Case Details

Hoarding - over 100 animals seized
Jasper, TN (US)

Incident Date: Tuesday, Jun 7, 2005
County: Marion
Local Map: available
Disposition: Convicted
Case Images: 1 files available

Abuser/Suspect: Joan Annette Mobley

Case Updates: 16 update(s) available

Case ID: 4755
Classification: Hoarding
Animal: cat, dog (non pit-bull), bird (pet), rodent/small mammal (pet)
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Suspect was in animal welfare field
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A Marion County, Tennessee woman is behind bars facing 40 counts of animal cruelty.

Dozens of the animals were found last night at the Perry Link Humane Memorial Society.

On June 7, 60 animals, 40-dogs and 20-cats, were removed from that Marion County Animal Shelter.

They've all been brought to Hamilton County while the woman who vowed to help them is behind bars charged with hurting them.

June 7, Annette Mobely, the president of Perry Link Memorial Humane Society, appeared in a Marion County courtroom facing dozens of charges of animal cruelty; animals that were found in unthinkable conditions.

Sheriff Bo Burnett says, more charges may be pending with this discovery. The investigation will continue. Annette Mobely's bond is set at $25,000.

A hearing for Annette Mobely is scheduled for June 14, 2005.

Case Updates

A last-minute change alters the sentencing of a Marion County woman convicted of animal cruelty. A jury found Annette Mobley guilty on two felony counts and 36 misdemeanors last month.

Just last month, she was charged with animal cruelty charges for her time as head of the Perry Link Animal Shelter.

But in a twist today, Judge Thomas Graham reduced the two felony charges to count as misdemeanors...saying he didn't think she intended to hurt the animals for evil.

"As a result of her failure to properly take care of these animals she lost her home, she lost her job, she lost her daughter who nobody knows where is now, is hiding out because she was charged"

Judge Graham sentenced Mobley to almost a year of unsupervised probation and a 1000 dollar fine. In addition to those charges, he prohibited her from caring for or working with any animals. She is only allowed to have one animal as a pet at a time.

Judge Thomas Graham: "I think it is important whether or not she intended or didn't intend to hurt these animals that she not be in a position in the future for this to happen."

Judge Graham says he believes Mobley was simply overwhelmed by her responsibilities at the Perry Link shelter...and as a result, it was the animals that suffered.

"The record does reflect that this woman was doing this for nothing, she was doing it without pay and she herself was not financially, had very little financial means."

But now she has the chance to resume her life after an ordeal that has stretched out over nearly two years.

Mobley's attorney has thirty days to file a motion for a new trial...if he so chooses.

Mobley has since moved from Marion County.
Source: WDEF - Feb 28, 2007
Update posted on Mar 5, 2007 - 12:36AM 
The woman at the center of an animal abuse case in Marion County, was scheduled to be sentenced today in court. The judge didn't sentence Annette Mobley today. Mobley's attorney, Jes Beard, didn't make it to court.

The judge told Mobley her attorney had gone to the emergency room with some sort of heart problem.

The judge also also told Mobley he understood the situation was stressful for her and he didn't want to make her wait to be sentenced. They scheduled the sentencing for Wednesday.

A jury convicted Mobley last month on two felony counts of aggravated animal cruelty and 36 misdemeanor counts. She was acquitted of 26 other counts.

Mobley was operating The Perry Link Memorial Humane Society when animal rescuers found what they called dozens of animals living in their own waste.

The director of the Chattanooga Hamilton County Humane Educational Society says, "It even chokes me up from time to time to think about the situation but at least we know all the animals have been adopted out. They're all gone and at least they have a better life now and we do need to put this to an end."

Mobley is scheduled for sentencing Wednesday at 3. The judge says if her attorney does have a health problem, they will sentence Mobley March 12th.
Source: WRCB - Feb 27, 2007
Update posted on Feb 27, 2007 - 9:07PM 
Mobley will have to pay $96,000 total in fines and could face up to two years of jail time for each felony charge, and up to a year on the lesser charges. She'll be back in Marion County for sentencing February 26th at 2:00pm ET.
Source: WRCB TV - February 11, 2007
Update posted on Feb 11, 2007 - 2:24AM 
A Marion County Jury convicted 48-year-old Joan Annette Mobley of 38 counts of animal abuse late Thursday night, after deliberating almost three hours.

