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samanthajane13
09-25-2007, 05:36 PM
A beastly kind of cruelty


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Drive-by shooters, often youths, are killing farm animals in a growing wave of violence. The culprits may face only vandalism charges.
By John M. Glionna, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
August 17, 2007
PETALUMA, CALIF. -- The buzzards led Nick Bursio to his prized calf. He found the body just over a rise in the field, with a bullet hole in its left shoulder, near the heart.

Bursio had heard of animals killed by rustlers for their meat. But not until that May morning had he ever imagined anything so senseless as shooting cattle presumably just to watch them die.

"I had a hollow feeling in my gut, to see that dead calf laying there, with the mother cow bellowing nearby," said the Sonoma County rancher. "I thought, what the hell's going on in this place?"

Authorities are searching for a drive-by shooter who guns down cows as they calmly munch grass in the rolling pastureland 50 miles north of San Francisco. Since February, five cows have been found dead in two counties, shot with small-caliber bullets designed to inflict prolonged pain and suffering.

Nationwide, an increasing number of animal cruelty cases are being reported outside city limits: Horses, cows, goats and other farm animals are being killed, authorities say, often by angry, reckless youths, perhaps acting on dares.

Although there are no statistics on such crimes, newspapers detail scores of cases. Two Texas college students were indicted last fall for slashing a horse's neck before stabbing it in the heart with a broken golf club handle. In Pennsylvania in 2005, three joy-riding men killed a pony named Ted E. Bear that belonged to a 4-year-old boy.

Last year, two Tennessee teens shot and killed 24 cows, many of them pregnant. "They just wanted to see what shooting cattle was like," said Hickman County Sheriff Randal Ward.

California has also seen its share of the rural violence. In addition to the Northern California cattle shootings, Oakland police are investigating the May killing of 15 goats, each shot in the face as they huddled in a portable pen. Officers said residents had called in to report the sound of "babies crying."

Fresno County detectives arrested two groups of teens in 2005 in the shooting of two dozen cows and horses. In 2003, two Sonoma County men used their cars to ram to death a horse named Gentle Song.

Still, the killing of large farm animals garners little attention in the United States, where the loudest outcry is reserved for the killing of suburban pets or other domesticated animals. Recently, pro football quarterback Michael Vick made front-page news, charged in connection with operating a dog-fighting farm.

Although 43 states have passed felony animal cruelty laws, they rarely apply to livestock -- thanks in part to a strong cattleman's lobby -- as long as ranchers follow "accepted husbandry practices."

In California, state law provides some protection for large farm animals, but enforcement varies among counties. As a result, prosecutors in farm cases often settle for convictions on lesser vandalism charges.

"Animals raised commercially for food have little legal protection against cruelty," said Gene Baur, president of Farm Sanctuary, a group that campaigns against cruelty to farm animals. "It speaks to a prejudice against certain animals, not based on a rational assessment of their ability to feel pain but on our intended use for them."

Studies suggest that youths who engage in animal cruelty often commit violent criminal behavior as adults. Among those who preyed on animals before turning on people were mass killers Jeffrey Dahmer, Ted Bundy and Albert DeSalvo, the Boston Strangler.

The random killing of larger animals signals a troubling psychology that experts are only beginning to understand. Even when caught, most youths refuse to talk about their crimes.

"When you do get to talk to kids and ask why they did it, the most common response is that they were bored," said Randall Lockwood, vice president for anti-cruelty initiatives at the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. "They're obviously troubled. Most bored teens shoot hoops or go see movies; they don't go out shooting horses and cows.

"But you're not going to hear them say, 'I'm alienated against society and this is how I'm reaching out,' " he said.

Still, researchers are developing a personality profile of those who kill large animals outside the context of legal hunting. Abusers who target livestock act out of a different motivation than those who pick on smaller creatures, said Mary Lou Randour, national director of human-animal relations for the Humane Society. "Driving around in search of animals to kill is very planned and methodical, which could make it more pathological and dangerous. These animals could be standbys for the real thing: a human being."

In January, a 16-year-old Humboldt County boy was sentenced to 15 years in prison for the killing of a homeless man. Earlier, that same night, the teen fired a dozen shots into a cow, hitting it in the face and eye and cutting off an ear, authorities said.

Such violence preoccupies Cindy Machado, a Marin County Humane Society detective. Combing country roads in her blue animal control truck, she is pursuing four cases involving the killing of cattle in the San Francisco area.



Story continued...

samanthajane13
09-25-2007, 05:49 PM
"What kind of coward sneaks out here to put a bullet into these creatures?" she said, motioning to some dairy cows, who watch her warily. "They're big and friendly. They're not moving."

In May, after Bursio found his dead 600-pound Charolais heifer, Machado got on the phone to Fresno County, where detectives had solved a series of farm animal killings in 2005.

