Vermont investigates man living with 70 goats in house
CORINTH, Vt. (AP) - State officials are investigating a man whose goats and
his religious convictions against killing them have collided in a possibly
inhumane and definitely stinky way.
There were three goats on the farm Chris Weathersbee's mother bought seven
years ago. Now there are 300 - including 70 living in his house, much of
which is covered with a mix of goat droppings and hay.
Authorities last month raided the farm in Corinth, about 20 miles southeast
of Montpelier, and seized 44 deemed unhealthy by a veterinarian. State
police and the Central Vermont Humane Society are weighing whether to pursue
animal cruelty or neglect charges.
"He has more goats than he can care for," said Sherry LeMay, the humane
society's director of operations.
Weathersbee, 63, admits he cannot afford to give the herd sufficient care,
but he refuses to get rid of the animals. He said his Buddhist religious
views prohibit him from slaughtering any of the goats.
"Getting rid of goats means killing them," he said.
Weathersbee said he brought dozens of invalid goats and nursing mothers with
babies inside his home last December because of cold temperatures.
His only income is from monthly disability checks, which, he said, he spends
mostly on hay at a cost of $150 a day in the winter. He's in debt $15,000 to
his neighbors for hay.
Weathersbee said he wants time to find a group that does not believe in
slaughtering animals to take the 30-acre farm and house. In exchange, he
wants to remain with the goats, living in the barns and fields.



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