Showing posts with label dryer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dryer. Show all posts

Sunday, July 3, 2016

California: Visalia man, Rock Rowland, 31, gets 4 years in prison after killing cat in dryer

CALIFORNIA -- A Visalia man was sentenced to four years in state prison on Thursday by a Tulare County Superior Court judge after putting a cat inside a dryer and turning the machine on.

Rock Rowland, 31, was convicted in May of one count of animal cruelty with a special allegation that he used a deadly weapon.


After an argument with his mother on Dec. 21, 2015, Rowland placed his mother’s cat inside a dryer and turned the machine on, killing the cat.

(Fresno Bee - June 23, 2016)

Earlier:

Friday, May 20, 2016

California: Rock Rowland, 31, convicted of animal cruelty after putting his mother's cat in the dryer and killing it

CALIFORNIA -- On Monday, May 16th, in Department 12 of the Tulare County Superior Court, Visalia Division, Judge Lloyd Hicks presiding, Rock Rowland, age 31, of Visalia was convicted by a jury of one count of animal cruelty with a special allegation that he used a deadly weapon. The conviction is a strike.


On December 21, 2015, Rowland had an argument with his mother at the house they shared. His mother left the house shortly after the argument and Rowland put her pet cat in the clothes dryer and turned it on.

A family friend discovered the cat deceased in the dryer several hours later.

Sentencing is set for June 23, 2016, in Department 12 of the Tulare County Superior Court, Visalia Division. Rowland can be sentenced up to four years in state prison for the conviction.

The case was prosecuted by Deputy District Attorney Wendy Sedillo and investigated by Officer Isaac Stephens of the Visalia Police Department.

(Tulare County District Attorney's Office - May 19, 2016)

Related:

Thursday, December 3, 2015

In Massachusetts, when you kill a cat by cooking it to death in a dryer, you get probation

MASSACHUSETTS -- A Quincy woman will serve probation after pleading guilty to animal cruelty in the 2013 death of a cat killed in a clothes dryer.

“This cat died after repeated blunt force trauma and hyperthermia with bruising to the head and face, broken teeth, bleeding into the eyes and pulmonary contusions” 

On Monday, Lori Tasney, 38, changed her plea in Norfolk County Superior Court in Dedham to a count of animal cruelty, a count of killing, maiming or poisoning an animal and a count of larceny over $250. However, Tasney didn’t concede to all of the facts in the case against her.


Tasney, whose trial was set to start Tuesday, is already on probation through April 2017 for a separate criminal case out of Suffolk County, said David Traub, a spokesman for Norfolk County District Attorney Michael Morrissey.

Following Tasney’s guilty plea Monday, Norfolk County Superior Court Judge Beverly Cannone added two conditions to Tasney’s existing probation – that she receive mental-health evaluations and she abstain from drugs and alcohol.

It is disgusting that they gave this odious woman probation after torturing this poor animal to death.

Tasney’s co-defendant in the animal-cruelty case, Christopher Lang, 35, of Quincy, pleaded guilty to the same three counts last year and was sentenced to three years in jail in conjunction with his guilty pleas in a separate case on charges of breaking and entering and larceny.

Prosecutors said Lang put a cat in a clothes dryer in early May 2013 while Lang and Tasney were guests in a Sea Street home in Quincy. The cat, named Kitty, was later found dead outside near the basement door, court documents said.

Lori Tasney and Chris Lang look into each others eyes as Marilyn and Daniel Haldeman hold each other at the end of a visit. Tasney and Lang have been dating for two years and plan to marry when he gets out. His current parole date is set for 2008. Lang was imprisoned for robbery in January 2005. Tasney visits twice a week, which is the most time any inmate is allowed visitors, but says “I would visit every day if I could.” --
Prison Photography - Elyse Butler

Prior to her guilty plea, Tasney asserted that she was not aware of the cat’s whereabouts when Lang put the animal in the dryer. Her defense attorneys were Natalie Corvington and Sandra Gant.

