allforgreys
13th February 2008 - 11:50 PM
The last stop on the Florida greyhound racing circuit was supposed to be the Pensacola dog track, where over-the-hill racers hustled after the mechanical rabbit one last time.
But for dogs that could not keep up the pace, the authorities say, it turns out that the end of the line would often be across Perdido Bay, in a dusty corner of Alabama, in a ditch behind the ramshackle home of one Robert L. Rhodes.
Here, on an 18-acre spread strewn with rusty trailers, filthy sheds, steel animal traps and a small menagerie of hogs, cows and billy goats, Mr. Rhodes routinely disposed of used-up greyhounds with a bullet to the brain, prosecutors say.
Judging from aerial photos of mounds of bones, Mr. Rhodes's own admissions, and the number of dog carcasses unearthed on Tuesday in just one pit, investigators say they believe Mr. Rhodes slaughtered 1,000 to 3,000 dogs over the last 10 years.
Mr. Rhodes, 68, a former security guard at the Pensacola Greyhound Track, told law enforcement officials and local reporters on Tuesday that he had killed the dogs for $10 each, and that he had been doing it his entire adult life, beginning with his first job out of high school as a young man in the Black Hills of South Dakota.
Today, Mr. Rhodes was charged with three counts of animal cruelty, a felony punishable by up to 10 years in prison.
Mr. Rhodes insisted that he always shot dogs once in the brain. "It was quick," he told The Pensacola News Journal. "They didn't feel a thing."
But District Attorney David Whetstone said three of the four dogs his investigators dug up on Tuesday had been shot in the mouth or the neck. "None would have died instantly," he said.
The discovery of Mr. Rhodes's animal-disposal operation exposed what animal-rights advocates have long described as the lethal underbelly of the waning greyhound racing and parimutuel industry in the United States, in which as many as 34,000 puppies are born a year and 24,000 dogs registered to race on any of 48 tracks in 15 states.
"We know there are many animals produced for racing, and that the industry does not have sanctuaries or shelters to place animals that are no longer useful to them on the racetrack," said Wayne Pacelle, senior vice president of the Humane Society of the United States. "They're doing something with them. The information we've had over the years is that they are killing them, disposing of them. They are raised for commercial purposes and when they don't produce, they are expendable."
Advocates recalled similar cases in the United States, but none involving as many dogs. Last year, an Iowa breeder was charged with collecting 341 greyhounds for adoption but then selling them to a medical research laboratory. Last month, international animal-rights advocates charged that thousands of greyhounds were being put to death in Spain, often by hanging, at the end of the racing season.
Gary Guccione, executive director of the National Greyhound Association in Abilene, Kan., said that adoption is strongly encouraged, and that 18,000 dogs are adopted each year. But euthanizing healthy dogs merely because they do not run fast enough is not forbidden, he said, provided it is done humanely - by lethal injection.
Indeed, neither Alabama nor Florida state law prevents the owner of an animal or pet from killing it for any reason at all, provided the killing is done by lethal injection, officials said. But most veterinarians refuse to kill healthy animals, officials said, which apparently opened a niche for Mr. Rhodes.
The trail that led to his property here in Lillian began in April with an anonymous tip to Albert Kelson, the racing director at the Pensacola track, about dogs being shipped off by the truckload, often under cover of darkness.
In an interview, Mr. Kelson said only one kennel associated with the track, owned by Clarence Ray Patterson of Pensacola, was giving dogs to Mr. Rhodes to be killed. He said that Mr. Rhodes was a part-time security guard at the track for two or three years, and that other guards were concealing his visits to the greyhound compound by not signing him in. Mr. Kelson said that Mr. Rhodes and the other guards were fired on May 9 or 10.
Mr. Patterson, whose contract was terminated by the track, could not be reached for comment.
Mr. Whetstone, the Baldwin County district attorney, said Mr. Rhodes had been running an animal-disposal business, in which he picked up roadkill and dead farm animals like cows and horses, butchered them, then fed the meat to his own dogs and left the carcasses to his hogs - all in flagrant violation of health codes intended to prevent the spread of bovine diseases.
He said investigators dug into one pit on Tuesday and found 40 freshly killed greyhounds, with the tattooed identification numbers still visible on their ears.
Mr. Whetstone said he had been to the dog track and enjoyed the races, but after seeing Mr. Rhodes's property he sounded more like an animal-rights advocate, likening it to a "Dachau for dogs." "We've seen this before," Mr. Whetstone said. "A madman called Hitler was doing it, trying to create a superrace. Well, they're overbreeding, because they're trying to get superdogs. These dogs were not unhealthy, they were just slow."
Tonight, as Mr. Rhodes awaited a bond hearing, his property and his live animals were left to themselves. Past his trailer, where a phone inside rang steadily, past the sheds where about a dozen surviving greyhounds stirred in their cages at a visitor's footsteps, past the gate that kept 22 goats from running free, a field opened wide before a piny woods.
