A Litigation Article used with permission from All-Creatures.org


Ryder the carriage horse collapsed and was beaten in NYC in the summer of 2022. Tamara Bedić reports that the horse carriage driver who abused Ryder is now scheduled to face a criminal trial.


Justice for horse Ryder: New York carriage driver faces trial for horse’s abuse and neglect
From Tamara Bedić, Esq., TheAnimalReader.com
February 2025

gavel
Photo from Canva

Update: The trial is postponed to March 18th. New Yorkers continue to push for a bill to ban all horse-drawn carriages.

Thirty months after whipping his fallen carriage horse Ryder in New York, a 56-year-old horse carriage driver faces a criminal trial and possible jail time. The trial is scheduled for Monday.

It will be on Assistant District Attorney Sophie Robart to convince 12 New York jurors that the defendant overdrove his dark brown Standardbred and failed to provide proper nourishment.

Central Park temperature hovered around 31°C on August 10, 2022. The humidity, lack of shade and black asphalt created a heat index of around 34°C. Ryder had been pulling a 450-kilogram carriage filled with tourists since 9:30 AM.

By 5:00 PM, Ryder could not drag the carriage three more kilometers to the West Side Livery Stable. He collapsed in New York’s rush hour traffic.

This video of the defendant screaming, “Get up, get up!” and hitting and smacking the horse as he lay on hot, black asphalt went viral.

[Please see original article for video.]

Ryder was older than claimed

Although the defendant told arriving police that Ryder was 13 years old, he was twice that age.

“All Standardbreds have a freeze brand on the right side of their neck,” said Standardbred owner and trainer Michael Petrelli. “Their true identity can be obtained in seconds.”

Typing Ryder’s brand (R5932) into USTrotting.com reveals that the elderly NYC carriage horse had once raced as Hi Ho Cheery O.

Petrelli believes Ryder spent the next 20 years pulling an Amish plow before finally being sold to McKeever as a “junk horse” at 26. That’s 80 to 90 in human years.

New York regulations do not allow horses to pull a carriage past the age of 26.

Key evidence the jury won’t hear

The defendant drove horses for over 20 years. “He knew (Ryder) was too old for the carriage industry when he purchased the animal in May,” the defendant’s former friend, Ken Frydman, told the New York Post. “He bought the horse on the cheap and figured he’d squeeze what he could out of it.”

Such out-of-court statements are generally forbidden in court as “hearsay.” The jury will not hear them.

The jury will also not hear that the defendant’s brother was fined $1,000 for falsifying Ryder’s age on NYC’s carriage horse license application.

The defense attorney will object to the fine being mentioned or knowledge of Ryder’s actual age being blamed on the defendant.

Another thing the jury won’t hear mentioned is a lawsuit former carriage horse driver Aylan Kaya initiated against the defendant. According to Mr. Kaya’s complaint, “McKeever was illegally driving under Mr. Kaya’s license plate” when Ryder collapsed.

Might the jury find the defendant guilty anyway? Edita Birnkrant of NYCLASS hopes so. She’s sought a ban on horse-drawn carriages since 2008.

“A guilty verdict would validate what NYCLASS and many others have said since (ASPCA Founder) Henry Bergh: these horses are victims of criminal abuse. Ryder is just one example. There are 200 Ryders. A guilty verdict would convict not just one owner but the whole industry.”


More articles on The Animal Reader.


Posted on All-Creatures: March 3, 2025
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