Posted by:
EricWI
at Sat May 8 21:23:12 2010 [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by EricWI ]
BATON ROUGE — The owners of High End Herps, a constrictor breeding business near Oakdale, say they have been wrongly accused of abusing animals, and their home and snake-breeding facilities were illegally searched.
David Beauchemin, 44, and his wife, Tawni Beauchemin, 23, were arrested and booked into the Allen Parish Jail in March, charged with 22 counts of felony cruelty to animals and charges of obstruction of justice and theft by fraud.
He was held in jail several days "because they kept upping my bail to give them time to let more poop pile up in the cages to make me look bad," said Beauchemin, who also goes by the name Damon Heynen. No court case has been scheduled.
Beauchemin says that since the early morning raid on his facility included Allen Parish sheriff's deputies, narcotics agents with a drug-sniffing dog and Homeland Security officers, all with their guns drawn, he believes the charges were "bogus" so the sheriff's office could invade his property looking for drugs.
"I think they came in here expecting a huge drug bust but found nothing," he said. "They were desperate to find something, so they came up with the bogus animal abuse charges."
He said resisting arrest charges stemmed from his requesting to examine the warrant. He said he was not allowed to read it until after he was released from jail.
Several attempts Friday to contact Allen Parish Chief Deputy Grant Willis were unsuccessful.
Beauchemin said he has hired an attorney and is considering filing suit against the sheriff's office and other agencies that raided the two facilities where he houses his snakes and the travel trailer where he lives with his wife. Also on the property is an old mobile home he said he was stripping to convert to another snake area.
The search warrant used by officers specifies that they were to look for and seize "'Xavier' a 6-year-old Doberman Pincher, the property of Lyndsey Rainer."
The officers seized the dog and 22 boas that exceeded the 12-foot limit for which permits are required, as well as other dogs and cats.
Beauchemin said they improperly stored the seized animals in an uninsulated trailer overnight where three pregnant boas, one valued at $100,000, a dog and a cat died when the temperature dropped to 37 degrees on March 21.
Rainer said she had rescued the Doberman and after getting it neutered and its shots updated, kept it awhile. She then put an ad on Craig's list offering to give it away to a good home.
"A woman by the name of Jennie said she wanted to get it for her husband, so I brought her my dog," Rainer said Friday. "I thought it was to be a permanent home."
Tawni Beauchemin said Jennie is her nickname and, "I didn't steal the dog. She gave him to me." She provided several e-mail messages between her and Rainer, who regularly checked on the Doberman and provided tips on caring for him.
Rainer said she became curious several days later when an ad appeared on Craig's list offering a blue
Doberman for sale in Baton Rouge for $300. She asked a friend to inquire and was sent photos that she had taken in her home before giving the dog to "Jennie."
"She lied to me to get my dog," Rainer said, "so I filed a criminal complaint. I wanted him back. I didn't know they had a snake farm."
Deputies used that complaint as grounds to secure a warrant.
Tawni Beauchemin said Xavier was a friendly dog except that it lunged at her husband's face, trying to bite him. "He must have been abused by a man at some time," she said, so they decided to give it away and sell the kennel she had purchased.
After the raid on the property, Rainer got the dog back but Beauchemin has yet to get back the snakes that were seized and are being housed by the Department of Wildlife and Fisheries.
He said that when he established his business in 2005, there was no state law requiring a permit for snakes longer than 12 feet and he was not aware that one had been adopted by the Legislature. The permits are free.
Beauchemin said comments in a House committee on Rep. Dorothy Sue Hill's bill requiring a license to keep and breed dangerous snakes were "misleading. We've never had mambas and cobras. We've never had poisonous snakes. It was fear-mongering to make the committee vote for the bill."
He said it also made his neighbors even angrier about his operation.
As to comments that some snakes were kept in plastic boxes, he said using sweater boxes with holes drilled in them are "an industry standard" for keeping baby and juvenile snakes. "And there's no w ay any of my snakes could ever escape into the wild." Responding to comments about neighbors fearing that their pets were being fed to the snakes, Beauchemin said he would never do that and that's why he raises chickens, rabbits and rats. He said the large packs of coyotes roaming the area are more likely getting their pets. www.thenewsstar.com/article/20100508/NEWS01/5080321
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