Sunday, February 28, 2016

United Kingdom: Ban on keeping animals for Suffolk woman who caused suffering to 30 horses and 20 dogs

UNITED KINGDOM -- A Suffolk woman has been found guilty of causing unnecessary suffering to over 30 horses and 20 dogs in her care after they were found emaciated and living in their own feces.

Following an initial welfare concern about a group of ponies kept on land near a railway line, animal welfare officers investigated the premises of Marilyn Read.


They found over 30 miniature horses in a variety of sheds, barns and fields – many living up to two feet deep in their own feces. Most of the ponies were underweight and many had badly overgrown feet, dental problems, worm burdens and eye infections.


Stallions and mares were housed next to each other with only a small fence to separate them, causing unnecessary stress and fighting between the herd.

Expert witness for the prosecution vet Peter Green described the property as ‘massively overstocked’ with ponies and lacking in adequate grazing or space for them to exercise.


Dogs were kept in small cages without fresh water or food and were described as ‘depressed’ by another vet, Kerstin Politz.

Ms Read was convicted of 29 offences under Section 4 and Section 9 of the Animal Welfare Act and has been given a six-year ban from keeping horses and dogs, with a three month suspension to enable her to rehome the animals currently in her care.

 

She was also ordered to pay £2,500 in costs which will be paid at a monthly cost of £50. This prosecution is Ms Read’s third under the Animal Welfare Act having been previously convicted in 2007 and 2004 respectively.

The original 35 ponies seized in summer 2014 are now in the care of the RSPCA and World Horse Welfare where they are undergoing rehabilitation with a view to rehoming them in the future.

 

"We are pleased that this case has now come to a resolution but at the same time disappointed that the sentencing was not stronger given this was Ms Read’s third conviction.

“Now that the case has concluded, the ponies can undergo intensive rehabilitation, a process which has had to be put on hold during the two years this prosecution has been ongoing. Many people don’t realise that any horses or ponies in our farms as part of a prosecution case can only be given basic care and stallions cannot be gelded which means they must be individually housed instead of living in herds or groups as our other horses do. This understandably places a huge strain on our resources, so it’s positive that the team at our Hall Farm Rescue and Rehoming Centre can now begin work with these ponies.”– WORLD HORSE WELFARE FIELD OFFICER, JACKO JACKSON

(ITV - Feb 26, 2016)

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