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#2
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As others have stated, I don't think we have enough information to really have an informed opinion. But if I had to guess just based on the information we have, I doubt this guy would have been prosecuted and/or convicted if he had a legitimate defense.
If this guy did the minimum that any caring person would have done, I don't think there would have been any case against him. The minimum, in my opinion, would have been to have a vet check the horse regularly. I can guarantee that if this guy had a vet checking this horse regularly, the state would have had no case. If he would have been consulting with a vet regularly, there is no way that any jury would have convicted him because if a guy is constantly having a vet look at the horse, this would show that the guy cared and was trying to do the right thing. As I stated before, I don't have all the facts so I could be totally wrong. |
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#3
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I just wanted to add that if this was simply a case of a judgement call (of whether or not to give the horse more time to recover) on this guy's part, I highly doubt any jury would have convicted him. This jury must have determined that this guy did not provide even a minimal standard of care for this horse.
We may not have all the facts, but the jury did have all the facts and they unanimously voted to convict this guy. Not a single juror thought there was a reasonable doubt. |
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#4
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The legal system is so screwed up and it's all about who has which attorney... I'm not slamming you and I'm sure you know that. I think all the jurors, or some of them, needed to hear was "animal cruelty" and an assumption was made. Maybe people want so desperately to do what's right that they go into deliberations with a preconceived notion without even realizing it. Anyway, here's an update. The charge was reduced to a misdemeanor... http://www.contracostatimes.com/california/ci_14135913 "Mr. Kriple is guilty of embracing the idea that this horse should not be put down," I choose to believe that. |
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#5
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By the way, when does a guilty person ever admit that they're guilty? Just because we have heard a few quotes from this guy proclaiming his innocense, that hardly means a thing. Guys always proclaim their innocense. Every person that heard the facts of the case, came to the same conclusion, every single person from the CHRB investigators, to the prosecutor, to the judge, and to the jury. I highly doubt all these people got it wrong. It's possible but it's unlikely. If you read the judge's quote, he never said that the horse should have been put down. The judge's simply said, "He should have done something with the animal." That is the point. Nobody would convict this guy for making a judgement call that it wasn't time to put the horse down. This guy got convicted because he was doing nothing to care for this horse. If he wanted to give the horse more time, that would have been fine as long as he was properly caring for the horse which he obviously was not. Let's not forget that this guy has a pattern of neglecting his horses. In an interview last week, Mrakich (the prosecutor) said Kriple "has a pattern of extreme negligence when it comes to taking care of horses." Mrakich cited a case in 2002 in which Kriple failed to care for a racehorse that suffered a fractured knee at Los Alamitos. In the 2002 case, the California Horse Racing Board "found that (Kriple's) conduct was detrimental to horse racing," Mrakich said, but they did not suspend his license to train horses or forward the case to prosecutors for possible criminal charges. Last edited by Rupert Pupkin : 01-07-2010 at 05:07 PM. |
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#7
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By the way, not all cases of cruelty to animals involve intentional cruelty. Some of the cases simply involve such gross negligence that it rises to the level of cruelty under the law. I've seen a number of these cases on the news over the years. I would put this case in that category. Last edited by Rupert Pupkin : 01-09-2010 at 04:33 AM. |
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