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SouthernJen
06-08-2004, 04:20 AM
Link to story (http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/topstory/2614890)


3 days of bread, water for neglecting 2 horses
Former owner to spend 30 days in jail
By ANDREW TILGHMAN
Copyright 2004 Houston Chronicle

A 28-year-old Baytown woman convicted of neglecting her horses will begin a 30-day jail sentence with three days of bread and water, courtesy of Harris County Criminal Court-at-Law Judge Mike Peters.

"She's going to get more than her horses got," Peters said Monday, after signing off on the unusual jail terms for Melissa Dawn Sweeney.

Sweeney was convicted last Friday on two counts of cruelty to animals for severely neglecting the two horses she kept outside her trailer home in Baytown. Each of the misdemeanor charges could have landed her in jail for up to a year.

Instead, Peters on Monday sentenced her to 30 days in the Harris County jail, with the stipulation that for the first three, she must endure his judicially imposed diet of bread and water.

Neither Sweeney nor her attorney, Tom Niederhofer, could not be reached for comment.

Sweeney, a former stable worker, was accused of leaving two horses unfed and unsheltered in the back of her Baytown property for more than more than four months.

When the animals were found in late January, they were boney and emaciated, diagnosed with intestinal infections and a skin condition known as "rain rot."

One of the horses had severe abscesses on his hoofs that made it difficult to stand.

"He was just swaying back and forth in pain because he didn't want to put any weight on either foot," said Assistant District Attorney Tacie Ball, who prosecuted the three-day trial.

Sweeney testified that she fed the animals about 28 pounds of food a day and attributed their condition to their advanced age. The horses were in their mid-20s. Healthy horses can live into their early 30s.

The jury of six women convicted her of both counts and sentenced her to 365 days in jail. The jury probated her sentence, meaning she will only have to serve that sentence if she violates the terms of her probation. In this case, the 30 days in jail with dietary restrictions were imposed as part of her probation.

Investigators from the Harris County Sheriff's Department's livestock division received a complaint in January and found Sweeney's horses living in a muddy, trash-strewn lot and drinking from dirty puddles behind the home in 4200 block of Redell.

Jim Boller, the director of field services for the Houston office of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty of Animals, said Sweeney's case appeared more egregious because she had worked in a stable.

Ball, the prosecutor, told jurors that the mistreatment appeared to be the result of laziness.

One of the horses was later euthanized and the other has been adopted and is now healthy and living in Montgomery County, Ball said.

Peters told Sweeney she could serve her 30 days in jail on weekends during the next several months, allowing her to continue to care for her three children.

Sweeney's sentence also requires her to post blown-up photographs of her malnourished horses on her jail cell wall.

"So she'll have a reminder of what she did," Peters said.

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What do you think? Was the sentence too harsh? Not harsh enough? Or did the judge make a good call in giving her this punishment for neglecting her horses?

mom2burgess
06-08-2004, 04:43 AM
I think it was a good call. Too many people don't think of animals of having feelings, or feeling pain, maybe this will teach her a lesson. Although I do think the 30 days, served on weekends is al ittle odd

Madelyn
06-08-2004, 03:56 PM
I think she got off easy. If I were the judge, she would have gotten 12 months for each counts, served consecutively, not concurrently -- Meaning 2 years.

SouthernJen
06-08-2004, 04:31 PM
When I first read that story I couldn't believe someone would allow their animals to live in such deplorable conditions. I feel so badly that those horses had to endure what they did. In my opinion, those who mistreat and/or abuse animals should receive the same type of punishment as if they were abusing another human.

Her sentence wasn't harsh enough, IMO. I do like how the first three days of her sentence are bread and water only, though. Since her animals suffered then to me she should suffer as well. But, I don't agree with only having weekend jail time. Her horses were mistreated every single day, not just on the weekends. Why should she only be punished on the weekends then? Let her sit out in jail for a couple of years and have the father take care of the kids or another family member take over while she's incarcerated!!

Daethian
06-08-2004, 08:09 PM
I totally agree to making punishment fit the crime. In any sort of abuse I think the abuser should suffer the same as the victim. Hell let her serve the whole year with only bread and water! Sucks about the weekend thing...

Jory
06-08-2004, 09:49 PM
I think she should be fed the bread and water the whole time. I can never understand how people can let animals that depend on them suffer. I am glad that laws are becoming stricter for this kind of thing, but I still think we need more.

Mabel
06-08-2004, 10:01 PM
I think she should serve the 30 days in jail in succession, not just weekends, and I think that she should endure bread and water the entire time, possibly with a multi vitamin. She can survive on bread and water for 30 days - at least she's receiving nourishment. I don't think the court can cross a line into abusing her, because that would be a slippery slope, which is why I added the possibility of a vitamin.

Loveone
06-09-2004, 01:21 AM
I think she should serve the 30 days in jail in succession, not just weekends, and I think that she should endure bread and water the entire time, possibly with a multi vitamin. She can survive on bread and water for 30 days - at least she's receiving nourishment. I don't think the court can cross a line into abusing her, because that would be a slippery slope, which is why I added the possibility of a vitamin.
I agree with Mabel.