The prosecutor was Norfolk County Assistant District Attorney Tracey Cusick.

Tasney’s case was scheduled to start earlier this year, but it was delayed after her lawyers questioned her competency. In a court motion filed in April, defense attorneys said Tasney nodded off repeatedly during the jury-selection process, wrote indecipherable notes to herself and did not seem to remember which jurors were selected or why.

Tasney underwent a competency evaluation and was deemed fit to stand trial.

The death of Kitty was one of two high-profile animal cruelty cases out of Quincy in 2013. In October of that year, Radoslaw Czerkawski, a Polish national, was arrested and charged in the death of Puppy Doe, the name given to the pit bull that police say was brutally tortured in a Whitwell Street home.

Cusick, who has been involved in animal-cruelty prosecutions since 2001, is also the prosecutor in the Czerkawski case.

(Patriot Ledger - Nov 30, 2015)

Earlier:

Tuesday, December 1, 2015

Dog torturer, Dustin Harrell, back in jail after violating probation 2nd time

TENNESSEE -- A Washington County, Tennessee, man who pleaded guilty in a high-profile animal cruelty case is back in jail for violating his probation a second time.

This time, Dustin Harrell failed to report to his probation officer six times. Harrell will have to serve at least two months in jail to complete his original sentence.

He was sentenced to probation in 2012.


In Nov. 2011, officers say he admitted to torturing and then killing his family's Yorkshire terrier by throwing the dog down a flight of stairs repeatedly, holding it underwater and cycling the dog in the clothes dryer for about four minutes.

Harrell told Washington County Sheriff’s Investigator Jeff Miller that he first threw the dog down the stairs at his house, then comforted it, then threw it down the stairs several more times.

“He later filled the bathtub up with water and held the dog under the water for approximately 20 seconds at a time” and did this three times, Miller wrote in the court record.

After the bathtub incident, Harrell said he dried the dog off with a towel, then put the dog in the clothes dryer — with nothing else in it — and turned the machine on for four minutes.

That’s when Harrell told investigators he looked up “dog in the dryer” on the computer. After that, Harrell threw the dog down another time, which broke the Yorkie’s leg.

That injury caused Honey to cry in pain, so Harrell used painter’s tape around the dog’s mouth to keep her quiet and used an Icy Hot sleeve on the dog’s broken leg.

When the Yorkie stopped crying, Harrell told police he removed the tape and the dog began bleeding from the mouth. Harrell said he held Honey and she died in his arms.

An investigator said the little dog's torture and subsequent death occurred over a four-hour period.


At the time, the judge said Harrell would have to comply with probation for 18 months; if he did, the charge would be erased from his record.

But in May 2014, Harrell had not reported to his probation officer, left the state without permission and tested positive for drugs.

(WCYB - Dec 1, 2015)

Earlier:

Monday, April 20, 2015

Lawyers question alleged cat killer's competency

MASSACHUSETTS -- Lawyers for a Quincy woman accused of killing a cat in a dryer have raised questions about her competency to stand trial after she behaved strangely during jury selection earlier this week.

In a motion filed Wednesday, the lawyers said Lori Tasney nodded off repeatedly during the process, wrote indecipherable notes to herself and did not seem to remember which jurors were selected or why. In response, the court ordered Tasney to undergo a competency evaluation and postponed her trial until August.


Tasney was one of two people arrested on animal cruelty charges in 2013 after a Sea Street woman found her cat’s bludgeoned body outside her house. Tasney’s co-defendant, Christopher Lang, was sentenced to three years in prison in December after pleading guilty in two cases, including the animal-cruelty case.

Prosecutors allege that Lang put the cat in a clothes dryer while Lang and Tasney were guests in the Sea Street home. Tasney’s lawyers have argued that she was not aware of the cat’s whereabouts when Lang put the animal in the dryer, and therefore she should be acquitted.

