Saturday, July 05, 2008
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Animal cruelty


he wrist-slap sentences
given two men who
killed and horribly mutil-
ated two horsed in Kane
County reflect two disturbing
facts about a particular attitude
toward cruelty to animals in
Utah.
     First, the prosecuting and de-
fense attorneys who crafted the
plea agreement that resulted in
no jail time for the criminals
clearly were more concerned
about the financial loss to the
horses’ owners than about the
wanton cruelty of the crime and
what it might signify.
     Second, the Utah Legislature,
bucking the national trend, con-
sistently declines to make tortur-
ing animals a felony. Even the
worst cases of animal cruelty re-
main class A misdemeanors,
which can bring jail time, but are
frequently bargained down.
     The details fo the case are as
sickening as they are alarming.
     According to authorities, the
two men entered a private ranch
last summer and repeatedly shot
a mare and a stallion. After the
stallion went down, 23-year-old
Gavin Demont Ewell of Toquer-
ville and Hurricane resident Jer-
emy Douglas Katzenbach, 21, cut
off the animal’s ears, shot it in
the legs through its hooves,
jammed a stick in into its rectum
and clubbed it with a rock
wrapped in a T-shirt. They wrote
vulgarities on the dead horse’s
hide.
     Police reports indicate the acts
were not random vandalism, but
calculated acts of vengeance
against the animals’ owners.

     Even so, the two perpetrators
were allowed to plead guilty to
felony criminal mischief and to
class A misdemeanor animal cru-
elty in exchange for 36 months of
probation, written apologies, $200
in court fines and $27,500 in resti-
tution for the 4-year-old stallion.
     The original third-degree
felony charge carried a
possible penalty of up to five
years in prison and a $5,000
fine; the maximum penalty
for the misdemeanor is a
year in jail and a $2,500 fine.
     Kane County Attorney Eric
Lind defends the recommenda-
tion of no time behind bars,
contending that it is more
important that Ewell and
Katzenbach get busy paying
restitution for their crimes than
that they spend even a day
in jail.
     We disagree. The monetary
value of the horses isn’t the only
issue, nor should it be the over-
riding one. It is true that under
the law, animals are the property
of humans, but cruelty toward
a living creature is far different
from vandalizing a barn or
wrecking a car, especially in light
of studies and law-enforcement
statistics showing that torturing
animals often is a precursor to
violence against humans.
     In 43 other states, animal
cruelty is a felony. The Utah
Humane Society is sponsoring
an initiative on the 2004 ballot
that would make the crime a
felony in Utah. Given some
legislators’ refusal to acknowledge
the seriousness of this crime, a ballot
initiative is called for. One way or
the other, it is time to toughen the law.

The Salt Lake Tribune 12-11-03