Case Details
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Case ID: 7970
Classification: Neglect / Abandonment
Animal: pig
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Pigs eating carcasses, trash
New Windsor, MD (US)

Incident Date: Thursday, Mar 9, 2006
County: Carroll

Disposition: Convicted

Defendants/Suspects:
» Carroll L Schisler, Sr
» Carroll Schisler, Jr - Alleged

Case Updates: 8 update(s) available

The Maryland Department of Agriculture has imposed a swine quarantine on a 112-acre Carroll County farm and banned the sale and slaughter of pigs there after federal, state and county agents discovered decomposing carcasses, piles of bones and livestock feeding on rotting trash.

During a search for possible violations of agricultural, environmental and animal cruelty laws, investigators and three livestock veterinarians took samples from carcasses and removed a malnourished pig that later died. When inspectors observed pigs feeding off garbage and animal carcasses strewn across the property, the Agriculture Department imposed the quarantine at the Marston farm. "Swine cannot move on or off the property for a minimum of 30 days from the last illegal feeding," said Sue Dupont, a department spokeswoman. "The owner also cannot sell swine products. These pigs have had access to carcass material."

This was the second search warrant issued in less than a month for the livestock farm, owned by Carroll Schisler, 59, and his son, Carroll Schisler Jr., 33. They raise cows, goats, chickens and pigs and occasionally other animals, such as llamas or emus. Neither man could be reached for comment. State police secured the second search warrant March 30, 2006 and accompanied officials from the state departments of Agriculture and Health and Mental Hygiene, the Carroll County Health Department, the Carroll County Humane Society, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to the farm for more than four hours on April 1, 2006. Officials said they will await test results from the samples and a necropsy of the dead pig, results of which will not be available for several days, before considering any charges against the farm owners.

Most of the possible violations would be misdemeanors, punishable by minimal fines, but officials said they have resolved to find ways to clean up the farm and prevent a recurrence. The state Agriculture Department will be responsible for enforcing the swine quarantine.

On March 9, 2006, during an authorized search of the Schisler farm for stolen property, police discovered numerous livestock carcasses, some decomposing in pens holding live animals and others scattered about the property amid piles of bones. Photographs, obtained by The Sun, were taken by the Carroll County Health Department last month and showed pigs feeding off carcasses, piles of decaying dead cows stacked among mounds of bones and a dead pig left in what appeared to be a large feeding trough. Other photos show runoff from carcasses and animal pens flowing into nearby pastures and woods. Pictures were taken inside a blood-stained slaughterhouse that the owners operate on the farm. Health inspectors shot photographs of cartons with rotting eggs and a refrigerator, blackened with mold, storing food products. Customers, many of whom seek animal slaughter along religious or ethnic guidelines, purchase animals from the farm's livestock and request customized slaughter, agriculture officials said.

The operation is largely unregulated because the slaughter is of the owner's property and at the owner's request. The animal products cannot legally be sold, agriculture officials said. "The farmer is not licensed in any way by the Food Safety and Inspection Service," said Amanda Eamich, spokeswoman for the agency, which is part of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Although federal officials said animal products cannot legally be sold, one photo shows the door to the slaughterhouse with the hours of operation painted in large black letters. Although officials have expressed disgust with the farm's condition, no agency has taken the lead on finding a solution. The state health department became involved because of potential food safety violations but will not comment on a continuing investigation, said spokesman John Hammond.

The state attorney general's office also participated in the original search. But unless officials can determine an adverse impact to surrounding neighbors or streams, state agencies cannot become involved in what is essentially a local issue, said Kevin J. Enright, a spokesman for the attorney general. "For this to be a crime, we would have to prove the owners knowingly let fluids from dead animals get into waterways," Enright said.

In the past two years, the county Humane Society has collected from neighboring Marston properties dozens of feral pigs, as well as goats, llamas and emus that had escaped. For years, herds of feral pigs have routinely torn up neighbors' lawns, eaten shrubs and damaged homes.

At several county hearings in 2005, the elder Schisler said the feral pigs were not his property.

He has repaired fencing that allowed livestock to escape, he told officials. In December 2005, animal control officers rounded up more than 30 feral pigs roaming outside the farm. Because of conditions at the farm, the Carroll County Health Department might be able to enforce a nuisance ordinance and force the farmer to clean up the property, health officials said.


