Investigation to Prosecution: Making an Equine Cruelty Case

Proving a case is legitimate, then levying charges and prosecuting those responsible, takes time and cooperation.
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In early June, Kentucky Department of Agriculture personnel began investigating the alleged abandonment of 43 mostly Thoroughbred horses on a farm in Mercer County, ultimately filing charges later in the month. This situation represents just one example of the process that accompanies any alleged animal cruelty case. But what does that process entail? Several long-time investigators explained that proving that a case is legitimate, then levying charges and prosecuting those responsible takes time and generally involves lots of cooperative casework.

“To prosecute an animal cruelty case, prosecutors have to have more documentation than for a human murder case,” said Jim Boller, formerly of the television series Animal Cops Houston and now executive director of Code3 Associates, an organization that trains law enforcement personnel on investigating and prosecuting animal cruelty cases. “They have to act within the law.”

Boller said every alleged animal cruelty case begins with a call to local police, county sheriff, or a state law enforcement agency. After that, the appropriate enforcement personnel are dispatched to the scene.

“It’s depends upon who has jurisdiction—whose job it is to investigate animal cruelty cases,” Boller said. “Sometimes it’s the county, sometimes it’s the local police, often it’s animal control, and sometimes it is the local humane society that has been authorized by the county to conduct animal cruelty investigations

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Written by:

Pat Raia is a veteran journalist who enjoys covering equine welfare, industry, and news. In her spare time, she enjoys riding her Tennessee Walking Horse, Sonny.

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