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BAN HORSE SORING IN TENNESSEE - JUST PLAIN CRUELTY

HORSE SORING - DEPRAVED INDIFFERENCE TO HORSES IN PAIN FOR ENTERTAINMENT PURPOSES

April 1, 2013



Tennessee Grand Jury Indicts Former Tennessee Walking Horse Trainer Jackie McConnell



HSUS Undercover Investigation Leads to Animal Cruelty Charges and Grand Jury Indictment







Court documents reveal a Fayette County Grand Jury has indicted infamous horse abuser Jackie McConnell and two co-defendants on 38 counts of animal cruelty for illegally soring and torturing horses as documented in a Humane Society of the United States undercover investigation conducted in 2011.



A nationally recognized walking horse trainer, McConnell is now notorious for horse abuse following a federal felony conviction for conspiracy to violate the Horse Protection Act. McConnell has been indicted on 22 counts of animal cruelty in Fayette County, for charges stemming from shocking footage captured by an HSUS investigator of McConnell and his associates brutally beating horses and using painful chemicals on horses? legs in a cruel practice known as ?soring.? Soring is the method trainers use to force Tennessee walking horses to perform the exaggerated, artificial gait known as the ?Big Lick.? McConnell is already serving 3 years of probation and has been fined $75,000 for his federal felony conviction.



?We commend District Attorney General Mike Dunavant and Assistant District Attorney General Mark Davidson for filing criminal charges against McConnell and his co-defendants ?the first case of its kind in Tennessee,? Keith Dane, director of equine protection for The HSUS. ?Unfortunately, the owners who placed their horses in McConnell?s training stables have not expressed the slightest regret or remorse for the torture these animals endured, and still need to be held accountable.?



McConnell?s co-defendants in the federal case, John Mays and Jeff Dockery were also indicted?Mays was charged with 13-counts and Dockery with 3-counts. Both men pleaded guilty to lesser charges in federal court for their role in the conspiracy to violate the Horse Protection Act.



Since 2011, The HSUS has assisted the U.S. Attorney?s Office for the Eastern District of Tenn., the U.S. Department of Agriculture?s Office of the Inspector General, and the Tennessee 25th Judicial District Attorney General?s Office in prosecuting the offenders and assisting in the rescue of horses from McConnell?s training operation. In March 2012, eight horses were seized from McConnell?s stable following the execution of a search and seizure warrant. At the state?s request, and at great expense, The HSUS has been providing the horses with intensive rehabilitative care for the past year and will continue to do so.



The indictment is available here.



Background:

Footage obtained by The HSUS of the abuse inflicted upon horses in McConnell?s training facility during its investigation was aired on national television in May 2012 by ABC?s Nightline, sparking national outrage, and condemnation of the practice of soring by the American Association of Equine Practitioners (AAEP