese doing it but my money is on hispanics as FL is full of them.
 

Old Gray Mare

TB Fanatic
IMHO the problem are laws that encourage this kind of activity by making it so profitable. It also denies US farmers of a proven profitable market for their products. Restrict the public's access to a desired product and abracadabra a black market appears. These laws protect foreign producers.

Not every horse is Black Beauty or Flicka. Some are downright dangerous and have to be put down to protect people from injury or potential death. Others are put down due to old age, deformity, injury or sickness. All this meat, all this potential profit and investment gets wasted.

Horse owners of rustled stock are hurt

Horses may be killed using less than humane methods because of the russling and humane regulated slaughtering houses cannot legally take horses in the US

US farmers are denied a market

Law enforcement has to invest resources to try and track down rustlers that may be being protected by ethnic communities in the US because the rustlers supply a demand that could be easily and profitably cured by legalizing the slaughter of horse meat for human consumption.

Many pet horses are being dumped now because of the slumping economy and owners who nolonger have the resources to properly care for them. Some of these animals suffer starvation and abandonment because a more humane option is not available.

I don't care if PETA gets pissed at me. I do not like to see innocent animals suffer and family farms hurt.
 
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Publius

TB Fanatic
They could also putout the word that the last horse that was killed was on medication that can kill humans if they eat the meat. This would put people off from buying the meat and the meat may turn up somewhere leading the cops to the people thats doing this.
 
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