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Thursday, February 09, 2006

Owner of horses saddled with fine

Animal control officers seized six horses that were blocking the road in Botetourt County.

A judge levied a $250 fine against a Fincastle horse owner Wednesday, ending another episode in a two-year dispute between the man and the county over the care of his horses.

Botetourt County animal control officers seized six of Jack Cassell's horses Feb. 1 after a truck driver called 911 to report the horses blocking U.S. 220. The incident contributed to the latest set of charges.

"If things don't improve, somebody is going to get killed one night," said Botetourt County General District Judge Louis Campbell. He convicted Cassell of five misdemeanor counts of allowing an animal to stray or trespass, but suspended all but one of the accompanying $250 fines.

Both sides hope to bring the dispute to a quick end. Cassell's attorney, Robert Hagan, said that Cassell has a contract to put up an electrified fence and intends to find homes for all of his herd, which he's already reduced from about 30 to about 20.

The judge's decision struck a fair balance between addressing a public safety issue and guarding against "overzealous enforcement" by impatient authorities, Hagan said.

Assistant Botetourt Commonwealth's Attorney Jill Deegan said it's not prosecutors' goal to put Cassell behind bars or punish him with hefty fines. "We want Mr. Cassell to be in compliance."

A neighbor of Cassell's, Randall Fletcher, testified that he's called Cassell about 100 times after finding Cassell's horses on his property or out in the road.

Sgt. W.D. Horton with Botetourt County Animal Control testified that Cassell's fences have remained in poor repair for about two years.

"We don't want to be back in here because a person has hit a horse and killed the horse and killed themselves before we get something done about it," Deegan said.

Cassell, 79, faced trial in January on 33 counts of animal cruelty for allegedly allowing his horses to starve.

He ultimately pleaded guilty to two counts of depriving an animal of food and water, and agreed to reduce the size of his herd.

Commonwealth's Attorney Joel Branscom said prosecutors will wait to see how Cassell complies before deciding whether the new convictions will affect the January plea agreement.

Hagan expressed concern about the manner in which the horses were seized Feb. 1. Usually, when horses are in the road, the owner, who can respond fastest, will be called first. But Cassell wasn't notified that his horses were on the highway. Instead he was called by a neighbor, Hagan said.

In court, Hagan argued that there was no legal precedent for the county to seize the horses.

The judge disagreed with him, saying the seizure was justified by the number of previous violations.

Cassell has already sold two of the seized horses and will likely try to find homes for the other four, Hagan said.

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