Concerns remain
The following
abridged investigative report may be the best way of describing what we
found in Presidio, TX and what took us there. It is important to
remember that the situation at the export pens in Presidio is what is
found everywhere along the horse slaughter pipeline.
In Shippensburg, PA
or Presidio, TX; Butler, KY or Fairhaven, MI; Shelby, MT or Los Lunas,
NM; Shipshewana, IN or Sugarcreek, OH-- the evidence is stark and clear:
Horse slaughter and transport on U.S. soil or not, means
suffering and cruelty for horses long before they stand in the slaughter
kill box.
Important Background to Investigation

Signed eye witness
statements report horses without food & water, and "non-ambulatory
horses dying where they lay in puddles of mud and urine."
(All Photographs provided by anonymous sources, taken between 8/12/11-8/18/11)

Animals' Angels Investigation:
Animals' Angels
requested a status update from the Presidio County Sheriff's Office as
well as TCEQ in February and also submitted Public Information Act
requests regarding horse shipments and any prior investigations of the
C4 pens.

In the August 2011 report TCEQ states, "The
cause of death of these horses remains unknown and should be further
investigated by the appropriate agency having jurisdiction in this
matter." This would indicate that the sheriff's office was enjoined to investigate.
However, TCEQ has informed AA that further information is not available to the public but is under "Management Review."
The Presidio
County Sheriff's Office response included no documents of a cruelty
investigation against C4. Apparently, there are also no records of any
complaints ever being submitted. However, Deputy Sheriff
Nunez acknowledged in an earlier email (8/15/11) to complainant
the receipt of the complaint & the pictures and confirmed that 2
cruelty investigations were ongoing.
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Dead horse and trenches visible
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The Sheriff's Department did
provide some documents of an investigation related to C4's illegal
dumping. It included landfill records, showing that in June, July and
August of 2011 C4 dumped approximately 50 dead horses/month at the landfill.
The photographic evidence
submitted to the Presidio Sheriff's Department suggests cruel and
inhumane treatment on C4 property where horses were in the "custody and
control" (as described in state law) of C4. What happened?
Investigation on the ground: Presidio 3/ 6-7/2012
Investigators
immediately observe a truck unloading horses from Three Angels Farms
(Dorian and Edwin Ayache) whose February wreck in TN (crashing within an
hour of leaving origin), killed 3 and injured several of the 38 horses.
http://www.wkrn.com/story/16531100/overturned-cattle-truck-closes-both-directions-of-i-40.
A Dennis Chinn truck (Pratt, KS) sits empty nearby.
Both Ayache and
Chinn trucking companies have many violations, the most recent include
31 violations for Vehicle Maintenance, 4 Unsafe Driving, 9 Fatigued
Driving, Driver Fitness and Crash with Injury.
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Three Angels Farms Trailer
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A second Three
Angels Farm truck is observed with holes, loose boards, broken overhead
piping that put horses at risk of severe injuries.
Wrangler Grain truck, Mount Pleasant, TX and Robert Jackson truck and trailer, Marietta, OK are also seen.
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Dead Horse in C4 Pens
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No vantage
point allows AA investigators to see inside the pens. After renting a
helicopter, investigators observe 2 dead horses in a pen with other live
horses. Water is available to all horses, but little to no hay can be
seen in the pens and there is no shelter from the desert sun.
Investigators note temperature is already 93 degrees. TX Animal Health
& Safety code 821.021 defines cruelly treated as "unreasonably
deprived of necessary food, care, or shelter."


Investigators
note that on these new trailers the sides can be closed completely,
which makes it impossible to check en route if a horse has gone down or
if there are other problems. Closed, the metal trailer would be
intensely hot. Unfortunately and predictably, trailers loaded with
horses documented at the border waiting to cross were completely closed.
Conclusion:
While some
improvements were noted (no illegal dumping of dead horses was
observed), horses are still dying at the C4 pens in Presidio. It appears
carcasses are left in the pens with other horses and are not
immediately removed. The pens have no shelter from the desert sun. Questions remain regarding adequate food.
Transport trailers
& procedures observed in Presidio are unacceptable. Animals' Angels
has discussed with USDA officials the dangerous disrepair of the Ayache
trailer, the detached loaded trailers waiting for hours, and the closed
up Mexican trailers. They have promised to take a look further into
each.
Concerns also
remain regarding no confirmed sheriff's investigation and TCEQ's review
that is unavailable to the public for an unknown period of time. It now
appears that the slow deaths of multiple horses in 2011 were never
investigated and that no charges were filed against C4 for cruelty to
animals. It appears the real bottom line here is that horses suffered
and continue to suffer in Presidio.
Horse slaughter is no excuse.
A normal horse owner, who just left his or her ailing horse to suffer
and die, would be charged with animal cruelty. It should be no different
for these horses.