Off to the right were what looked to be half a dozen sand traps. But up close, the sand revealed bits and pieces of animal bones. In one, the dirt was fresh, the bones were not yet bleached white, and the stench was still drawing swarms of giant flies.
cheryl2
14th February 2008 - 02:21 PM
Any particular reason you're going back 6 years to find news? The guy has been dead for a few years now.
mountain4greys
14th February 2008 - 03:23 PM
greydaddy
14th February 2008 - 04:36 PM
Those were some low times for the industry and that man was very evil. As Cheryl2 said, it is old news and the guy is dead.
But, this tragedy did happen and I believe we have moved on now and things have gotten better.
I think allforgreys is just sad for the dogs that had to go through this as I do but we all need to work somehow better with the tracks, owners and dogs making sure all these dogs get adopted out or live a normal life being on the farm.
FastRunner
14th February 2008 - 08:57 PM
How come the trainer(s) that sent dogs to this guy continued to hold jobs in the industry?
xracers
15th February 2008 - 06:53 AM
| QUOTE (FastRunner @ Feb 14 2008, 08:57 PM) |
| How come the trainer(s) that sent dogs to this guy continued to hold jobs in the industry? |
Nothing the trainers did was illegal at the time. In Alabama a shot in the head is considered humane- in FL it's not, so FL passed a law that made it illegal to cross state lines to put down a dog. The only thing they could have gotten the farmer on was improper disposal of the bodies anyways.
This was a long time ago.
FastRunner
15th February 2008 - 06:59 PM
Then why were they arrested and charged with crimes? It wasn't until Rhodes died that charges were dropped since the star witness wasn't around to testify.
In 2002: "Authorities in Baldwin County, Alabama arrested three more people on felony animal cruelty charges on November 7 in connection with nearly 2,000 greyhounds found shot to death in May on an 18-acre property in Lillian, Alabama. The town is just across the state line from Florida, where more than a third of the greyhound race tracks in the United States are located.
All three people arrested were based in Florida. They are Ursula O'Donnell, who was arrested at Melbourne Greyhound Park in Melbourne, Florida; Paul Discolo, Jr., who was arrested at Ebro Greyhound Park in Chipley, Florida; and John W. Smith, who was arrested in Marathon, Florida."
In 2005: "Bay Minette, Alabama - Baldwin County District Attorney, David Whetstone has been forced to request a dismissal of animal cruelty charges against three of the defendants in the greyhound-killing case that garnered national attention in 2002. The State's case against the alleged perpetrators has suffered numerous setbacks over the past two and a half years in spite of Whetstone's aggressive pursuit of justice.
The first blow was the death of triggerman, Robert Rhodes who died a year after he admitted to a lifetime occupation as a killer of thousands of unprofitable racing greyhounds. Rhodes had identified four Florida greyhound trainers as co-conspirators. A judge ruled earlier this month that Rhodes' death rendered his testimony against the others inadmissible. Co-defendant, Clarence Patterson, now refuses to substantiate statements he previously made against the other three. Consequently, charges have been dropped against defendants: Ursula O'Donnell, Paul Discolo Jr. and John Wilson Smith. It is doubtful that Whetstone will exercise his option to prosecute Patterson based on earlier self-incriminating statements he made to authorities. "
2002-5 isn't, as you put it, "A long time ago".
Fact is these guys were welcomed members of the racing community long after it was clear what they did.
Are they still NGA members?
FastRunner
15th February 2008 - 07:10 PM
For those reading and not wanting to look if Ms O'Donnell is still in racing... she is the trainer for R&B Kennel at Valley in Texas.
CLICK HERE to see trainer in race 1So a trainer that a few years ago was charged with a felony and has a proven track record of behavior the people in the industry say doesn't happen is still caring for dogs.
FastRunner
15th February 2008 - 07:54 PM
Here's the point:
Next time someone says the business can manage itself and weeds out the bad apples just remember that is a pile of bull poop and this woman is a prime example.

Trainers at every track should be embarrassed this woman is "one of them". And a kennel owner who would hire her.... well, what does THAT say about them?
FastRunner
15th February 2008 - 07:55 PM
Mountain4greys. Why did you delete your post? My reply seems like piling on now.
