Two plead guilty to animal cruelty

Jury selection for third defendant in maltreatment of goat, dogs set for May 21

Two of three defendants charged in connection with mistreatment of a goat and several dogs in Texarkana, Ark., have pleaded guilty.

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Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Bulleit Rye

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Stephanie Whitcomb (from left), Sarah Mouritsen, Emily Moser in Crimes of the Heart by Beth Henley

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David & Dorothy Robinson

William Lake Evans, 25, pleaded guilty earlier this month and was sentenced to four years in prison for felony animal cruelty at a hearing before Miller County Circuit Judge Carlton Jones. Evans also received a one-year county jail sentence for misdemeanor animal cruelty involving a goat which will run concurrently to his prison term. Evans was on parole for burglary at the time of his animal cruelty arrest.

Tyler Blaine Green, 21, pleaded guilty Dec. 19 to misdemeanor animal cruelty at a hearing before Circuit Judge Kirk Johnson. Green was sentenced to one year of probation and ordered to pay a $500 fine as well as $570 in court costs and fees.

A charge of misdemeanor animal cruelty remains pending against Green's wife, Victoria Anderson, 24. Anderson's case is scheduled for jury selection May 21. A status hearing before Jones is scheduled for March 13.

The three defendants were allegedly sharing a house where the neglected animals were found but had moved out because utility service had been cut because of nonpayment.

Animal control first visited the house at 309 Laurel St. on Sept. 18 in response to an emergency call about the animals not having food and water, according to a search warrant affidavit signed by Animal Control Officer Jackie Mullins. They observed a brown-and-white female pit bull whose ribs, spine and pelvic bones were visible. A smaller dog of unknown breed appeared in "less than adequate condition."

There was no food and little water.

A notice to contact animal control officials within eight hours was left on the door, and repeated attempts were made to contact Anderson, whose name is listed on the home's water service account. Animal control officers returned Sept. 21. The notices left on the door had been removed, and attempts to contact Anderson were unsuccessful. Officers could see there were other animals in the house and that there was no electricity. They observed a goat, laboring to breathe and unable to stand, lying in its own waste.

The following day, animal control officers and a member of the Texarkana, Ark., Police Department executed a search warrant. Officers removed the ailing goat and used bolt cutters to enter a locked room where two more dogs were found. The goat died that night while under veterinary care.

Green allegedly contacted Texarkana Animal Care and Adoption the day of the search. The affidavit alleges that Mullins called Green and could hear him speaking with Anderson while on the phone. Green allegedly acknowledged that he knew the animals were in the house, knew of their poor condition but "felt it was not their problem."

Green allegedly told Mullins the animals belong to Evans, the couple's housemate. Mullins spoke to Evans the day of the search as well. Evans allegedly told Mullins he had food for the animals and knew they were in need of care. Evans allegedly claimed he was treating the animals with remedies he'd found on the internet because he couldn't afford a vet and that he was planning to move them to another location.

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