She says the cases are similar: "They combine guns and kids and back roads. It's a disaster waiting to happen."

As Craig Allen recalls, the yearling colt just wasn't acting right: It refused to go near the roadside fence at Old English Rancho, a Fresno County thoroughbred farm.

Workers found the creature bleeding from a bullet hole in its buttock. Allen, the manager who is responsible for 600 horses, rushed to check on other yearlings.

It was the start of the most horrible day of his life.

He found another panicked horse shot in the neck, a stream of blood trickling down its chest, and helped lead the wild-eyed animal to the stables. There, several men held the horse still as a veterinarian tried to pass a tracheal tube down its throat.

Within moments, the horse was dead. "He drowned in his own blood," Allen said.

That year, 2005, seven horses were killed in Fresno County, including two fillies that motorists had liked to stop and pet. Several months before the Old English Rancho attack, a rancher found one of his cows lying on its side, kicking its legs in the air, blood pouring out of a gunshot wound in its neck. Another cow was paralyzed. Both had been shot in the back of the head. In all, 16 cows belonging to several ranchers were killed within four months.

Authorities arrested two teens in the cow shootings. One came from a home with 25 guns.

Pat Sample lost eight cattle to the snipers. In court, a judge ordered that the boys apologize, but the rancher refused to hear them. "I told the judge there's something really wrong in our society for kids to act this way," he said. "Why do they do it?"

Not long after making arrests in the cow case, two teenagers were convicted in the horse shootings: a shooter and an accomplice. The 17-year-old shooter maintained his innocence and refused to talk with a court psychologist.

A lawyer for one of the boys says he doesn't understand the motivation in such an attack.

"Rural kids grow up with guns. They shoot squirrels and coyotes as predator control, so the idea of shooting a rifle from a vehicle is not abnormal," said attorney Mark Coleman. "Still, I just cannot fathom the transition it takes to start shooting livestock."

George Kayian, a former Fresno County assistant district attorney who prosecuted all the Central Valley teenagers, said they had too little adult supervision and too much access to guns. "You see something, you shoot it -- and then you drive down the road for a few more laughs," said Kayian, now in private practice. "It's someone else's problem."

Investigators say society is beginning to take a tougher stance on such cruelty. After two college students stabbed a 14-month-old quarter horse named Cowgirl Chic last fall, Texas improved protections for farm animals, creating a legal definition of what constitutes torture that includes inflicting "unjustifiable pain or suffering."

"Most places, you've got to go a long way to be considered cruel to livestock," said Robert Trimble, an attorney for the Texas Humane Legislation Network, a nonprofit group that promotes animal protection laws. "The industry is paranoid that somehow what they do in their routine animal husbandry could be called cruelty. We're working to give these animals some protection."

At Old English Rancho, the same day the yearling died, Allen put down the horse shot in the buttocks because the bullet had entered the horse's abdomen.

A third horse, hit in the shoulder, survived. Said Allen: "We named him 'I'm Bulletproof.' "

One morning in June, Cindy Machado examined a rusted yellow cattle crossing sign along a deserted back road: The steer's image had been shot through the heart. She ran her hand along the jagged exit holes.

Story continue...:(

samanthajane13
09-25-2007, 05:58 PM
Machado thinks the sign was shot recently and that it might be a clue.

In the miles of Marin County grazing land that are now her crime scene, she looks for traces a cow killer may have left behind: a swastika etched into the middle of a road, bashed-in mailboxes, mangled empty beer cans, the shot-up road sign.

She also tries to soothe the nerves of angry local ranchers, one of whom suffered a heart attack after a cow was gunned down in his field.

"Hey, we all lose animals; they die. But these killings are off the charts," said Mike Gale, president of the Marin County Farm Bureau. "They've gotten under the skin of the ranching community here. If they catch these kids, I'm afraid they're going to do something terrible to them."

Machado knows the anger. She once ran a cattle ranch. Cows are more than just walking slabs of beef, she says. You get attached to them, name them.

Photos of the crime scenes decorate the walls of Machado's office. She scours the shoulders of roads, using a metal detector to hunt for spent shell casings.

She brought one rotting calf carcass to the shelter where she works to X-ray it for metal fragments: "It was looking for a needle in a haystack. But we had to try."

Officials have offered a $16,000 reward in the Northern California cattle cases. But so far, it has yielded no leads.

Machado isn't giving up. One afternoon, she leaned out of her patrol truck and offered her card to two girls and a boy who were feeding cattle at their family's ranch. She drove away, observing the teens in her rearview mirror.

"The kids killing these animals are out here somewhere," she said. "I hope we find them soon. They really need help."

john.glionna@latimes.com

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And people wonder why I have so much more trust and feeling for animals???

And why I'm an animal activist???

THIS CASE ALONE GIVES AT LEAST 10 REASONS WHY!!!

This makes me physically ill.

