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- Wyoming, USA -


~ Update: October 26, 2023


On Monday, October 23, 2023, 51-years-old KATHY WRIGHT (pictured), appeared at Riverton Circuit Court before Judge Daniel Stebner in relation to the animal cruelty charges filed against her in 2022, when she starved several innocent animals to death.


As reported by County 10, WRIGHT maintained her innocence and throughout the hearing, she repeatedly said: “I did not do this.”


According to County 10, at the hearing, Assistant Fremont County Prosecuting Attorney Ember Oakley showed pictures taken on WRIGHT’s property depicting a horse with his hip bones as well as dead goats.

Oakley also noted that it is unfortunate that Wyoming law only recognizes this charge as a misdemeanor.


Judge Stebner sentenced WRIGHT to a total of four years of probation with the first two years supervised. While on probation, WRIGHT cannot “own, transport or possess any animals”, reports County 10. Additionally, WRIGHT “was ordered to pay $4,261.76 in restitution to the Fremont County Sheriff’s Office for hay, supplies, veterinary care, and other costs associated with caring for and re-homing her animals. “


So, starving innocent animals to death is not a felony in Wyoming. Wyomingites, please do something about that!



~ Original story:


50-years-old KATHY WRIGHT (pictured), of Riverton, has agreed to plea guilty to four counts of animal cruelty.


WRIGHT is accused of starving chickens, geese, goats, horses, and sheep. Some of the voiceless victims were sadly starved to death.


On December 7, 2022, Lt. Sarah Trehearne with the Fremont County Sheriff’s Office responded to a property on 54 David’s Way in Riverton after Deputy Sara Lowe found many deceased goats in pens. Some of them had died recently, while others were in various stages of decomposition.


Deputy Lowe also saw a horse who needed “immediate veterinary care.” In two pens were skeletal-looking horses, and sheep and goats were in “deplorable” condition.


Lt. Trehearne knocked on WRIGHT’s door, but no one answered. She then walked around the property and among the animals, and discovered between ten to twenty deceased animals. Some of them were still warm as though they had died that same very day.

None of the animals on the property had food or water, and although there were three bales of hay, they were insufficient to feed just one animal.


Dr. Guna Gamble of G Bar G Veterinary Hospital responded to the scene and carried out an emergency assessment. She determined two of the goats had died that day. Dr. Gamble then advised officers to feed the animals a little explaining that since they were so malnourished, overfeeding them could shock their systems. Dr. Gamble further noted that the animals needed grass hay and they could not be fed the “straight alfalfa” that was on the property.


As stated above, the poor souls were not only deprived of food, but there wasn’t any water either so, officers used a hose that was on the property and as you can imagine, the animals, who were extremely thirsty, drank immediately.


Lt. Trehearne called WRIGHT on the phone, who said that the “very thin horse” was hers but that she did not know what was wrong with her/him.

WRIGHT also said that she was planning on getting the horse wormed and treated, then quarantined at her mother’s home. WRIGHT explained to Lt. Trehearne that only nine of the eleven horses were hers and that the other two were her mother’s.

WRIGHT then admitted that all the chickens, geese, goats, and sheep were hers.

In reference to the goats, WRIGHT said that they may have been dying of chlamydia. WRIGHT claimed that a veterinarian at the state fair had diagnosed them.

When Lt. Trehearne followed up with vets in the area and at the state fair, none of them confirmed WRIGHT’s claim. Furthermore, they also said they would no longer do business with WRIGHT.


Lt. Trehearne then seized multiple deceased goats and took them to the G Bar G Veterinary Hospital for necropsies. Dr. Glenn Gamble performed necropsies on two goats and said he believed the animals died of starvation, explaining that there were no fat deposits between the skin and muscle of their rib cages, no fat around their internal organs, and no fat survival reserves.


Buffalo Bulletin reports that on December 12, 2022, two charges of animal cruelty were filed against WRIGHT for incidents occurring between January 1, 2022, and December 8 2022. WRIGHT was then arrested on December 13, 2022. At her December arraignment, WRIGHT plead “not guilty”.


According to Cowboy State Daily, on December 20, 2022, the Fremont County Attorney’s Office increased its case against WRIGHT from two animal cruelty charges to the following ten:


Count one, for more than twenty dead sheep and goats.

Count two, for a dead red roan Nubian doe and a dead cream-colored Nigerian dwarf buck.

Count three, for cruelty toward nine horses, a sorrel gelding with a club foot, two bay mares, two red-and-white paint geldings, one roan mare, one roan gelding, one bay paint pony and one bay filly pony.

Count four, for cruelty toward a red and white paint gelding.

Count five, for cruelty toward thirty-seven doe goats.

Count six, for cruelty toward a doe goat with mastitis (infection related to breastfeeding).

Count seven, for cruelty toward seven buck goats.

Count eight, for cruelty toward eighteen ewe sheep.

Count nine, for cruelty to four ram sheep.

Count ten, for cruelty toward three geese and fifteen chickens.


WRIGHT initially plead not guilty to all ten charges.

