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  • Updated
    20
    Feb
    2013
    9:27am, EST

    New Zealand cops find hatchback full of shackled sheep

    Cameron Spencer / Getty Images, file

    "A lot of sheep get poached, especially during lambing season," Wellington police spokesman Guy Callahan said. "But something like this is not regular."

    By John Newland, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Four men, 10 sheep and one very small car.  It’s not the start of a joke. It’s what police in New Zealand found Wednesday when a routine patrol turned decidedly woolly.

    An officer was driving along about 1 a.m. local time Wednesday in Havelock North when he noticed something odd about a 1994 Ford Laser hatchback as it labored along under the power of its 1.3-liter engine, Wellington police spokesman Guy Callahan said.

    “He would have done a double take and said, ‘What the hell?’” Callahan said. “The officer basically pulled the vehicle over and discovered it was full up with men and sheep. … It’s quite a small vehicle.”

    The 10 hog-tied sheep had allegedly just been stolen from a farm. Three of the men were charged with theft of stock and cruel treatment of an animal.

    The men, all locals, weren’t teenagers pulling a prank. Their ages were 35, 22 and 21, Callahan said, adding that stolen sheep are generally slaughtered and eaten.

    He noted that the meat is expensive, even in New Zealand, which is known for its lamb production.

     “A lot of sheep get poached, especially during lambing season,” he said. “But something like this is not regular.”

    The sheep found in the car were returned unharmed, though presumably shaken, Callahan said, adding that he thought the cruelty charge was particularly appropriate, given the hog-tying and the weather.

    “It’s bloody hot here because it’s in the middle of summer,” he said. “So 10 wool sheep and four men -- it’s, well … it’s hot.”

    Local media reported that 11 sheep were stolen, which would make the logistics and the car ride even harder to fathom. But Callahan said he was confident the number was 10.

    “Maybe one of the men was mistaken for a sheep,” he said.

    This story was originally published on Wed Feb 20, 2013 7:50 AM EST

    136 comments

    The accused have escaped. They are now on the lamb....

    Show more
    Explore related topics: new-zealand, sheep, featured, updated, four-men, sheep-theft, 10-sheep, one-car
  • 2
    Feb
    2012
    7:12pm, EST

    'King of the farm': Sheep-herding rabbit gains fame

    Watch on YouTube
    By msnbc.com staff

    A rabbit that rounds up sheep on a small farm in northern Sweden is rapidly gaining a following on the Internet, with more than 650,00 views in the past week on YouTube.

    Even the owners are a little perplexed by the herding skills of the self-taught bunny, which may have learned its techniques by watching its border collie friends.


    "He learnt these skills himself, we had nothing to do with it," Greta Vigren, the rabbit's owner told The Local, an English language website based in Sweden.

    "He surely has seen the dogs doing it before, but really, Champis thinks he is the king of the farm, and that he owns the sheep."

    The video, "Champis - the herding rabbit" in English, was filmed at the farm by a friend of the owners, Dan Westman, a sheepdog breeder who also writes a blog.

    Westman has no idea why the video of the rabbit is so popular. "Maybe you can tell me why?" he asked The Local.

     

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    25 comments

    What an adorable way to start the day!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: sweden, sheep, rabbit, herding
  • 19
    Jan
    2012
    6:35pm, EST

    Army investigates video of sheep beating in Afghanistan

    By msnbc.com staff

    Army officials are investigating a graphic video of a sheep being beaten with a baseball bat by what appears to be U.S. service members in Afghanistan, The Army Times reported Thursday.

    The report comes a week after another inflammatory video surfaced on the Internet that purports to depict four U.S. Marines urinating on the corpses of Taliban fighters — a clip that both Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai condemned as deplorable. An investigation is ongoing.


    In the 30-second video, a sheep with horns is dragged into a large room and is clubbed 10 times with a metal bat by a man in dark civilian clothes amid laughter and cheering. One person is seen in the background jumping up and down. No attempts are made to stop the beating.

    According to The Army Times, military commanders in Afghanistan have condemned the incident, and an Army criminal investigation has been launched. The video reportedly first surfaced in November, but it's unclear when the incident occurred.

    "We are aware of a Live Leak video depicting the killing of a sheep," spokesman for the International Security Assistance Force told The Army Times in an email. "The actions of those involved are not condoned or supported in any way. We are currently assessing the situation to determine more information."

    PETA posted the video on its website and contacted Army officials, prompting an investigation. 

    "PETA did what it always does when someone blows the whistle on these incidents of gratuitous cruelty: We wrote to Secretary of the Army John McHugh and then, when no answer was forthcoming, to other high-ranking officers, including Chief of Public Affairs General Stephen Lanza and Commanding General of the U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Command David E. Quantock," the animal welfare agency stated on its website.  

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    102 comments

    If they are this cruel to a sheep, I can imagine what they will be like to other helpless victums, children and animals. A sadist regardles of the uniform.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: army, afghanistan, beating, video, peta, sheep

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