:rose: RIP-To all the sweet gentle creatures who had their lives stolen form them is such BRUTAL WAYS!!!:rose:

kurro07
09-26-2007, 12:46 AM
that is sick and wrong. what is to stop those kids from switching to humans once shooting animals isn't any more fun?
Too many people assume that just because animals don't show the range of emotion that we do that they have no feelings. I've seen my fair share of animals that showed plenty emotion w/o cracking a smile or laughing.
I hope those kids are caught and punished in some way that drives to others that what they are doing is not fun and they are destroying others means of making money as well as harming harmless creatures.

pony named Ted E. Bear that belonged to a 4-year-old boy.
Come on! i can't image how heartbroken that boy was.

samanthajane13
11-26-2007, 02:30 PM
"I truly hope someday these kids wake up in a bath tub with ice at the back of some abandoned building, only moments later to discover that their internal organs like kidneys, liver and etc have been surgically removed (harvested)... then I hope they die in horrible pain...36 hours later."

:beer: I whole-heartedly agree!

AlsoKnownAs
11-29-2007, 03:57 PM
The article didn't specify the counties, but I used to live and bicycle in the areas that distance from SF. This is the first I have heard of this 'Hobby'. I wonder if this isn't another by product of the 'Rewards' Interactive Violent Video Games that flood the market! It's not something any kids of mine would be allowed to play. The parents getting a surprise $40,000 bill would curb this practice. I have dogs & horses and am glad my property is situated that they are not usually visable from the road. AKA

Solution, Skin, Salt, Repeat! One apendage at a time. Start with the removable from the gene pool.:punch:

hissister
11-30-2007, 02:45 AM
Oh man! This is really disturbing to read. I've been an animal lover all of my life. I've always said that other people don't have to love or even like animals; but they don't have the right to abuse or harm them in any way. I can't fathom the mind of a person who takes pleasure from harming an animal. It is frightening. I think these young people are showing signs of a deep disturbance that will someday lead them to start acting out violently against other humans; if they haven't already.

wind149
11-30-2007, 09:50 PM
Today's youth have no respect for anybody or anything, it is all about them, and parents nowadays can't punish their kids because the little brats will tell a teacher at school they are being abused and here comes CPS. My god-daughter had one evil friend, she was adopted into a lovely home, rich parents, and this girl was as bad as they get. Sins of the biological parents I guess. I was staying with my best friend for a few days ,and my cats were there and she threw my cat off the couch and I do mean hard, and I wanted to beat her senseless. One day, I am sleeping in my house and I heard my god-daughter come in and I have an open door policy with all my kids, and she asks me if I had a couple bucks and I told her it was in my purse and laid back down as I was not feeling well. I feel somebody standing over me and I think it is Holli, and it is the evil one and she has her hand on my pain med bottle and had slipped a pack of cigs in her pocket. I called Holli's Mom and then we called the police and her parents. The little brat tells the cops I said it was OK to take a pill and then she tells them that I allowed Holli to take the cigs, and not likely as they both were under 18. The cops knew she was lying through her teeth and she was banned from both of our houses. Later on, I heard that she had stole a car one night when Mommy took the Beemer away, she got busted for pot ,and ended up in juvie. Her parents should have kicked her butt, and you can do that without it being abuse. Ground them ans stick with it, or take away cars, phones. As for these dirtbags hurting animals, a long prison sentence is the answer. Anyone who ever tries to harm my cats or the horses, God help them is all I will say. People that start out hurting animals end up like Jeffrey Dahmer.

Shelley420
12-01-2007, 05:19 AM
Horses and cows are such beautiful animals. It really makes me sick that people could kill them for fun. How disturbed must someone be to enjoy watching animals die?

I try and teach my kids to respect animals. We have a 6-week-old kitten at the moment and it really makes me feel fantastic when I see my 11-year-old son playing with her and treating her oh so gently.

What do parents do to kids to make them want to hurt animals I wonder? I guess they have been hurt themselves somehow...still, no excuse for not having compassion and respect.

samanthajane13
12-01-2007, 05:47 AM
God help anyone attempting to harm my animals.

I've got a crow-bar waiting for them.

charmaine
12-06-2007, 07:04 AM
God help anyone attempting to harm my animals.

I've got a crow-bar waiting for them.

I am a horse, dog, bunny, fish and bird owner and ITA! Here in Oz at the moment there has been a case of someone taking shots at horses. The cops have the make and rego number of the car though. The problem with people shooting your horses and/or cattle is that you can't keep your eye on them 24/7 and thats when these scumbags pounce. I have my own property and I wake up pretty quickly at the sound of anything suspicious but if something was to happen, it would in all liklihood be too late. I have planted lots of trees so my place is very private and my horses are not easily spotted. You have to wonder what is wrong with the people that do these things, especially when they can't even articulate why they did it in the first place.