Two of the convictions were felonies, and the remaining 36 are misdemeanors.

The jury cleared Ms. Mobley of 27 counts.

The convictions came at the end of the eighth day of Ms. Mobley�s trial, which featured graphic testimony and impassioned, sometimes angry legal arguments.

Jurors spent Thursday listening to five final witnesses, hearing attorneys� closing arguments and paying careful attention to the judge�s instructions before finally being allowed to begin deliberations around 5 p.m. central time.

Assistant District Attorney General David McGovern, during his closing argument, told jurors that the case boils down to the undisputed fact that conditions at the Perry Link Memorial Humane Society shelter were horrendous on June 6, 2005 � and that Joan Annette Mobley was the person in charge of the shelter at that time.

If Ms. Mobley was ill at that time, as she claims, then it her responsibility to find somebody reliable she could count on to care for the animals housed there, the prosecutor said. Instead, she ordered her daughter�s boyfriend � a man who could not even hold onto his job at a local car wash � to take over her responsibilities. And even after receiving repeated reports that he was not doing so, Ms. Mobley did not go to the shelter to check for herself whether the necessary work was being done.

Running an animal shelter is a lot like operating a day care shelter, he said.

�You�ve got to be there . . . And if you can�t be there, you say, �Please, can somebody help me? I�m sick in the bed� . . . And you don�t have to be a radical tree-hugging liberal to believe that.�

But Ms. Mobley�s attorney, Jes Beard, was frankly disdainful of the charges against his client. Just because an animal is present in a shelter that is filthy and reeks of urine and feces � and where other animals have been neglected and/or abused � does not mean that particular animal also was abused, he told the jury.

Until a few days before June 6, 2005, when police raided the shelter after being told it was full of dozens of dead and neglected and/or abused animals, evidence indicates the animals there were being fed and given water, he argued. Otherwise, many more animals would have been dead or dying when they were discovered.

�I�m not trying to suggest for a moment . . . that the animals were properly cared for,� the defense attorney said. �But she was doing pretty poorly at that time, and she relied on (her daughter�s boyfriend) to do the work . . . Some of the animals probably were abused � but not by Joan Mobley.�
Source: Chattanoogan - January 25, 2007
Update posted on Jan 26, 2007 - 11:50AM 
A Marion County judge dismissed three of the 68 aggravated animal abuse charges against Joan Annette Mobley on Tuesday.

Ms. Mobley, 48, was arrested in 2005 after investigators found almost 150 dead, sick and/or neglected animals at the Perry Link Memorial Humane Animal Society, which she operated, and at her home.

Her trial on 68 counts of aggravated animal abuse began last Tuesday, and has been marked by heated exchanges between defense attorney Jes Beard and prosecution witnesses in the case.

Attorney Beard has contended the Marion County Detective Gene Hargis is incompetent and mishandled the investigation into who was responsible for the conditions at Perry Link.

Tuesday, in addition to dismissing three charges, Circuit Judge Thomas W. Graham reduced 51 of the charges to misdemeanors. That leaves just 13 charges to stand as felonies.

Prosecutors in the Mobley case have rested their case, and defense attorney Beard has begun calling witnesses.

The trial is scheduled to resume at 9 a.m. central time Wednesday in the Marion County Justice Center in Jasper.
Source: Chattanoogan - January 23, 2007
Update posted on Jan 24, 2007 - 3:51PM 
Week two of the animal abuse trial against Annette Mobley continues in Marion County.

She faces more than 60 counts of animal abuse after the Perry Link shelter was closed in June of 2005.

Prosecutors today called Hamilton County Animal Shelter manager Guy Bilyeu to the stand.

Bilyeu came to the site once authorities were notified of the problems at the Perry Link shelter.

During his testimony, Bilyeu described the horrible conditions inside he saw first hand.

Guy Bilyeau/ Hamilton County Animal Shelter: "the odor outside told me there was a problem, and then the odor inside was overwhelming."