Case Updates

A Carroll County farmer was convicted of animal cruelty and selling contaminated meat yesterday after he waived his right to a jury trial in Circuit Court - the most recent in a series of dealings with authorities that date to the early 1990s.

Also, in a separate case involving environmental crimes that the state was set to prosecute next week, Carroll County Circuit Judge Thomas F. Stansfield convicted Carroll L. Schisler Sr., 61, of discharging animal carcasses and waste into a stream and littering the farm with more than 500 pounds of trash, including numerous junked cars.

Stansfield sentenced Schisler, of New Windsor, to five years plus 90 days in prison in the animal cruelty case and six years in prison for the environmental crimes. The judge then suspended those sentences and put Schisler on five years' probation.

Stansfield ordered that all decomposing animal carcasses and other trash cluttering the property be removed within 90 days. He gave Schisler six months to remove the junked cars.

Stansfield said that state agriculture and environmental agencies will monitor Schisler's farm to ensure compliance with the law. "This is a tragic situation in many respects," Stansfield said after hearing a statement of facts from county and state prosecutors. "We must bring it to an end and get it resolved."

Dale Bartlett, deputy manager for cruelty issues for the Humane Society of the United States, said the Schisler case "is not uncommon. These types of things happen when people don't take their responsibility seriously."

Last year, a grand jury indicted Schisler and his son, Carroll L. Schisler Jr., on 19 charges including intentionally causing the cruel killing of an animal by providing insufficient nourishment to male pigs on his property; multiple counts of animal cruelty to pigs, chickens and a Scottish highlander bovine; feeding garbage to swine; failing to provide those animals proper space; selling adulterated meat and selling meat without a permit.

After the federal Department of Agriculture documented the July 2006 slaughter of goats amid squalid conditions on the farm, a federal judge banned the commercial slaughter of animals there, said Marcia Murphy, spokeswoman for the U.S. attorney's office in Baltimore.

The Schislers' 112-acre farm in the rural hamlet of Marston has been under quarantine since April 2006, when a pig taken from the property tested positive for trichinosis, a disease caused by a parasitic worm.

Carroll L. Schisler Jr., 35, is serving a three-year sentence in Maryland for threatening a witness who had assisted the Carroll County state's attorney's office with the animal cruelty case.

Two weeks ago, he entered an Alford plea to charges of animal cruelty and selling tainted meat. In an Alford plea, a defendant does not admit guilt but acknowledges that prosecutors have sufficient evidence to obtain a conviction.

The plea arrangement included the witness-intimidation case and a charge of conspiracy to steal a motorcycle, said Melissa O. Hockensmith, deputy state's attorney for Carroll County.

Carroll Schisler Sr. pleaded not guilty during yesterday's nearly three-hour court session, blaming most of the farm's poor conditions on his son, who manages the property.
Source: Baltimore Sun - July 17, 2007
Update posted on Jul 17, 2007 - 11:03AM 
A Carroll County hog farmer won't be going to jail for his conviction on several animal cruelty charges.

Carroll Schisler Senior of Marston received a suspended three-year sentence yesterday in Carroll County Circuit Court. He was found guilty of aggravated cruelty to animals, feeding garbage to swine, delivery of food without a permit and other charges.

Investigators who visited Schisler's farm last year found dead carcasses of cows and pigs, and malnourished and dehydrated animals. Several pigs carried trichinosis and a slaughterhouse at the farm did not meet cleanliness standards.

Schisler plans to appeal the convictions and claims the search warrant used by investigators was illegal.

State regulators, meanwhile, issued an updated quarantine of Schisler's farm yesterday after tests found the Trichinella spiralis parasite in nearby wildlife.
Source: WMDT - July 17, 2007
Update posted on Jul 17, 2007 - 10:41AM 
A Carroll County man whose Marston farm was quarantined last April when a pig tested positive for trichinosis successfully appealed two Circuit Court cases yesterday involving three llamas and a bull found unattended near his property on separate occasions.

Carroll L. Schisler Sr. had been found guilty last fall of failing to prevent a bull from leaving his property without attending to it last April, and of failing to restrain the llamas in May.

Schisler appealed the guilty findings because "he had done nothing wrong," said his lawyer Roland Walker.

"The law is clearly in his favor," Walker said. While an owner is required to restrain his animals, Schisler did not own the bull or the llamas. The llamas were Schisler's son's pets, Walker said.

Officials testified that they found the black bull, estimated to weigh 400 to 600 pounds, across the street from the Schisler farm.