Jury selection in Tasney’s trial began Tuesday, but one of her lawyers said in an affidavit filed the next day that Tasney appeared to be “in physical and mental distress” and had trouble staying awake through the process.

“Though I was able to occasionally converse with Ms. Tasney, I do not believe she was able to meaningfully participate in the selection of jurors in her case,” the attorney, Sandra Gant, said in the affidavit. “I do not believe she is able to recall who was ultimately seated on her jury, nor is she able to recall who was excused or why.”

The motion also included three pages of Tasney’s “notes” from jury selection, each of them marked with an illegible scattering of cut-off words, half sentences and random scribbles. One of the only legible portions read: “My life is a mess.”

Tasney’s trial is scheduled to resume Aug. 17.

(Wicked Local Quincy - Apr 17, 2015)

Earlier:

Thursday, December 12, 2013

Family pet survives 20 minute hot-spin after he climbed into tumble dryer full of bedding

UNITED KINGDOM -- It must have seemed like the perfect place for a catnap.

But when Phoenix the kitten chose to snuggle down among the damp bedding in a tumble dryer, his decision nearly proved fatal.

Deryn De Temple had no idea that her daughter Elfie’s black cat was in the machine and switched it on.

The seven-month-old pet found himself trapped inside for 20 minutes as it revolved at high temperatures  – until Mrs De Temple opened the door he tumbled out.


Phoenix was close to death when he was rushed to a vets last week but was allowed home just six days later after making a 'miraculous' recovery.

The house-cat suffered mild burns to most of his body and had ten times the normal amount of potassium in his blood, an effect of the extreme heat exposure during the spin cycle.

Owner Elfie De Temple, 17, of Arundel, West Sussex, said: 'When he came out of the dryer he looked like he had inhaled nerve gas - he was convulsing and spasming.

'I feel terrible. I think Phoenix has forgiven me though - he gave me a cuddle last night I'll never be able to forgive myself.'


 After Phoenix was found Elfie's step-dad, Ron Cole, 58, researched what to do online, and discovered they should slowly try and lower his body temperature with cold water.

Deryn, 52, said: 'We did that for a few minutes and then rushed him to the vet. He barely looked alive at all, we were all so scared.

'The vets were fantastic. They put him on a drip and told us that the first few hours were the most crucial. Luckily he survived the night, and the next day he got a bit stronger.

'That happened for a few days, and on the sixth day, he was strong enough to be allowed home. He's still a bit poorly, but he seems to be getting back to normal.


'He walked up to the dryer, meowed loudly at it and then scampered off, so I think he's told the machine who's boss.'

Ron added: 'His kidneys shut down and he was unable to feed himself.

'He got so hot that his red blood cells started rupturing and he was unable to regulate his own body temperature. His recovery was miraculous. It was a real miracle - he went through hot hell and came out the other side.'

Vet Annette Moyart said: 'We were at the point of putting him to sleep when he came in. We had to pull out all the stops to save him.


'Cats like crawling inside dark places, like piles of clothes, tumble dryers or even ovens, and if they are hiding, they won't purr when disturbed.

'It's always best for cat owners to just give a quick check to make sure their pet isn't inside any household appliance before turning them on.'

(Daily Mail - Dec 12, 2013)

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Guilty plea entered in Jonesborough dog torture-killing

TENNESSEE -- The man accused of killing Honey, a four-pound Yorkshire Terrier mix that was his family’s pet, told a judge Wednesday during a plea hearing he had no excuse for his behavior but revealed he was using drugs and alcohol at the time.

Dustin Ricky Harrell, 22, 1125 Old Stage Road, pleaded guilty to aggravated animal cruelty with no agreement from state prosecutors on his sentence.


Harrell’s attorney, Jim Bowman, told Criminal Court Judge Robert Cupp his client is eligible for judicial diversion. Assistant District Attorney General Erin McArdle said after the hearing that she intends to seek a jail term for Harrell because of the magnitude of the crime.

