Case Details

Cat shot
Charlottesville, VA (US)

Incident Date: Monday, Apr 24, 2006
County: Charlottesville City
Local Map: available
Disposition: Convicted

Abuser/Suspect: George A. Seymour

Case Updates: 2 update(s) available

Case ID: 8697
Classification: Shooting
Animal: cat
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Animal was offleash or loose
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What was he thinking? That's been the million dollar question ever since a well-to-do businessman shot his neighbor's cat in Albemarle County's upscale Bentivar neighborhood on April 24. According to his lawyer, Benjamin Dick, George Seymour was simply trying to protect his expensive auto fleet from his neighbor's three year-old black cat, Carmen. "He and his wife run a refurbishing car business," Dick explains of the Seymours. "They've had a number of stray cats who have come onto the property." Some of those cats, Dick says, "got on the hood of refurbished cars and clawed the paint. They damaged their valuable cars."

Though Dick says Carmen wasn't on a Seymour car at the time of the shooting, around 7:30pm on April 24, he insists that Seymour believed she was a stray because she wasn't wearing a collar. Dick says Seymour told him, "I saw the cat, I impulsively picked up my gun, and trained it on him to shoot to kill." "If he'd known it was the next door neighbor's cat," Dick says, "he wouldn't have fired away."

As detailed in the Hook's May 18 cover story, "Claws and effect: Bentivar sparks outrage, "Seymour's bullet entered Carmen's neck, passed through, and shattered bones in her shoulder and right front leg. The wounded pet dragged herself home, where her owners discovered her on the garage floor. Later that night, the Wintersteigers made the difficult decision to euthanize Carmen. Vanessa Wintersteiger confirms that Carmen was collarless at the time of the shooting. "She has worn one in the past," she says, "but it kept coming off." Because Carmen was lethargic and rarely moved far from the back of the house, Wintersteiger says they didn't replace the collar. But Wintersteiger adds that she has never seen any stray cats on or around her house, which is approximately 100 feet from the Seymours, who have been their neighbors since 1998. "I know every cat I see around here," she says.

Dick says Seymour, a "former NRA member" who has hunted in Africa is "quite upset" over the incident. "This is an unfortunate incident for which he has great remorse," says Dick.

Wintersteiger says her family has had no contact with the Seymours since Carmen's shooting, something Dick attributes to Seymour's shock at being charged with a crime. "He didn't know it was their cat," he says. "The first instant he dealt with was when [the police] were on his property talking about charging him with a felony." Since then, Dick says, Seymour has been dealing with hate mail and with trouble at his business, the Import Car Store at the corner of Hydraulic Road and Seminole Trail. On Tuesday, May 23, several picketers appeared on the sidewalk with signs reading "Import Car Store owners shoot family pet." That protest was not organized by the SPCA, says the organization's executive director, Susanne Kogut.

"That's not typically how we'd handle something like this," she says, adding that she has heard from numerous people in the community upset about the incident and wanting to see it punished. Currently, Virginia law treats first offense cruelty to animals as a Class 1 misdemeanor, punishable by up to a year behind bars. A 2002 amendment to that law made the second offense a Class 6 felony, and it made cruelty to companion animals-- cats or dogs-- a Class 6 felony if it resulted in that animal's death.

On Wednesday night, May 24-- after this paper's presstime-- Kogut invited the community to the SPCA for an evening meeting to discuss "Carmen's Legacy." The goal of the meeting: "To decide what organized actions would be appropriate to make community leaders and officials aware that this community supports strong measures to combat animal abuse and to protect our family pets," she wrote.

Dick says Seymour, an avid hunter and former member of the NRA, is upset at people's perception of him and that he is not someone who'd deliberately hurt a companion animal. "He told me, 'I'm having bad dreams about this whole thing; I'm being made out to be someone I'm not,'" says Dick. Wintersteiger says her family too is suffering, and she's not sure what she'd say to Seymour if given the chance. "He's upset it occurred," she says. "We're very upset that it occurred, as well, but we didn't have a choice."

Case Updates

Just before he was sentenced to 10 days in jail, the owner of an Albemarle County car dealership reflected on the strange events that landed him in court.

�I impulsively shot my neighbor�s cat, and I regret that,� George A. Seymour Jr. told the judge.

The jail sentence came at the end of an emotional two-hour trial that played out Tuesday afternoon in front of a courtroom filled with indignant SPCA volunteers and concerned residents of an affluent Albemarle County neighborhood.

