A member of the Minnesota Horse Council, the state's most influential equine group, has been charged with felony animal cruelty for the mistreatment of her horses, two of which were so emaciated they had to be put down.
Carol Dobbelaire, 63, of Buffalo, was suspended Wednesday by the council, an umbrella organization that represents all facets of the state's horse industry. If convicted of any of the eight counts against her -- six misdemeanors and two felonies -- Dobbelaire, a council director for five years, will be banned from the organization, said its president, Dr. Tracy Turner.
Dobbelaire told authorities that she and her husband were struggling financially to feed their 16 horses. However, Turner pointed out, "she's the chairman of a [council] fund that provides hay for those who need it."
During a week that the Minnesota Horse Welfare Coalition, a nonprofit organization that is not affiliated with the Minnesota Horse Council, launched a hay bank to help keep horses fed, 26 counts of mistreating animals were filed in Fillmore County against Wilbur Schmoll, 80. According to court documents, the smell of death permeated the farm in the southeastern Minnesota community of LeRoy. Dogs fed off horse carcasses in various states of decay. Five of Schmoll's horses were found dead or have since died.
Authorities seized 55 of Schmoll's horses, donkeys and ponies, the most in at least 25 years and likely the biggest equine seizure ever in Minnesota, said Keith Streff, the Humane Society investigator involved in both the Dobbelaire and Schmoll cases.
But even in a year involving Minnesota's first-ever felony convictions involving the mistreatment of horses, the Dobbelaire case has raised eyebrows because of the severity of the charges and the affiliation of the accused.
Dobbelaire and her husband, Rick Dobbelaire, 47, each were charged with two felonies and six gross misdemeanors. (The most severe charge against Schmoll was a gross misdemeanor.) Carol Dobbelaire told authorities that she has 15 years of equine experience, but admitted she was not feeding her horses enough, according to court documents.
Court records say that the horses were so hungry that they had begun eating away the barn walls, possibly consuming the fiberglass insulation.