[NOTE: Judicial diversion means that as long as he doesn't pick up any new charges while he's on probation -- misdemeanors, felonies -- at the end of his probation period, it will be wiped clean of his record as if the torture and death of the little dog had never happened. It will not show up on any background searches, he will not be a convicted felon. It will be as if IT HAD NEVER HAPPENED.]

The incident happened Nov. 3, apparently during the night as Harrell’s family slept.

McArdle said statements from family members indicate Harrell retrieved Honey from his mother and stepfather’s bedroom that night, saying she needed to go out.

Four hours later, he told them the dog was dead after being hit by a car. But Honey’s ordeal didn’t happen outside. It occurred inside the house where she lived.

In his description of what happened, Harrell told Cupp that he repeatedly tortured, then comforted, the scared, injured family dog named Honey.

Harrell told Washington County Sheriff’s Investigator Jeff Miller that he first threw the dog down the stairs at his house, then comforted it, then threw it down the stairs several more times.


“He later filled the bathtub up with water and held the dog under the water for approximately 20 seconds at a time” and did this three times, Miller wrote in the court record.

After the bathtub incident, Harrell said he dried the dog off with a towel, then put the dog in the clothes dryer — with nothing else in it — and turned the machine on for four minutes.

That’s when Harrell told investigators he looked up “dog in the dryer” on the computer. After that, Harrell threw the dog down another time, which broke the Yorkie’s leg.

That injury caused Honey to cry in pain, so Harrell used painter’s tape around the dog’s mouth to keep her quiet and used an Icy Hot sleeve on the dog’s broken leg.

When the Yorkie stopped crying, Harrell told police he removed the tape and the dog began bleeding from the mouth. Harrell said he held Honey and she died in his arms.

An investigator said the little dog's torture and subsequent death occurred over a four-hour period.

“I killed and tortured my family dog,” Harrell said. “I could tell you what I did to cause my actions, but everything was a choice.”

Cupp asked Harrell “what could possess you?” to hurt and kill the dog in that manner.

Harrell said he was using heroin, bath salts, pain pills and alcohol.

Since killing the dog, Harrell sought alcohol and drug treatment and through that learned how abuse at the hands of a family member led him down a path of destructive behavior.

The abuse occurred when Harrell was a child and was not committed by his mother or stepfather.

Animal rights supporters were in court to hear Harrell admit to killing Honey and said he still needs to be punished for his actions.

Regina Isenberg, founder of The Bridge Home No Kill Animal Rescue, located in Blountville, said she was glad to see Harrell plead guilty, but “what else can you do when you’re charged and (they) have pictures?”

“We do not tolerate animal abuse in our area. We will stand up for all the animals. This is our responsibility as caring, compassionate citizens,” Isenberg said.

She also said her support for animals should not be mistaken for not caring for children who are victims of crime.

“There are many organizations that represent children. I worked for many years with children,” and child abuse “is not acceptable,” she said. “If I had more than 24 hours, I would sit for all the kids.”

Harrell is now scheduled for a sentencing hearing July 10 at 9 a.m.

(Johnson City Press - May 30, 2012)

Friday, August 31, 2007

Florida: Boy, 11, charged with breaking into home, trying to slash cat's neck and when he failed at that, he killed it by cooking it to death in the dryer

FLORIDA -- A Florida judge ordered a psychological evaluation Thursday for an 11-year-old boy charged with breaking into a home and killing a cat.

The boy, who has not been identified because of his age, faces charges that include animal cruelty and burglary, WKMG-TV in Orlando reported. He allegedly wanted to get even after an argument with another boy in Titusville, Fla.

The judge ordered the 11-year-old to spend three days in the juvenile detention center in Brevard County for the evaluation. The boy will then be released to the custody of his parents, and may only leave home to go to school or when escorted by one of his parents.

Investigators said the boy broke into the house and tried to slash the cat’s throat. When that failed, he put the animal in the dryer and turned it on.

He has been ordered to refrain from all contact with the family that owns the cat.

(UPI - Aug 31, 2007)