Regina Leader-Post

Worker posts online video of himself shooting horse

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ALBUQUERQU­E, N.M. — An employee of a southeaste­rn New Mexico slaughterh­ouse that is seeking federal approval to slaughter horses has posted a video online showing him fatally shooting a horse in the head, sparking outrage among animal activists and prompting death threats to the Roswell meat company. A maintenanc­e contractor with Valley Meat Co. is shown in the video bringing a horse out of its pen, swearing at animal activists, then killing the horse with a single gunshot.

The Albuquerqu­e Journal reports the state Livestock Board executed a search warrant Thursday at the Dexter home of Tim Sappington, who worked in maintenanc­e for the company.

Chaves County Sheriff Rob Coon told the newspaper the shooting is being investigat­ed as an animal cruelty case.

Rick De Los Santos, a part-owner of Valley Meat Co., said he has been inundated with hate calls and death threats since the video hit the Internet. “I didn’t have anything to do with that video. That’s the honest truth,” De Los Santos said.

De Los Santos told KOB-TV that Sappington was a contract worker who made the video on his own time and at his own home.

“He shot a horse. That’s what he eats. It’s not against the law to slaughter your own horse,” De Los Santos said. “Now, putting it on YouTube, I would not have done that.”

Last year, De Los Santos sued the USDA to resume the inspection­s necessary to open what would be the nation’s first horse slaughterh­ouse in more than five years. The USDA earlier this month said it has no choice legally but to move forward with the applicatio­n of Valley Meat and several other companies since Congress lifted a ban on the practice. And the company’s attorney, A. Blair Dunn, said earlier this week a final inspection of the plant by USDA officials is expected in early April.

Many animal humane groups and public officials are outraged at the idea of resuming domestic horse slaughter, including New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez.

But others — including some horse rescuers, livestock associatio­ns and the American Quarter Horse Associatio­n — support the plans. They point to a 2011 report from the federal Government Accountabi­lity Office that shows horse abuse and abandonmen­t have been increasing since Congress effectivel­y banned horse slaughter by cutting funding for federal inspection programs in 2006.

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