Seymour is the owner and operator of Import Car Store at the corner of Hydraulic Road and U.S. 29. For the past eight years, he and his family have lived next to the Wintersteigers in the Bentivar subdivision in northern Albemarle.

Though they lived on bordering lots, the two families were not overly friendly and rarely communicated, according to testimony at the trial.

On April 24, Seymour was sitting on his back deck drinking a cup of coffee with his wife when he saw a cat enter his yard, he said.

The Seymours frequently drive cars home from their dealership, and have had problems in the past with cats jumping on the vehicles and damaging them, he said.

�I saw this black cat coming out of the woods, and I said, �Kathy, there�s one of the cats that�s been damaging our cars,�� Seymour testified.
Seymour, a gun enthusiast who said he has been a hunter since he was a small boy, went inside his house and retrieved a pistol he kept in a dresser drawer. He returned to the deck and shot the cat twice.

The feline was Carmen, a beloved 3-year-old pet of the Wintersteiger family.

Klaus and Vanessa Wintersteiger weren�t home at the time of their shooting, but their 9-year-old son heard the gunfire and looked out a window, according to the boy�s testimony Tuesday.

�I saw Mr. Seymour holding a long gun,� the boy said in court.

Wounded, the cat returned to the Wintersteiger home and collapsed in the garage.

When Klaus Wintersteiger returned home that evening, he found his mother - who was visiting from Austria - sitting on the porch, crying and holding the bleeding cat.

Carmen was taken to an emergency veterinarian, who testified Tuesday that she would have had to amputate the animal�s leg at the shoulder to give it a chance of survival. The Wintersteigers decided to have Carmen put to sleep.

�It was very hard,� Vanessa Wintersteiger said. �[The children] still have episodes and tearful nights about it.�

During the trial, Seymour maintained that he hadn�t known the cat was his neighbors� pet, that he�d never seen the animal before, and that it didn�t have a collar on at the time of the shooting.

Seymour testified that the problem of cats jumping on his cars has grown so bad that he and his wife have resorted to placing cat traps around their vehicles.

But when questioned by Albemarle Commonwealth�s Attorney Jim Camblos, Seymour admitted he�d never seen the black cat on his vehicles.�Carmen did not jump up,� Klaus Wintersteiger said. �She was too lazy and too fat.�

Camblos said he didn�t buy the argument that the Seymours thought the cat was a stray.

�Mr. Seymour took it upon himself to shoot a cat that was clearly a companion animal,� he said.

Substitute General District Judge Steven Helvin found Seymour guilty of the malicious wounding of an animal. The judge sentenced Seymour to 60 days in jail, but suspended all but 10 days.

�Sometimes an active jail sentence is the only way to send a message to the community,� the judge said.

Seymour will also have to perform community service. Just before the sentencing, defense attorney Benjamin Dick argued against jail time, suggesting that his client could serve community service, possibly at the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.

Local SPCA Executive Director Susann Kogut was in the audience at the trial, and she shook her head vehemently at the suggestion.

On Monday, Kogut sent out an e-mail encouraging the recipients to show up at the trial in support of strict enforcement of animal cruelty laws.
�People have been following this on their own,� Kogut said. �It didn�t really take much to get them down here.�

Much community interest has been stirred up by coverage of the incident in The Hook, a weekly newspaper. About 40 people came to watch the trial.

As the courtroom emptied out Tuesday, Klaus Wintersteiger said he was glad the ordeal was over and was satisfied with the sentence.

�I think it sends a message,� he said.

Though the families have continued to live next to each throughout the ordeal, there has been no contact between them since the shooting, Vanessa Wintersteiger said.

�There was never any apology,� she said.

Vanessa�s father, Bruce Eades, said the trial might not have been necessary had Seymour come over and apologized.

�This could have all been avoided,� Eades said.
Source: Daily Progress - Aug 22, 2006
Update posted on Aug 23, 2006 - 2:54PM 
The trial for accused cat shooter George Seymour has been postponed to August 22, 2006 at 3pm.

Seymour had been scheduled to appear in Albemarle County District Court on June 20, 2006 for his alleged role in the shooting of Carmen, a three-year-old cat belonging to his neighbors, Klaus and Vanessa Wintersteiger.
Source: The Hook News - Jujne 20, 2006
Update posted on Jul 1, 2006 - 3:32AM 

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References

The Hook - May 25, 2006

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