The defense claims it was someone else, and not Annette Mobley, who abused and neglected the animals.
Source: WDEF - Jan 22, 2007
Update posted on Jan 22, 2007 - 9:13PM 
A Marion County judge laid down the law Friday to attorneys in the aggravated animal abuse trial of Joan Annette Mobley, saying he will allow no more �needlessly cumulative� questions about dozens of animals rescued from the Perry Link Memorial Humane Animal Society in 2005.

Ms. Mobley, 48, was arrested in 2005 after investigators found almost 150 dead, sick and/or neglected animals at the Perry Link shelter, which she operated, and at her home. She is currently charged with 68 counts of aggravated animal abuse.

Friday afternoon, Circuit Judge Thomas W. Graham noted that at least two of the three witnesses called this week were shown photos of the individual animals whose conditions led to the charges against Ms. Mobley, and asked whether they could identify them.

�We�re not going to have any more witnesses that just go down through the 68 animals and try to identify them,� the judge said. �I�m not going to waste this jury�s time bringing in ten people to identify the same animal . . . This is a waste of the court�s time and of the jury�s time.�

His ultimatum came during the testimony of Beth Brock, a former employee of the Humane Educational Society of Chattanooga, who was one of more than a dozen HES workers sent to Perry Link to help rescue the animals there.

When prosecutor Julia Sanders began showing photos of the individual animals to Ms. Brock, the judge interrupted and sent jurors out of the room.

�I think this is needlessly cumulative as to the identities of the animals,� he told the prosecutor. �If you�ve got something new that she can testify to, fine.�

The same rule applies to defense attorney Jes Beard, the judge noted.

After testimony resumed, the prosecutor quickly led Ms. Brock through a series of photos of previously unidentified dogs eventually taken in by a local rescue group at the request of HES.

�I was the one who selected the 13 dogs that went to Vicky Swan (of Tennessee Valley Golden Retrievers),� Ms. Brock explained.

During her cross examination, the defense attorney zeroed in on a photo that Ms. Brock said showed the body of a dead dog lying in a wire cage.

Asked what color the dog was, Ms. Brock said it looked gray in the photo.

Mr. Beard pounced, noting that in prosecution documents the dead dog was described as being �black.�

�Is the rest of your testimony going to be as sound and accurate as this testimony?� he demanded sarcastically.

�I don�t know how to answer that question,� the witness replied, her voice breaking.

�I�m not trying to make you cry, Ms. Brock. Really, I�m not,� Mr. Beard told her.

�He�s made all of us cry, Ms. Brock,� the judge interjected.

Minutes later, as the harsh questioning continued, the witness was openly weeping.

�I�m sorry,� she apologized. �This is so embarrassing.�

She was having a rough time due to a recent death in her family, she explained, before the judge ordered a brief recess.

Earlier Friday, jurors heard hours of testimony from longtime animal rescuer Cindy Davis, who operated the Perry Link shelter until she was fired several months prior to June 2005.

Ms. Davis testified that she visited the shelter several times between early May and June 2, 2005. On each of those occasions, she said, �everything seemed fine.�

But on June 6, when she was asked to come to Perry Link following the discovery of dozens of neglected, sick and dead animals there, conditions were appalling. The facility was filthy, the stench was horrendous and it was �sweatin� hot� inside the metal building which housed the shelter, she said.

�If you had gone there that day and seen those conditions, would you have made an animal cruelty complaint (to police)?� Ms. Sanders asked.

�Yes, I would,� Ms. Davis replied.
Source: Chattanoogan - Jan 19, 2007
Update posted on Jan 20, 2007 - 12:33AM 
There are more graphic details about an animal cruelty case in Marion County, Tennessee. For the fourth day, Annette Mobley listened quietly in court as witnesses testify about the living condition of dozens of animals at the Perry Link Memorial Humane Society.

The morning began with both attorneys standing before the judge and accusing the other side of acting improperly. Judge Thomas Brown dismissed their claims, saying this case is already confusing enough for the jurors who have to decide if Mobley is guilty of 67 counts of animal cruelty to the dogs and cats who were in her care.

�Dogs have a smell, but they really had a smell, just really ugh! Take your breath away smell,� said Cindy Davis, as she described the stench of dogs at the Perry Link Memorial Humane Society in June 2005.

Davis said she made frequent visits to the shelter. Before Annette Mobley, she used to be president. Davis said she knows several of the animals from her time as president�others she rescued when detectives shut down the place.

