Newsletter Article:
Great News on Cherokee Ridge Case!
We all work hard to make the laws work for animals, and every
now and then, the whole process works beautifully, which is
what happened in the Cherokee Ridge case, reported on in an
earlier newsletter article.
To recap, in October 2004, the State Police, Mohawk and
Hudson River Humane Society, New York State Humane Association,
and many local farmers who volunteered their time
and resources conducted the rescue of the animals at Cherokee
Ridge in Coeymans. This occurred after two years of attempts
by the Mohawk and Hudson River Humane Society had failed
to get Susan Peters, operator of the facility, to clean it up. A
total of 287 animals, including horses, goats, ducks, dogs, cats,
rats, pigs and chickens, were removed from overcrowded, unsanitary
conditions.
On March 15, 2006, Peters was found guilty of 18 misdemeanor
counts of animal neglect in Town Court. She also
plead guilty to one count of criminal contempt for having kittens
in her home AFTER she was forbidden to have any contact
with animals.
Peters appealed the ruling in County Court, saying that she
was the victim of bias. However, the court found nothing to
support her claim. Because ADA Renee Merges of Albany
County had done such a fine job on this case at trial, the appeals
court upheld the conviction.
Peters was to continue serving her sentence of 14 months in an
Albany County correctional facility and three years probation,
according to a report in the Albany Times Union on May 16,
2007.
It is outcomes like this that gives us the spirit to keep going.
— Sue McDonough, Legislation Committee Chair
New York State Humane Association Humane Review, Vol.XX, No.3, Spring/Summer 2007.
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