Miami Herald

Three stolen horses, including a therapy horse, are found slaughtere­d in Redland, police say

- BY DAVID GOODHUE AND OMAR RODRÍGUEZ ORTIZ dgoodhue@flkeysnews.com orodriguez­ortiz@miamiheral­d.com All tips to Crime Stoppers are anonymous.

stole and slaughtere­d three horses in Redland either late Thursday night or early Friday morning, according to the Miami-Dade Police Department.

Police got a call around 8 a.m. Friday that the horses were stolen, Detective Alvaro Zabaleta told reporters at a news briefing near where the horses were found dead. Officers assigned to the department’s agricultur­e unit responded to the remote area.

“They looked up and saw some vultures, and they said, ‘Let’s see where it leads us,’ ” Zabaleta said. “And, sure enough, it led them to where they had been discovered.”

Police say the thieves walked the horses from the stable where they lived near the 12400 block of Southwest 197th Avenue to a property next door. They cut a hole in a chain-link fence, and led the animals to an open field, where officers found them “slaughtere­d for their meat,” Zabaleta said.

The horses were a 6to-8-year-old male named Bucefalo; a 14-to-16-yearold named Paloma; and a 20-year-old named Miranda, Zabaleta said. No one has been arrested.

THERAPY HORSE KILLED

Paloma was used to provide therapy to children on the autism spectrum, her caretaker, David YeThieves pez, told the Miami Herald.

Yepez, 39, is an Army veteran familiar with posttrauma­tic stress issues.

“The therapeuti­c aspect of horses is something near and dear to me,” Yepez said. “It’s sad. You build an attachment, and you see the impact this horse has, not just on one person, but, several people.”

Police have no informatio­n on suspects, and said it’s not clear if this case is related to other illegal horse slaughters in Redland in recent years.

HORSE KILLINGS IN MIAMI-DADE

On Jan. 3, two stolen horses were found in pieces near 20641 SW 168th St., about four miles south of Friday’s crime scene, according to Miami Herald news partner CBS News Miami.

In December, a 39-yearold man was arrested near Hialeah and accused of the illegal sale of 40 pounds of horse meat, police said. The arrest of Alain Arencibia-Diaz was the result of a sting operation after officers had received a tip that a horse had been killed to sell its meat. His next court date is March 18.

In 2016, a horse was found in pieces off a dirt road in the Homestead area. Later that year, police arrested a 70-year-old man, accusing him of selling horse meat for $7 a pound in an agricultur­al area west of Hialeah and Florida’s Turnpike Extension. A judge imposed a probation sentence on Manuel Coto-Martinez in connection to an animalwelf­are conviction.

Zabaleta said there is a black market for horse meat, but he warned the public that not only is stealing and slaughteri­ng horses illegal, the meat isn’t safe for human consumptio­n because of the medication­s that the animals are given to keep them healthy.

“Just because it’s expensive doesn’t mean it’s a delicacy,” he said.

Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava echoed the same warning while offering condolence­s to the owners of the horses.

“My deepest sympathies go to the bereft owners as they try to find answers to an incredible loss and some certainty that this will not happen again,” Levine Cava said in a statement on Friday. “This issue affects us all, from the agricultur­al community that is suffering these attacks on their private property, to other members of the community that could be putting their health at risk. My administra­tion is ready to work with all stakeholde­rs and the community to put an end to this problem.”

If caught, the people who killed the horses will face felony charges related to theft and animal cruelty, Zabaleta said.

Redland is a widespread, remote area with fruit and vegetable farms, nurseries and livestock.

The county police department has a unit specifical­ly tasked with patrolling the area.

But its isolated topography can make it easy for thieves to slip in and out, and, tougher for police to find witnesses.

Police are asking anyone with informatio­n on the horse slaughter to call Miami-Dade & The Florida Keys Crime Stoppers at 305-471-8477 or visit crimestopp­ers305.com.

 ?? DAVID GOODHUE dgoodhue@flkeysnews.com ?? A fence was broken near where horses were found slaughtere­d in Redland on Friday.
DAVID GOODHUE dgoodhue@flkeysnews.com A fence was broken near where horses were found slaughtere­d in Redland on Friday.

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