�When I had that dog he was really outgoing, real friendly, real playful, but when I saw him that day it was like he was traumatized. He was withdrawn,� Davis said of a dog the prosecution had a photo of.

She told of maggots feasting on a beagle's pressure soars, dogs covered in feces, and puppies that died within days of being rescued.

�She was very, very thin. Very thin. You could count her ribs and her spinal column,� said Davis about another dog.

But defense attorney Jess Beard said NONE of that proves animal cruelty, and he insisted there's little evidence to prove Mobley harmed any pets on purpose.

�Are you more likely to have unhealthy animals brought to, dropped off, or staying at a no-kill shelter?� asked Beard.

�Brought to? Yea,� replied Davis. �You don't find them�or they're not turned in or they don't become residents of a humane society in good condition.�

Davis agreed with the prosecution who says the humane society was filthy when detectives shut it down. But ask Davis if she thinks this adds up to animal cruelty, and she's not so quick to condemn. She told Beard she thinks this may be a case of animal neglect but NOT animal abuse. The trial continues on Monday.
Source: News Channel 9 - Jan 19, 2007
Update posted on Jan 19, 2007 - 9:37PM 
A Marion County detective spent a second day on the witness stand Thursday, as the attorney defending Joan Annette Mobley flashed individual photos of the dozens of animals prosecutors say she abused and demanded to know how each particular animal had been mistreated.

Hour after hour, sheriff�s Detective Gene Hargis peered at the photos of animals rescued from the Perry Link Memorial Humane Animal Society in 2005.

Some of the 68 animals, such as one dog with a deformed double tongue, stand out in his memory, he told jurors. Others do not.

Defense attorney Jes Beard, contending that Detective Hargis is incompetent and mishandled the Mobley investigation, demanded to know how he can say the animals were abused when he cannot even remember them.

Detective Hargis ticked off his reasons. There was no edible food or clean water for the animals at Perry Link, he recalled. The floor in the building was covered with feces mingled with maggots and worms. The building itself was extremely hot, unventilated and foul smelling. Flies were everywhere, drawn by the feces and the bodies of dead animals left to decay inside the building, and were �all over the animals.� And some animals were confined in carriers so small they could neither stand up nor turn around.

The defense attorney was unimpressed.

During a break in testimony, he told reporters he anticipates the trial will last another week and a half and predicted that, at its conclusion, jurors will acquit his client of all charges.

He said he intends to make several of the total 15 prosecution witnesses go through photos of the 68 Perry Link animals one by one, tell where and under what conditions each individual animal was confined, and explain how it was abused.

The process will be lengthy and tedious for jurors, he conceded, but �I�ll wake them up once in a while.�

Detective Hargis, on the witness stand, answered a seemingly endless series of questions � many of them over and over.

The detective agreed, as he had during lengthy questioning on Wednesday, that he has never questioned Ms. Mobley about day-to-day operations at Perry Link and who was responsible for what at the shelter. Since she was represented by an attorney, he said, it would have been unethical to do so.

Isn�t it true that part of his reason for not attempting to question Ms. Mobley was that his prior dealings with Mr. Beard had been unpleasant, the defense attorney asked the detective.

Yes, Detective Hargis said frankly. �My impression of you was that you are a bully.�

Circuit Judge Thomas W. Graham � who spent the day refereeing disputes between prosecution and defense attorneys, urging them not to ask questions that had already been asked and answered, and refusing to let them introduce evidence that was not relevant � suggested that the lawyers put the issue of whether the detective should have questioned Ms. Mobley to rest.

�Can we stipulate to the jury that there is no issue regarding Detective Hargis� competence?� the judge suggested. �There is nothing that is incompetent about an investigator stopping his questioning of a defendant once he believes an attorney is involved.�

Mr. Beard refused.

�(Detective Hargis) is incompetent,� he told the judge.
Source: Chattanoogan - Jan 18, 2007
Update posted on Jan 19, 2007 - 2:17AM 
A Marion County jury watched impassively Tuesday afternoon as the attorney defending Joan Annette Mobley sparred verbally with the detective who arrested her on dozens of counts of aggravated animal cruelty.

