Police
find more than 10 dead horses on Mississippi ranch
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[December 02, 2014]
By Therese Apel
JACKSON, Miss. (Reuters) - Authorities
found at least 10 dead horses on a Mississippi ranch after receiving a
report that more than 170 of the animals, many of them malnourished,
were on the property, officials said on Monday.
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Some of the horses were missing eyes, others were walking on three
legs and several had open wounds with pus coming out of them, said
Alisha Armstrong, who made the discovery in Crystal Springs, about
25 miles south of Jackson, on Saturday together with her husband
before notifying authorities.
The couple, visiting the property with an eye toward buying it,
counted 179 horses, most of them appearing to be malnourished and at
least 20 of which were dead, Armstrong said.
Some of the dead animals appeared to have been moved into piles,
including two carcasses befouling a creek supplying the 175-acre
property with water, she said.
"This was something that you see and hear in horror movies. This is
a nightmare," Armstrong said.
When the Armstrongs returned to the property on Sunday, most of the
horses, including the most sickly ones, had been removed, she said.
Copiah County Sheriff Harold Jones said investigators instructed the
horses' owner, Jerry Earls, to bury the dead animals.
Earls transported 45 of the horses north to Hinds County, with
authorities there quarantining them and seeking to determine if any
of them were stolen, a Hinds County Sheriff's Office spokesman said.
The roughly 45 horses remaining on the property were found by animal
health officials to be in decent condition, and there are no grounds
for charges against Earls at present, Jones said.
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Earls, who court records show was convicted of grand larceny of
livestock in 2012 after being indicted on charges of stealing 42
head of cattle, is on probation through November 2015, according to
the Mississippi Department of Corrections.
Animal welfare advocates said the case raises concerns.
"Having that many deceased animals, and horses with various injuries
going untreated, when you combine that with [Earls'] criminal
history... I think it would be hard not to find something in
violation of state statute," said Lydia Sattler, director of the
Mississippi chapter of the Humane Society of the United States.
Earls could not be reached for comment. A phone number listed in his
name was not receiving calls.
(Editing by Jonathan Kaminsky and Eric Walsh)[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2014 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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