Fenris
Well-Known Member
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/.../RSPCA-End-this-cruelty-to-animal-owners.html
RSPCA: End this cruelty to animal owners
The animal charity is spending too much time prosecuting innocent animal owners, believes Christopher Booker
By Christopher Booker
Published: 6:10PM BST 07 Aug 2010
2 Comments
Last week I reported on the tragic story of Alan Brough, the retired builder who became so depressed, after the RSPCA had for no good reason taken the herd of 90 semi-wild ponies he had looked after for 30 years on the Cumbrian moors, that he hanged himself.
This weeks story, again passed on to me by SHG (the Self-Help Group set up to advise victims of RSPCA persecution), concerns Michael ONeill, an Anglesey horse breeder. For three years he was dragged through the courts by the RSPCA, after one of its officials had in 2007 seen sores on two horses he had bought from Ireland for £10,000.
The RSPCA instigated criminal charges against Mr ONeill, claiming that the sores must have been caused by collars round his horses necks. Mr O Neills vet had already diagnosed their cause as a rare bacterial infection called strangles, for which he had been treating the animals. As the case dragged on, threatening the closure of his business, Mr ONeill became so stressed that his health deteriorated. At one hearing last year, he had a stroke in the courtroom.
Last week, when the trial finally concluded, the magistrates acquitted Mr ONeill of all charges, saying he could leave the court with an untarnished reputation. Such stories should be brought to the attention of all those generous folk who still provide the RSPCA with an income of £115 million a year in donations, without realising what a change has come over that once admirable organisation and how much of its activity, according to critics, is now devoted to prosecuting innocent animal owners in order to generate the publicity that keeps those donations rolling in.
RSPCA: End this cruelty to animal owners
The animal charity is spending too much time prosecuting innocent animal owners, believes Christopher Booker
By Christopher Booker
Published: 6:10PM BST 07 Aug 2010
2 Comments
Last week I reported on the tragic story of Alan Brough, the retired builder who became so depressed, after the RSPCA had for no good reason taken the herd of 90 semi-wild ponies he had looked after for 30 years on the Cumbrian moors, that he hanged himself.
This weeks story, again passed on to me by SHG (the Self-Help Group set up to advise victims of RSPCA persecution), concerns Michael ONeill, an Anglesey horse breeder. For three years he was dragged through the courts by the RSPCA, after one of its officials had in 2007 seen sores on two horses he had bought from Ireland for £10,000.
The RSPCA instigated criminal charges against Mr ONeill, claiming that the sores must have been caused by collars round his horses necks. Mr O Neills vet had already diagnosed their cause as a rare bacterial infection called strangles, for which he had been treating the animals. As the case dragged on, threatening the closure of his business, Mr ONeill became so stressed that his health deteriorated. At one hearing last year, he had a stroke in the courtroom.
Last week, when the trial finally concluded, the magistrates acquitted Mr ONeill of all charges, saying he could leave the court with an untarnished reputation. Such stories should be brought to the attention of all those generous folk who still provide the RSPCA with an income of £115 million a year in donations, without realising what a change has come over that once admirable organisation and how much of its activity, according to critics, is now devoted to prosecuting innocent animal owners in order to generate the publicity that keeps those donations rolling in.