Sheriff�s Detective Gene Hargis was dogged but polite as defense attorney Jes Beard accused him of mishandling the investigation and doctoring evidence in the Mobley case.

Ms. Mobley, 48, was arrested in 2005 after investigators found almost 150 dead, sick and/or neglected animals at the Perry Link shelter, which she operated, and at her home.

She was originally charged with 147 counts of aggravated animal cruelty, but a judge later dismissed some of the charges on the grounds that officers did not have a warrant to search her home. The judge also reduced her bond from $65,000 to $25,000.

Wednesday, Detective Hargis agreed that he did not secure the scene at Perry Link Memorial Humane Animal Society and prevent rescuers and reporters from viewing the mistreated animals there.

Further, he acknowledged that he has never questioned either Ms. Mobley or her daughter Krista about day-to-day operations at the shelter and who was responsible for what.

Unlike a homicide scene which would be secured so nobody could enter or leave the area, in order to preserve evidence that could help lead to a killer, Detective Hargis said his primary concern at Perry Ellis was to find help for the animals there.

�I wanted help from anywhere I could get it,� he said, adding that he believed publicizing the conditions in which the animals were living would attract people who wanted to adopt them and give them better lives.

He did not question Ms. Mobley, he said, because when he arrested her she immediately turned to her daughter and told her to �call the attorney and get the harassment suit started.� Attempting to question her after she had indicated she wanted an attorney would have violated the law, Detective Hargis said.

He said he has tried repeatedly to question Ms. Mobley�s daughter, who went into hiding after arrest warrants were issued for her. �She has been very hard to find,� he explained.

The exchange between the attorney and the detective grew heated when Mr. Beard asked Detective Hargis to examine three different photos of the same dead, decaying dog.

One of the photos, Mr. Beard noted, showed far more maggots on the dog�s body than were visible in the other two.

How did the detective explain that, he demanded, his voice dripping with sarcasm. Did somebody add more maggots to the dog�s body to make the photo more sensational?

Detective Hargis said he only took one of the three photos; the other two were taken a day later by an employee of the Humane Educational Society of Chattanooga. He could not explain the extra maggots, he said, because the photo that appeared to show them was taken by the HES worker.

Mr. Beard pounced. Demanding that the detective examine the backs of the three photos in question, the attorney noted that they had identical backstamps which indicated they had all been developed at the same time by Wolf Camera.

If the photos were taken at different times by different people, Mr. Beard asked, then why were they all developed at the same time?

Detective Hargis didn�t have an answer.

�I took mine to Wal-Mart to be developed,� he said.

But prosecutor Julia Sanders could and did explain.

After sorting through numerous photos taken by a variety of individuals, she said, she selected the ones she wanted to use as exhibits in the Mosley trial. Then she took the batch of selected photos to Wolf Camera and had a copy made of each one, and gave the copies to Mr. Beard.
Source: Chattanoogan - January 17, 2007
Update posted on Jan 18, 2007 - 11:31AM 
Testimony continues Wednesday in the animal cruelty trial of a Marion County woman.

Annette Mobley watched as prosecutors flipped through photographs of the dogs and cats she's charged with neglecting.

Prosecutors say she had dozens of dogs and cats living in their own feces and urine. They also say rescuers found decapitated cats. Mobley's attorney disagrees. Jes Beard, Mobley's attorney, says, "There's gonna be one cat who's heads cut off... one cat."

Mobley's facing 68 counts of animal cruelty. It was June 2005 when animal rescuers found dozens of animals at her property and the animal shelter she operated. Mobley was the president of the Perry Link Memorial Humane Society.
Source: NBC 3 - Jan 17, 2007
Update posted on Jan 18, 2007 - 12:37AM 
Detective Gene Hargis describes to jurors the conditions in which he found some animals in the Perry Link Animal Shelter a year and a half ago.

Detective Gene Hargis "...this was the part of the back there, where maggots were crawling on the floor, a lot of flies and mosquitoes..."

Hargis testifies some of those animals were dead...

"the puppy that was decomposing. It was in close proximity to that. There were maggots, lots of flies, mosquitoes, fleas everywhere."

Hargis describes the odor in the shelter as "unbearable."

