Patricia Kirker owns a ranch just
outside Crandon, Wisconsin she calls, Apache Pride. Her father, an Apache, taught her the significance of the wolf and horse in Native
American culture.
She inherited his love for the creatures that are so
important to her heritage and wanted to share that appreciation with others. She started Apache Pride with the intent to share her
love of her Native American Culture and teach the significance the wolf and
horse have in the history of the Apache people.
She was often invited to
speak to school children about the animals and brought a wolf with her to some
of these presentations. She developed and conducted camps and seminars about
the Apache culture for interested people and groups. The horses and wolves were always a part of
those experiences. They were a significant part of Native American history, and they are a part of our
present. Patricia wants to make sure
they are a part of our future.
Wolf-hybrids bring an opportunity for people to interact more closely
with animals that are representative of the majesty of their wild
relative.
Patricia selectively breeds
them for their ability to form functional relationships with people and to
participate in her educational seminars.
Some of her hybrids remain on the ranch where she uses them to teach
participants in her programs about the wolf.
Mushers seek her hybrids as sled dogs,
an area police departments purchased her dogs
and use them in police work. Some
are in homes where they are guardian animals and family pets. Patricia trains them in ground work and then sends them to specialty trainers for finishing training in the ultimate work they
will do. Others remain on the ranch for
breeding and are there for visitors to interact with and admire.
Patricia
had her first inkling that there was a problem at Apache Pride in 2013. After short absences
from the ranch, she would return to find animals loose or missing. At first, she thought that they somehow managed
to get loose, or someone at the ranch accidentally
left a gate or fence open. The
reality of what was happening, however, became clear sometime last year.
Patricia
knew her idyllic lifestyle was in jeopardy when one
winter day she heard the sound of gunshot close to her home. She looked
out her kitchen window just in time to see a young white puppy tumble down a
small hill leaving a trail of blood in the snow. She rushed outside to the sounds of the
mother’s howls to find a lifeless puppy;
a bullet wound piercing her little body.
She called the sheriff and an officer came to the ranch and took a report. To date, no one has been charged with the
crime.
The carnage didn’t stop with the white puppy. When a Paint mare didn’t come back to the barn, Patricia whet to the field to
investigate. She found her mare with a devastating
injury to her hoof. Patricia took the
mare to the University of Wisconsin Veterinary School for treatment where
veterinarians removed a 30 caliber bullet
from the horse’s hoof.
Sadly the injury
was too severe, and Patricia followed the recommendations of the veterinarians and had the
mare euthanized. The evidence, including veterinary records
and the bullet recovered from the mare’s hoof, was sent to the County Sheriff’s
department. It appeared as if someone stood directly next to the mare and shot
into her hoof. This felony crime on
Apache Pride also remains unsolved but left Patricia with a growing realization that someone was targeting her and Apache Pride.
Patricia increased her vigilance and when she discovered a group of
local people dressed in hunting gear carrying
weapons one her property, she told them to leave. Among those, in the group was
a neighbor and his friend, a local law enforcement officer.
One of them was carrying a 30 gauge rifle. Patricia knew one of the people in the
hunting party had connections to individuals involved in animal control and
wondered if their presence on the
property had any connection to a rash of recent anonymous complaints concerning
her animals.
Local authorities were
receiving information that Patricia was neglecting her animals. She opened her ranch to inspections
by authority. None of the inspections conducted as a result of
complaints uncovered evidence of neglect.
All of her animals were healthy and received proper care. Her local veterinary attested to the medical
care her animals received from him.
As the citations for permitting animals to run at large began to mount,
Patricia and her family started to find destroyed and damaged fencing around on
the property.
Gates that were closed and latched when
Patricia would leave the ranch were open when she returned. Locks on paddock gates were cut and cables
attached to the collars of some of the adult dogs were severed with bolt cutters.
One of her adult male hybrids was
captured on a neighbor’s farm with a brand new cable attached to his
collar that was cut clean. The other
half of the cable, still attached to the tie at the kennel, also showed a clean
cut that could only have been made with a
cutting tool.