Schisler's son, Carroll Schisler Jr., allegedly moved the animal back to the property, saying it belonged to the farm, testified Brian Rupp, the chief animal control officer with the Humane Society. Rupp said the son wouldn't accept a citation issued to his father.

Officials said they found the llamas across the road from the Schisler property. Again, the son herded them back to the farm and refused to accept a citation, according to court testimony.

Schisler and his son are facing various charges in other cases. Those range from animal cruelty to water pollution and illegally allowing the disposal of solid waste, including dead animals.
Source: Baltimore Sun - April 13, 2007
Update posted on Apr 16, 2007 - 12:44AM 
Carroll Schisler Sr rejected a plea deal Thursday. The case also is expected to be placed on the back burner because the lead investigator was a state trooper who was critically wounded Tuesday.

"He says he's innocent," said Daniel Green, one of the attorneys representing Carroll Schisler Sr., whose farm was quarantined in April after a pig tested positive for trichinosis.

Prosecutor Jennifer Darby offered a one-year probation and a fine "in the $10,000 range," Green said.

Darby refused to comment on the details of the offer.

A Carroll County Circuit Court grand jury indicted Schisler and his son, Carroll Schisler Jr., in July for animal cruelty; failing to provide nutrition and food to pigs, chickens and a cow; feeding garbage to swine; and selling contaminated meat.

Schisler Sr. refused a plea bargain, said Roland Walker, another one of his lawyers, after a pretrial conference Thursday in the chambers of Carroll County Circuit Judge J. Barry Hughes.

Also during the conference, Hughes recused himself from the case - at the defense lawyers' request - because the judge had represented Fred Schisler, Schisler Sr.'s estranged brother, in a family dispute.

Fred Schisler and three other estranged siblings filed a complaint in October alleging that the 114-acre farm on Marston Road in New Windsor belongs to them because their late mother was not competent when she signed her will, leaving the $2 million property to Schisler Sr.

A new judge has not been assigned to the case, but Michael Galloway and Thomas Stansfield are the other two circuit court judges.

All of the court dates have been delayed because Trooper 1st Class Eric Workman, the lead investigator, was critically wounded Tuesday when a suspect in a home invasion and kidnapping in Eldersburg shot him.

Workman's recovery will take a long time, said Sgt. Charles Moore, of the state police barracks in Westminster.

"He's like my ace in the hole," Moore said. "If I ever have a dangerous person, I give it to Eric, because he finds them."
Source: Caroll County Examiner - Dec 15, 2006
Update posted on Dec 15, 2006 - 3:31PM 
A 500-pound boar and 17 wild pigs were shot near a quarantined farm, although state officials said the animals are not believed to be any of the more than 100 missing hogs from the farm that are suspected of having trichinosis. Seven of the dead pigs may have been the offspring of a sow trapped Tuesday outside the quarantined farm, said Nicky Ratliff, executive director of the Humane Society of Carroll County.

The pigs were euthanized in part because there would not have been any way to house them, Ratliff said, adding the carcasses were sent to a state Department of Agriculture lab in Frederick for necropsies. Earlier this month, state agriculture officials warned states from Indiana to Georgia about the missing pigs. Maryland officials believe the pigs may be infected with trichinosis, a harmful parasite that can infect humans if pork from the animals is consumed without being cooked thoroughly.

The quarantine has been in effect since April 1, when an emaciated pig infected with trichinosis was found on the 112-acre Marston farm belonging to Carroll L. Schisler Sr. and Carroll L. Schisler Jr. The Schislers were indicted in July on 19 criminal counts stemming from the raids, including animal cruelty, feeding garbage to swine and selling contaminated meat on the property. State officials had planned to test 105 pigs on the farm in September but found the gates locked when they arrived. The pigs were missing when state officials returned, raising concerns the pigs may have been taken to slaughterhouses. The elder Schisler has said he doesn't know what happened to the animals, according to his attorney, Roland Walker.
Source: ABC 2 - Oct 13, 2006
Update posted on Dec 5, 2006 - 12:40PM 
Two Carroll County farmers charged with animal cruelty were in federal court Tuesday trying to get a ban on the selling of their livestock lifted.

The farm, located in New Windsor, has been the scene of several government raids and was quarantined when a pig tested positive for trichnosis. The government investigation led to charges of animal cruelty against Carroll Schisler Sr. and his son.

