70-year-old woman faces second charge after horses escape her property
Several weeks ago, Charlotte Bright, 70, was charged with mischief after her horses escaped her property.
READ MORE: Horse found galloping down QEII Highway Monday returned to owner
Neighbours and provincial police say it has been an ongoing issue for years.
Const. Shannon Cork with the Napanee Ontario Provincial Police says Bright has now been charged a second time.
“She’s been charged with a breach of not complying with the conditions of that initial mischief charge, there are many dynamics at play so the breach is in relation to a whole bunch of things with regard to property and the mischief and what she was able to follow through on.”
Bright says her horses have escaped her property but it’s not all her doing.
“When you have locked gates that are taken off hinges and horses that are let out of locked stalls in barns, it’s pretty hard to keep them in.”
Bright lives alone and works full-time. She says it’s impossible to monitor her 116 acres, 24 hours a day.
READ MORE: Halifax Lancers launch online fundraising campaign after horses quarantined with strangles
“For a long time, the horses weren’t getting out and then we got a new neighbour, he went out on his four-wheeler through my field out through a gate and left the gate open.”
Bright says Tyendinaga Township has taken possession of a dozen horses and 21 remain on her property for now.
As a result of the second charge, Bright says she’s been told all her horses have to be removed from her property by June 12.
© 2018 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
Editor's Picks

The big risk from Trump's tariffs is Canadian firms scrapping their investment plans

What U.S. steel, aluminum tariffs mean for Canadians — and their wallets

EXCLUSIVE: Liberals ignored green energy advice that could've saved Ontarians billions, lead engineer says

Coalition forces in Syria, Iraq targeted three Canadians, secret document says

A century after suffrage, where will the fight for political equality go in the next 100 years?

When he was 20, he fled Canada to join ISIS. Now he's believed dead and his family says it didn't see the signs

Canada's last military prison costs $2M a year. About half the time, it has no prisoners

Comments
Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.