Police discovered an old
horse, in his late twenties, outside the pasture with his head hanging over the
fence. In the police report obtained
during discovery stated that the officer saw the horse gazing at the other horses still in the pasture. The pasture
fencing and gates were secure. The only way that old horse could have gotten
out was if someone led it out of the pasture and
to the location where the saw him. He was too old to jump the fence, and it was unlikely he would have
voluntarily left the safety of his herd.
Patricia received over 15 citations in the months between April 2013 and
July 2015 including ones for the horse trying to get back to his herd and the
dog with the severed and attached cable.
Patricia would find the doors to outbuildings damaged and forced open and equipment stolen. She returned after a trip to town to find her
corral open, the lock on gate latch obviously cut with a bolt cutter.
The horses were gone and tire tracks left in the dirt in the corral evidenced the terror her horses faced by
people chasing them in vehicles. Was it
a group of teenagers out doing mischief?
Was it a neighbor who didn’t like her culture or animals?
Was it more
sinister and involved someone in authority? Was it related to her demand those
hunters leave her property? It is hard to say, but she felt helpless to stop
the onslaught.
After Patricia hired an attorney and successfully challenged the most
recent of her citations, things quieted down for a short time.
That ended last
month with the discovery of a dead puppy with a severe injury to its head.
It appeared
someone hit it in the head with a hammer.
A pregnant mare was found in the pasture with a twenty-two shot
through the chest. The mare and foal survived but Just a few days ago, another puppy was found dead with a bashed
in skull.
Whoever was killing her dogs and horses wanted to leave a message. Who could do such a thing? There is a
dangerous person on the loose in Forest County, Wisconsin; someone who is
depraved enough to bash a defenseless puppy in the head and shoot a pregnant
mare.
Patricia is offering a $2,000.00 reward for
information leading to the arrest and conviction of those responsible for the
damage to her property and injury to and death of her animals.
People with information about these crimes can contact the law offices
of Animal Legal Resources, LLC at 715-544-6448.
Patricia will seek to have the State Attorney General take over the
investigation of these crimes.
Yes for sure the above 2 comments are the truth!!! Nothing in this post by Patricia Kirker are true!!! She and she alone is responsible for the death of many of her horses and dogs by pure neglect and death by her own hand!! Thank God all the suffering she has put upon these poor animals has stopped as of TODAY!!!!! Thank you to the ASPCA for taking these animals away from this death and starvation "ranch"!!!
ReplyDeleteAs a family member I and the rest will attest she nor her father has any native blood! None of this is true! She i's and always has been a drug addict! Doctor shops with tax payers money! The pig stye she has lived in as well as her animals is shameful and she killed that pup in her story,many animals she bought from a closed petting zoo she starved to death as well.zhe has been doing thsee things for a very long time
ReplyDeleteBetty?
ReplyDeleteOMG! I live right by this dilapidated house. Ranch? Seriously! This place is not a ranch. Her animals were abused. I drive by her house daily to see dogs roaming loose everywhere. Her dogs have been in my yard dozens of times looking for food and water. Horses looked famished as well. Whoever wrote this blog is a liar. This woman abused these animals for years now. She's also involved in drug dealing and sits in jail as we speak. What a Bullshit blog! Fake story! Whoever wrote this should be ashamed!!!!!!!
ReplyDeleteYes this is bullshit not one word is true.
ReplyDeleteThose poor dog's have lived through hell and there owner was the devil herself they suffered from the day they where horn to the day they died never getting the love they deserved living in fear fighting and killing each other just to survive.
I Will never forget seeing the wild dogs killing and eating the puppy's of the dog's that where chained up and the few kindharted dog's that tryed to protect the puppy's get tore up mamed and mauled covered in blood as they were hellpless to save those poor dog's that where cursed to be borne on her land.
Yes I agree I all so see such horrible stuff happen there she is the devil her self no other way to say the abuse them animal went throw ashamed and yes thank God there gone she should been strung to a tree and let starve she don't deserve to be in jail it to good for her all I have to say is she finally met her waterlue and it stopped her I'm her tracks thank God the animals are saved by the aspca thank you for saving them
ReplyDelete