Both claim they've done nothing wrong as the son's attorney classifies the legal battle as a case of a government "Goliath" battling small time farmers.

WJZ's Mike Hellgren spoke to the Schislers' attorney, Daniel Green, Tuesday, who claims his clients are victims of a "continuing harassment from the government" and sees it as retaliation after Schisler Sr. was found innocent of animal creulty charges in 1990.

Schisler spoke to WJZ Eyewitness News earlier in the month. "I've been being harassed for 16 years about this. I've been in court, I've never lost," he said.

Last week a dozen pigs were euthanized after they tested positive for trichnosis, a disease that can spread to humans who eat undercooked, infected meat.

The farm has since been quarantined and a judge issued a temporary order that no livestock from the farm could be slaughtered and sold to the public.

The Schislers say that some of the pigs did not belong to them and that others contracted trichnosis before they bought them from a livestock auction.

Green claims the Schislers never slaughtered any animals themselves, but instead sold them to African immigrants who would kill them accoring to religious beliefs.

Prosecutors declined to comment.

None of the pigs infected with trichnosis were sold to grocery stores and there are no reports of illness.
Source: WJZ - July 27, 2006
Update posted on Jul 27, 2006 - 10:46PM 
A U.S. District Court judge issued an emergency temporary restraining order yesterday to prevent two Carroll County livestock farmers from slaughtering animals and selling them to the public.

Carroll Schisler Sr., 60, and his son, Carroll Schisler Jr., 34, face federal charges for operating a slaughterhouse without a license as well as animal cruelty charges in the county. The 112-acre Marston farm, outside New Windsor, has been under quarantine since early spring, after a pig was found to have trichinosis.

U.S. Department of Agriculture inspectors told Judge Andre M. Davis yesterday that the owners have continued to slaughter and sell meat after they were ordered to stop for violating federal meat and poultry inspection laws.

According to court documents, inspectors from the federal Department of Agriculture observed vehicles leaving the farm July 15 with bags and coolers of meat. Drivers of those vehicles told the inspectors they purchased three live goats and a live sheep that were then slaughtered.

Roland Walker, attorney for the elder Schisler, said that the younger Schisler primarily operated the livestock farm.

Walker said last night that he hadn't had a chance to discuss the restraining order with his client. However, "he has been very compliant. He's cleaned up his act tremendously," Walker said.

The Schislers were arrested after a Carroll County grand jury indicted the two men earlier this month on 19 counts that included charges of animal cruelty and sale of contaminated meat.

A hearing is scheduled for Tuesday in U.S. District Court on civil charges filed by the USDA against the Schislers for operating a slaughterhouse without a federal license.
Source: Baltimore Sun - July 22, 2006
Update posted on Jul 24, 2006 - 1:55AM 
A Carroll County farmer indicted on charges of animal cruelty and selling bad meat said Wednesday that he plans to turn himself into authorities today.

Carroll Schisler Sr., 60, of the 2500 block of Marston Road, described his operation - which allows customers to purchase farm animals to slaughter for themselves on his property - as a family business taught to him by his father.

"Every animal [customers] buy is for religious reasons, and that is their custom," Schisler said from the Baltimore offices of his lawyer, Roland Walker.

Schisler's son, Carroll Schisler Jr., 34, was arrested Tuesday on the same 19 grand jury indictments that charge the pair with "failing to provide nutrition and food" to pigs, chickens and a cow, feeding garbage to swine and selling tainted meat.

The two face a maximum penalty of 10 years for the charges, said David Daggett, the county's deputy state's attorney.

Father and son have continued to sell pigs and goats to customers for slaughter without a license, said Nicky Ratliff, the Carroll County Humane Society director.

Authorities said the Schisler farm is polluted with dead animals.

"It was disgusting," said Daggett, who visited the farm Tuesday. "There were dead animals, pigs, goats, chickens, a big field of bones, dead animals in the pond."

Walker said many of the pigs found in and around the property are wild.

When state police came across skinny cows during investigations several months ago, he said, the situation existed because his client buys starving bovine from livestock auctions.

In 1990, Schisler Sr. faced animal cruelty charges that were later dismissed by a Carroll County judge, Ratliff said.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture also has investigated the farm, and a hearing is scheduled for July 25 in federal court in Baltimore.
Source: The Examiner - July 13, 2006
Update posted on Jul 13, 2006 - 10:20AM 

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