Case Details

Horses, mules, hogs transported illegally
Watertown, OH (US)

Date: Jun 26, 2000
Disposition: Convicted

Abuser/Suspect: Arlow Kiehl

Case ID: 6091
Classification: Unlawful Trade/Smuggling, Neglect / Abandonment
Animal: pig, other farm animal, horse
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PA State Police stopped a double deck cattle trailer carrying 17 horses and mules along with a number of hogs on Route 30 in Lancaster County June 26, 2000. The truck was stopped approximately 20 miles west of a New Holland, PA auction barn that holds horse sales on Mondays.
PA State Police charged the owner of the double deck cattle trailer, Arlow Kiehl, Watertown, NY and the driver, Harold Rodgers, Lowville, NY with cruelty to animals under the current PA cruelty law, Title 18, Sec 5511(e),transporting animals in a cruel manner.

The two men were transporting 17 horses and mules to Canada for slaughter for human consumption overseas. Due to the low ceiling height, the horses and mules were unable to hold their heads in a normal upright manner. Double deck cattle trailers can have ceiling heights as low as 5'7". Trailers of the same size designed to transport horses have standard ceiling heights of 8 feet. Hogs were being transported on the top deck of the trailer, above the horses and mules. Before being transported to Canada, the horses and mules were being taken to Watertown, NY, a distance of 381 miles with a duration of over 6 hours.
Citations were also issued for Agricultural Code violations and traffic violations. Warnings were issued for numerous other violations.

Currently Mr. Kiehl has a court case pending in Dickinson, Broome County, NY involving 38 misdemeanor counts of the illegal transport of horses. Mr. Kiehl faces possible jail time and up to $38,000 in fines. In August 1999 Mr. Kiehl was using a double deck cattle trailer to transport horses from the sale barn in New Holland, PA to slaughter in Canada when he was arrested by the New York State Police.

Mr. Kiehl has a long history of violations involving the illegal transport of horses in NY, traffic violations and an accident in October 1999 in MN that killed several horses. The accident was attributed to inadequate brakes.
According to the Safer Database, Mr. Kiehl's trucks have been put out of service 6 of the last 9 times they have been inspected due to safety violations. That is more than 2.5 times the national average.Several of the violations involved the tractor trailer's brakes.

On April 5, 1999, Pennsylvania State Troopers served Arlow Kiehl, with a warrant for his arrest inside a New Holland, PA auction barn for failure to answer a non traffic citation issued by the Pennsylvania State Police in November 1998.
In the past two years Mr. Kiehl and or his drivers have been arrested and or cited for numerous violations of New York and PA laws, ranging from Motor Vehicle Code violations involving log books,required permits and equipment violations and over 100 Agriculture Code violations, some of which are misdemeanors.

Carlton H. Simmons, Gouverneur, NY, a driver for Mr. Kiehl, was found guilty after trial on February 3, 1999 in Kirkwood Town Court on 8 counts of transporting horses in violation of New York State Agriculture and Markets Law, Section 359-a 2. Judge Benjamin Weingartner fined Mr. Simmons $800, $100 for each horse transported illegally. Mr. Simmons was prosecuted by Broome County New York Senior Assistant District Attorney Marcy Cox.

New York State Police arrested Mr.Simmons, in the Town of Kirkwood, NY for transporting horses illegally in violation of New York State Agriculture and Markets Law, Section 359-a on Monday, December 7, 1998, just two days before Mr. Kiehl's December 9, 1998 trial date on 16 charges involving the illegal transportation of horses. Mr. Simmons had 17 horses and an unknown number of hogs on the double deck cattle trailer, with the hogs being transported on the top tier of the double deck trailer, over TOP of the horses. He was charged with transporting horses in a double deck trailer and for not having anti skid material on the floor to prevent the horses from slipping. The horses were being shipped from the New Holland Sales Stables in New Holland, PA to a Canadian slaughterhouse for human consumption overseas.

New York State Police arrested Mr. Kiehl on August 24, 1998 on I-81 north in the Town of Cortlandville. Mr. Kiehl was charged with 16 counts of transporting horses illegally in violation of New York State Agriculture and Markets Law, Section 359-a.
The 16 horses on Mr. Kiehl's double deck trailer were being shipped from the horse auction in New Holland, PA to a Canadian slaughterhouse for human consumption overseas.

Mr. Kiehl was later found not guilty in a jury trial on December 9, 1998 of having protrusions hazardous to horses inside his double deck cattle trailer. The jury was shown photographs of a horse with head injuries, but did not believe the the 3" to 4" beams that protrude below the low ceiling, to be hazardous to horses. The average horse stands 15 hands (60" or 5 ') at the withers. A horse's normal head carriage is above their withers. Commercial horse trailers of this same size have only one tier, and start at a minimum height of 7', with most being 8' tall with no 3" "I " beams protruding below the ceiling.

Mr. Kiehl previously pled guilty in Preble Town Court on June 23, 1998 to 26 counts of illegally transporting horses in violation of New York Agriculture and Markets Law, Section 359a and was fined $2000.00. The trailer involved was a double deck cattle trailer. The trailer lacked partitions spaced 10'apart and had protrusions hazardous to horses.
Mr. Kiehl also pled guilty to 17 counts of the illegal transport of horses on June 9, 1998 in Barker,N.Y. Town Court and paid a $500 fine. Mr. Kiehl's trailer lacked the required second doorway for a trailer carrying 6 or more horses.

According to a news story published June 25, 1998 by the Williamsport Sun Gazette,
" Kiehl uses a double deck trailer and said he will continue to do so, despite the fact that he has been arrested several times recently in New York State, hauling horses from the New Holland (PA) and Middleburg (PA) auctions."

In April 1998 2 Standarbreds and a mule with broken legs were found on Mr. Kiehl's trailer at New Holland. Two of the animals were euthanised by an equine veterinarian.
In May 1998 in Painted Post, NY, Mr. Kiehl was cited by the New York State Police for violations involving the Motor Vehicle Code.

Recently, the PA Department of Agriculture, PDA, issued Mr. Kiehl a permit to transport domestic animals in Pennsylvania, regardless of the fact that his convictions in New York under NY Ag & Markets Section 359-a, the illegal transport of horses, are grounds for denial and or revocation of a permit in Pennsylvania. These same convictions are also grounds for revocation of Mr. Kiehl's permit by NY Ag & Markets to transport domestic animals in New York. Both the PDA and NY Ag & Markets have been made aware of Mr. Kiehl's convictions by the District Attorney's offices that have successfully prosecuted Mr. Kiehl.

References

Equine Protection Network - June 29, 2000

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