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Also read the update on this story
Vickie Rene
Kittles, also known as Susan Dietrich, was
convicted on 42 counts of Animal Neglect in
Astoria, Oregon in February 1995 after five weeks
of trial, months of delay, and years of suffering
for the animals she claimed to love. Kittles has a
history of such incidents and is likely to begin
the same destructive cycle all over again after she
completes her 7-month sentence in Oregon.
Josh Marquis,
District Attorney for Clatsop County and the
Prosecutor in charge of Kittles' case tells the
story below.
The case concluded what some called the world's longest dental appointment without anesthisia. Kittles was able to drag the case out almost two years through endless manipulation of people and the legal system. She was afforded nine different court-appointed lawyers - none of whom met with her satisfaction, and went through six judges. The judge who tried the case was so traumatized that he refuses to have anything further to do with the case or Vickie Kittles. Kittles, who has a long
criminal record of assaultive conduct dating back to the
late 60s, surfaced most publically in Broward County Florida
in the early 1980s when she was charged with various crimes
after neighbors complained about the scores of dogs and two
horses she kept in her mother's suburban house. Kittles
claimed then - and now - that she is the victim of a massive
government conspiracy, somehow tied to the Drug Enforcement
Administration, that sought to poison her and "her" dogs.
From Mississippi she fled
to Colorado where she once again claimed persecution. She
left a wake of well-meaning vets with unpaid bills and
sponsors whom she turned on when they failed to give her
everything she wanted. From Colorado in the late 80s she
travelled to rural Washington where she and "her" digs were
delivered by a semi-truck. True to form, she was successful
in conning some wealthy backers to send her $15,000 which
she used to buy a school bus that became her home, and the
prison for over 100 dogs. She once again wrung every bit of
kindness - and money - out of her would-be benefactor before
accusing her too of being involved in a plot.
The scene on board the bus was worse - 115 dogs, four cats, and two roosters crammed into a bus caked with urine and feces, stinking so bad that officers used gas masks to go inside. Kittles boasted at trial that she had not let any of the dogs off the bus for weeks to prevent them from getting fleas. The dogs were, however, suffering from almost every other parasite, including hookworm, whipworm, and in at least 16 cases, deadly heartworm. After Kittles was arrested she threatened to sue anyone who touched "her" dogs. Despite her claims of love for the dogs she visted them only once and actually convinced a judge to FORBID the state from getting medical treatment for any of the dogs. When I took office in the
spring of 1994 Kittles was merrily holding the whole court
system hostage, alternately ranting and raving, and filing
literally hunndreds of self-styled legal motions. Eventually
we got the dogs treated for heartworm, and despite Kittles
best efforts to delay the trial, were scheduled to finally
go to court on August 2, 1994. Despite strong objections
from my office the judge had permitted Kittles to live out
of state - just across the river, and when the trial date
came, Kittles refused to show up, requiring an extradition
fight which took 3 months just to get her back to Oregon.
The case drew huge attention from regional media who sent satellite TV trucks to cover the more spectacular parts of the bizzare trial. Kittles is an animal collector, a title she now proudly wears despite the testimony of Humane Society of the United States Vice-President Randy Lockwood that animal collectors are much like drug addicts in their pathology, and much more interested in themselves than "their" animals. She is now serving a seven-month jail sentence which also forbids her from owning or even being around animals. She is likely to leave Oregon when released and will probably start collecting somewhere else in the United States. As D.A. I usually handle murder cases, and Kittles is in my opinion one of the most dangerous, evil people I have ever encountered. She has enough psychosis to be exasperating, and enough cunning to bend the system to her will. Like any really nasty virus, she should be confronted and stopped before she can ruin more lives - of people and dogs. |