However, according to a motion for a change-of-plea hearing filed on March 3, 2023, WRIGHT made a plea agreement in which she promised to give Alford guilty pleas for ONLY four of the ten counts so that the state will drop the other six.

An Alford plea means the defendant maintains their innocence but admits that the evidence against them is sufficient to convict them in court.

WRIGHT is scheduled to change her plea from “not guilty” to the Alford plea on May 1, 2023.


I emailed Fremont County Sheriff Ryan Lee and requested pictures of the furvictims and in an email he explained that since the “incident is not yet adjudicated” further case information to include photographs of the animals involved in the case cannot be released at this time. I was advised to request them after WRIGHT is sentenced.


Voice For Us Disclaimer: This story is sourced from official news outlets. Links included.

Details may be removed or additional information may be provided in future should such sources report an update.



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- North Carolina, USA -


The Forsyth County Sheriff's Office charged 31-years-old TIMOTHY ELISHA KING (pictured), of Winston-Salem, with felony cruelty to animals.


In a news release, the sheriff’s office said that on November 15, 2022,a concerned citizen alerted deputies to “a dog possibly being tethered in the backyard of a residence.”

A deputy assigned to the sheriff’s office’s Animal Services Division responded to the residence and met with KING, the dog’s guardian. KING told the deputy that the dog had died.

When the deputy was allowed into the backyard, he found “the body of a large brown and white dog, still tethered to a cable attached to a clothesline post,” stated the release.


The deputy seized the furbaby’s body to be sent to the Northwestern Animal Disease Diagnostic Lab for a necropsy. The sheriff’s office said that results “determined that the dog likely died of starvation.” The sheriff’s office also explained that the initial necropsy lab results have been submitted to a veterinarian who specializes in forensic examination to determine the extent of the conditions which led to the death of the dog.

KING is charged with one count of felony cruelty to animals for causing the dog to be tortured, mutilated, maimed, cruelly beaten, disfigured, poisoned, or killed and one misdemeanor count of restraining a dog by using a tether.

KING appeared before a Magistrate and received a $5,000 unsecured bond.

According to online records, he is expected back in court on the morning of Thursday, January 5, 2023.


Forsyth County Sheriff Bobby F. Kimbrough, Jr. said: “There is a correlation between how a community cares for its animals and how we care for one another. We must always protect those who cannot look after themselves. Here at the FCSO, we will always care for, show compassion to, and fight for those who cannot do so for themselves, whether they are two-legged or four-legged members of our community.”


The sheriff’s office said the investigation is ongoing.


Voice For Us Disclaimer: This story is sourced from official news outlets. Links included.

Details may be removed or additional information may be provided in future should such sources report an update.




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- Massachusetts, USA -


The Suffolk County District Attorney's Office announced that animal cruelty charges have now been filed against 37-years-old NATIVIDAD PIZZARO as a result of an investigation by the Law Enforcement Division of MSPCA-Angell into the death of PIZZARO’s dog.


According to a press release by Suffolk District Attorney Kevin Hayden, on Wednesday, June 8, 20220, PIZZARO was arraigned in the Roxbury Division of Boston Municipal Court where Judge Kenneth Fiandaca released her on her personal recognizance and ordered her not to own or work with animals.


As the press release indicated, the animal cruelty charge PIZZARO is facing stems from the February death of her dog, who suffered from frostbite and severe emaciation.


On February 2, 2022, a veterinarian at Angell Animal Medical Center in Boston alerted the Law Enforcement Division of the Massachusetts SPCA to a 6-year-old female Pitbull-type dog brought to the center.

The furbaby, named Beauty, was lifeless, and PIZZARO requested that she be cremated.


Beauty “had severe muscle wasting, was covered with mud and feces, had ulceration between her toes, and was matted with wet coat hair”, said Suffolk DA Hayden.


A necropsy was performed on Beauty and the report concluded that ”inadequate access to food (starvation) is likely” and that the “peripheral distribution of lesions (paw pad, tail, and ear tip skin), environmental conditions (death within days of severe winter weather), and emaciated body condition resulting in inadequate thermoregulation best support the clinical suspicion of frostbite.”


Judge Fiandaca ordered PIZZARO back to court on August 18, 2022, for a pretrial hearing.


Suffolk DA Hayden said: “We have laws that protect people and laws that protect animals. Just as caring for children or elders comes with responsibilities, so does caring for pets. When people can’t, or won’t, meet the responsibilities of pet ownership we get heartbreaking outcomes like this.”


To Suffolk DA Hayden’s statement, I want to add this:

The punishments and sentences handed down to those who harm or kill humans are far stricter than sentences handed down to animal abusers. I yet have to see an animal abuser that serves 25-30 years or life for killing an innocent animal!

So, just as caring for people and animals involve responsibility, let’s make sure that not caring for BOTH OF THEM leads to the same serious punishment!


Voice For Us Disclaimer: This story is sourced from official news outlets. Links included.

Details may be removed or additional information may be provided in future should such sources report an update.




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