"Today, Tennessee Walking Horses are known throughout the industry
as the breed that shows abused and tortured horses."

~ Jim Heird, Ph.D., Do Right By The Horse, February 2010

"If you have men who will exclude any of God's creatures from the shelter of compassion and pity,
you will have men who will deal likewise with their fellow men."

~ St. Francis of Assisi

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

NEWS and ARTICLES: Judge Makes Decision for McConnell's Actions Until Trial

Sorry that I'm a bit late posting this information, folks.  I have a big surprise for all of you starting next week that I've been working on.  However, here's the latest on the McConnell case (click for the article from the Shelbyville Times-Gazette).  I copied and pasted the article below.  I'm really happy about this decision.  I imagine that McConnell's only form of income is boarding and "training," so this may still allow him to make money.  I don't think he can be denied making a living.  But, because this decision is so detailed, this means that this judge cares about the law and upholding it.  So no matter how good McConnell's lawyers are, the judge sees this as a serious offense and wants to make sure it's clear that he can't train horses before the trial.

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Judge places limits on horse trainer facing horse soring charges
March 24, 2012
by Todd South


A 60-year-old Tennessee walking horse trainer charged in a lengthy federal indictment of abusing horses may remain free before his trial, but he cannot train horses owned by others.

Jackie McConnell, of Collierville, Tenn., faces a 52-count indictment involving charges of conspiracy and violations of the U.S. Horse Protection Act.

Federal defendants in nonviolent criminal cases commonly are allowed to remain free with little restriction as they prepare for trial.

But new details filed Friday morning, hours before McConnell's hearing in federal court, alarmed U.S. Magistrate Judge Bill Carter enough that he asked attorneys to find a compromise in order for McConnell to keep his freedom.

"The court is concerned there is an ongoing, consistent kind of problem," Carter told the attorneys.

One of the charges against McConnell is for horse soring, the technique of using chemical or mechanical means such as kerosene or bolts to tenderize horses' feet, producing an exaggerated gait for walking horse shows.

"Your client is not entitled to be out on bond where he can injure an animal," Carter said Friday. "I can't have horse soring and, if we have horse soring, I will put him in jail."

Two local attorneys hired by McConnell, Hugh Moore and Tom Greenholtz, argued in a March 15 hearing before Carter that, in order for their client to remain free on alleged charges, he shouldn't have to allow warrantless searches by investigators and also stop training horses he doesn't own, conditions that prosecutors want.

Three other co-defendants -- Jeff Dockery, 56; John Mays, 47; and Joseph Abernathy, 29 -- face some of the charges in the indictment as McConnell. On March 15, those three were released under many of the same conditions offered McConnell. Their trial is set for May 22.


Dockery and Abernathy are Collierville residents, while Mays is from Olive Branch, Miss.

McConnell faces the most charges and is depicted as the leader of a scheme to sore Tennessee walking horses before and during shows from 2006 until 2011. During the time of the alleged soring, McConnell was on a five-year suspension for previous soring-related violations, and he's accused of showing the animals in competitions by using the names of other men on his entry forms.

It was not his first suspension. In a 12-page brief to support restrictions in return for McConnell's freedom, prosecutors alleged that he had been suspended from the horse industry at least 13 times since 1979. One suspension took place on Sept. 9, 1985, the year before he was named "Trainer of the Year" by the national Walking Horse Trainers Association.

While Carter dealt with other cases on his docket on Friday, prosecutors Steve Neff and Kent Anderson negotiated with Moore and Greenholtz over restrictions for McConnell.

Among the agreed conditions, both the horse trainer and the federal government will each select a veterinarian to inspect his horses. The veterinarians will produce a report on the animals' condition, then perform weekly inspections of the horses as long as McConnell remains free awaiting trial.

He's not allowed to train any horses he does not own.

In return, investigators must obtain a warrant or have probable cause to search McConnell's property, as they would under most circumstances.

2 comments:

Hummingbird said...

They board, train and show TWH,only income for him & his wife. His sister-in-law is either married to or engaged to a vet in Shelbyville.

Hummingbird said...

McConnell & his wife make their living boarding,training & showing TWH. This is all they have done for a long,long time.

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