Girl, 9, sues state fair after pet goat was sold and BARBECUED
California girl, 9, sues state fair after her pet goat was sold and BARBECUED after her mom entered it for auction – and cops are sent hundreds of miles to retrieve it when family took it back
- Jessica Long’s family bought Cedar the goat in April 2022 and the animal soon formed an attachment to her nine-year-old daughter
- She’s now lodged a federal civil rights lawsuit against Shasta County and fair
A woman has sued a California county and its district fair after her daughter’s pet goat was sold for $902, slaughtered, and barbecued despite the family wanting to withdraw its entry for auction.
Jessica Long’s family bought Cedar the goat, a seven-month-old white Boer, in April 2022 and the animal soon formed an attachment to her nine-year-old daughter – who fed and cared for it everyday.
However, the family decided to enter Cedar into the Shasta District Fair’s junior livestock auction on June 24, 2022 – where the animals are sold off to be used as meat.
But long before the auction started, the Long family changed their minds and wanted to take Cedar off the ticket. The fair denied the request and sold it – so the mom brazenly stole the goat back before it was given to the buyer.
What followed was a wild goat chase – sending officers hundreds of miles across the county to retrieve the goat via a search warrant, before handing it to individuals who are believed to have killed Cedar and roasted him on a barbecue for their guests.
Cedar pictured with his owner, Jessica Long’s nine-year-old daughter
Cedar, described as a beloved white goat with beautiful chocolate-colored markings, was sold at the Shasta District Fair for $902 to a representative of state Senator Brian Dahle
The federal civil rights lawsuit lodged by the Long family, seen by the Sacramento Bee, is now demanding actual, general and punitive damages. It wants to establish the young girl’s ‘free expression or viewpoint with respect to livestock in future livestock activities.’
Cedar, described as a beloved white goat with beautiful chocolate-colored markings, was sold at the Shasta District Fair for $902 to a representative of state Senator Brian Dahle.
The mother, after seeing her daughter sob by the goat’s pen at the fair, decided to steal back the animal at the last minute and ‘deal with the consequences later.’
In an email to the Shasta District Fair on June 27, Long wrote: ‘It was heartbreaking. The barn was mostly empty and at the last minute I decided to break the rules and take the goat that night and deal with the consequences later.
‘I knew when I took it that my next steps were to make it right with the buyer and the fairgrounds. I will pay you back for the goat and any other expenses I caused. I would like to ask for your support in finding a solution.’
Melanie Silva, Shasta District Fair Chief Executive Officer, responded to her email and demanded that she returned the goat immediately.
Cedar, described as a beloved white goat with beautiful chocolate-colored markings, was sold at the Shasta District Fair for $902 to a representative of state Senator Brian Dahle
She wrote: ‘Making an exception for you will only teach out youth that they do not have to abide by the rules that are set up for all participants. Unfortunately, this is out of my hands. You will need to bring the goat back to the Shasta District Fair immediately.’
Shortly after, the organizer of the barbecue contacted her lawyers over the theft of the animal – and the livestock manager of the fair, B.J. Mcfarlane, texted Long warning that law enforcements would be brought in if the goat was not returned.
According to the lawsuit, Mcfarlane threatened to have her charged with a felony count of grand theft if she did not return Cedar.
Two weeks after Long’s goat heist, Shasta sheriff’s Detective Jeremy Ashbee filed a search warrant affidavit – in a bid to seek permission to seize the stolen animal.
It’s believed that Cedar was then slaughtered and eaten at the community barbecue, but the details are scant
It’s believed that Cedar was slaughtered and eaten at the community barbecue, but the details are scant
The girl’s mother, after seeing her daughter sob by the goat’s pen at the fair, decided to steal back the animal at the last minute and ‘deal with the consequences later’
Jessica Long’s family bought Cedar the goat, a seven-month-old white Boer, in April 2022 and the animal soon formed an attachment to her nine-year-old daughter – who fed and cared for it everyday
Judge Monique McKee signed one on July 8, permitting officers to ‘utilize breaching equipment to force open doorway(s), entry doors, exit doors, and locked containers in pursuit of their target.’
Cops then raided Bleating Hearts Farm and Sanctuary in Napa – but the goat was not being hidden there.
Instead, Cedar was being kept at an unnamed Sonoma County farm that Long had emailed in a desperate bid to save the animal from slaughter.
Vanessa Shakib, Jessica Long’s lawyer
Two officers then rushed to the other farm, despite having no search warrant for that location, nor a warrant to seize Cedar from there, according to the lawsuit.
They took the goat – and drove more than 200 miles back before delivering it to an unnamed individual at the fair ‘for slaughter/destruction’ – despite the fact that the warrant required them to hold the goat for a court hearing to determine its lawful owner, the lawsuit alleged.
It’s believed that Cedar was then slaughtered and eaten at the community barbecue, but the details are scant.
Vanessa Shakib, Jessica Long’s lawyer, said: ‘At this time we don’t have that specific information and we can only speculate. While it hasn’t been confirmed as a factual matter, we believe the goat Cedar has been killed.
‘Looking at this case, what we see is county and fair officials improperly used their authority and connections to transform a purely civil dispute into a sham criminal matter.’
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