"...very strong odor, again, of decaying, I guess, of organic material, feces, urine, just a real bad smell."

In cross-examination, defense attorney Jes Beard accuses the detective of spending more time helping news media crews than securing the crime scene at the shelter.

Jes Beard, Defense Attonrey "what about this case prevented you from keeping those folks with cameras from wandering in? 'Because, I was asking for any help I could get.' "So, your concern was not for the crime scene?" 'At that time, no, it was not.' "

Defense contends someone else is responsible for abusing or neglecting the animals, instead of Annette Mobley.
Source: WDEF - Jana 17, 2007
Update posted on Jan 17, 2007 - 11:37PM 
A Marion County, Tennessee woman facing hundreds of animal cruelty charges gets some of them dropped. The court clerk tells us 79 of the 147 charges were dismissed.

Annette Mobley was arrested last year after investigators found dozens of neglected animals at the Perry Link Memorial Humane Animal Society. A judge dismissed some of the charges because he says officers did not have a search warrant when they first went on the property.

Mobley will be back in court June 7, 2006.
Source: WTVC News - May 10, 2006
Update posted on May 13, 2006 - 11:26AM 
The attorney for a Jasper woman charged with animal cruelty says the state won't be able to prove the charges. Annette Mobley is charged with 147 counts of aggravated animal cruelty. Trial is scheduled for May 8, 2006.

Investigators discovered 57 neglected dogs and cats in the Jasper shelter on Highway 41 in June, then went to Mobley's trailer home on Jasper Mountain the next day and discovered about 80 more dogs dead or in ill health.

Attorney Jes Beard says the defense doesn't anticipate settling.

Prosecutor Julie Sanders declined comment, other than to say the state has a strong case against Mobley.
Source: WBIR - Nov 8, 2005
Update posted on Nov 8, 2005 - 11:30AM 
June 14, in Marion County Tennessee a woman appeared in court on dozens of charges of cruelty to animals.
Last week, the Marion County Sheriff's Department arrested Annette Mobley, who ran the Perry Link Memorial Humane Society, and confiscated more than a 100 animals living in the very worst conditions.

Detectives showed some of the video they recorded when they went to the Perry Link Memorial Humane Society last week, the same animal shelter Mobely was in charge of.

Not only did investigators find dead animals at the shelter, some were found at Mobely's house, other animals were found lying in their own waste and malnourished.

June 14, Mobely's bond was reduced from $65,000 to $25,000.

She also agreed to sign over custody of all the animals found at the shelter and her home.

The animals taken from Mobeley's home and the shelter, all are being cared for at other shelters in the area.
Tuesday, Mobely signed over custody to Hamilton County's Humane Education Society and are now available for adoption by contacting Hamilton County Humane Society or the Marion County Sheriff's Department.
Source: WTVC - June 15, 2005
Update posted on Jun 16, 2005 - 11:48AM 
Additional charges have been filed against the president of an animal shelter in Marion County, Tennessee.. Yesterday, Annette Mobley was arrested and taken before a judge.

She faces 40 counts of animal cruelty and her bond was set at $25,000.

But when investigators discovered at least 80 more animals at her Marion County home, the judge froze that bond.

One of the biggest challenges for authorities, today, is finding places to house all of these animals. "We've filled all area shelters to capacity."

Three ferrets, two cockatoos, seven felines, and 82 dogs..found at Annette Mobely's Marion County Home. After, confiscating 60 animals from the shelter site.. Investigators discovered dozens more animals.

Some living outside the house, some crammed inside living outside..and several dead.

"There will probably be more than one defendant in this case before its said and done because one person is not solely responsible for this, its a number of people" said Gene Hargis of the Marion County Sheriff's Department.

Investigators plan to question Perry Link Board Members as part of their investigation.. The animals have been picked up and are being housed at Hamilton County's Humane Education Society, in South Pittsburg Animal Shelter and a private Marion County Rescue home. It will be up to the courts as to if and when these animals will be available for adoption.
Source: News Channel 9 - June 8, 2005
Update posted on Jun 12, 2005 - 3:47PM 

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References

newschannel9.com - June 7, 2005
News Channel 9 - June 8, 2005
News 12
News Channel 9 - June 6, 2005
News Channel 9 - May 10, 2006

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