Redstripe
15th February 2008 - 08:13 PM
| QUOTE (FastRunner @ Feb 15 2008, 06:54 PM) |
| Trainers at every track should be embarrassed this woman is "one of them". And a kennel owner who would hire her.... well, what does THAT say about them? |
you say that like trainers aren't.. my good friend at Tri hates that people look down on his job.. he's work there for 20+ years and loves his dogs and talks about them like his children
mountain4greys
15th February 2008 - 08:18 PM
| QUOTE (FastRunner @ Feb 15 2008, 06:55 PM) |
| Mountain4greys. Why did you delete your post? My reply seems like piling on now. |
Mostly because there's no point in bringing this up again. It's been talked about in other forums, and the only thing we can hope for, is that they are being watched. All the kennels we get dogs from take very good care of their dogs. Most do now, but you still have some bad eggs, and they will be caught. The US has taken a different light on the way dogs are treated. Laws are getting tougher now, although it is slow in catching up. In my state, cruelty to animals is a felony now. That's a new law. We also have 2 dog tracks.
FastRunner
15th February 2008 - 08:36 PM
QUOTE (mountain4greys @ Feb 15 2008, 07:18 PM)
| QUOTE (FastRunner @ Feb 15 2008, 06:55 PM) |
| Mountain4greys. Why did you delete your post? My reply seems like piling on now. |
Mostly because there's no point in bringing this up again. It's been talked about in other forums, and the only thing we can hope for, is that they are being watched. All the kennels we get dogs from take very good care of their dogs. Most do now, but you still have some bad eggs, and they will be caught. The US has taken a different light on the way dogs are treated. Laws are getting tougher now, although it is slow in catching up. In my state, cruelty to animals is a felony now. That's a new law. We also have 2 dog tracks.
The point is getting the facts out there rather than wishful thinking. Racing does not police itself and weed out the bad apples. The bad apples walk among us and until people quit hiring them and sending them dogs things don't get better.
mountain4greys
15th February 2008 - 08:38 PM
I take it your Anti-racing.
FastRunner
15th February 2008 - 08:52 PM
Actually I love the races! I've been to most of the tracks in the US, visited farms, kennels and have few greyhounds myself. What I don't like is the lack of cooperation between the states, the tracks and the NGA.
ETA: Racing will never leave the US. But it need to do a better job then it is doing now.
mountain4greys
15th February 2008 - 09:00 PM
I agree, but unfortunately it's a slow process. But there's been changes. Look at 15 years ago to today. Things have come a long way, and they need to go a long way still. But when there are people involved, you have some good and some bad. The bad people make it hard for the good people. It really bites.
FastRunner
15th February 2008 - 09:22 PM
I didn't start this thread but aftering joining here I added to it. In the last post you say "15 years" but the people involved in post #1 were indited in 2002 and had charges dropped in 2005. Today they are still in the business and that's a problem that needs to be addressed.
If they were charged with embezzlement they would not be members of almost any professional organization, whether it be the ABA(lawyers), ACAT(accountants) or the NASD(stock brokers) but the NGA takes their annual dues and the are hired and sent dogs. A conviction should not required to say "you're not welcome here".
Would you give me your checkbook if I was charged with fraud? How about sending your kids to my daycare if I was charged with a sex crime? Of course you wouldn't because my behavior would indicate a lack of good judegement to say the least. So why is the NGA reluctant to say the same?
mountain4greys
15th February 2008 - 09:39 PM
That's up to the people down there. My job is to find homes for these wonderful hounds. The hounds come first and foremost for me, as seen in my siggy. I leave the politics up to those people.
Beryl
15th February 2008 - 10:35 PM
| QUOTE (cheryl2 @ Feb 14 2008, 01:21 PM) |
| Any particular reason you're going back 6 years to find news? The guy has been dead for a few years now. |
I agree why are you posting old news?
allforgreys
15th February 2008 - 10:41 PM
We are all in it for the hounds. We need to work hard to get these bad people out and to get better people in a position to do something about it besides saying, it is much better now then in the past.
What you do mountain4greys and other adoption groups is awesome. Keep up the great work.
If it wasn't for people like you and countless others, more greyhounds would never make it to a home.
allforgreys
15th February 2008 - 10:42 PM
QUOTE (Beryl @ Feb 15 2008, 09:35 PM)
| QUOTE (cheryl2 @ Feb 14 2008, 01:21 PM) |
| Any particular reason you're going back 6 years to find news? The guy has been dead for a few years now. |
I agree why are you posting old news?
2005 is not long ago. I agree these people are still working in the biz.
allforgreys
15th February 2008 - 10:51 PM
I want to say that I am not totally ant-racing. I have been to several tracks, I have waged some bets and won but what I don't like is when the dogs don't make it and they don't end up being adopted. That is what I don't like.
I have friends who tell me, "well you can't save them all." I tell them that is none sense.
greydaddy
24th March 2008 - 10:25 PM
| QUOTE (mountain4greys @ Feb 15 2008, 08:39 PM) |
| That's up to the people down there. My job is to find homes for these wonderful hounds. The hounds come first and foremost for me, as seen in my siggy. I leave the politics up to those people. |
I

all that you and others do mountain4greys.