Crow roundup of horses smooth operation
By JAN FALSTAD Of The Gazette Staff The Billings Gazette | Posted: Monday, March 21, 2011 5:00 pm | (40) Comments
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LARRY MAYER/Gazette Staff
A large band of horses formerly owned by James Leachman of Billiings is driven toward holding pens where the Bureau of Indian Affairs and the Crow Tribe will identify them and sell them. The 700 horses have been trespassing on tribal lands and private ranches and were impounded by the BIA.
In a colorful roundup on Monday morning, about 50 Crow horsemen spent the day gathering about 700 horses in bands of 80 to 200 and driving them through a gap in the rimrocks toward their last home before they are sold.
The mares and colts trotted, galloped, snorted and whinnied, but willingly followed the lead rider into the wooden pens.
Jay Stovall, 71, who grew up on this land and now owns the former Leachman Cattle Co. ranch 16 miles east of Billings, said the sight was thrilling.
"I've never seen these many horses running out here. This is something to see," he said. "What's important is that the Crow Tribe is handling those horses and doing a wonderful job of it."
Crow Tribal Vice Chairman Calvin Jefferson said everything went smoothly.
"They will be here for about another five days, leaving it for the owner to come and stake claim, give him a chance to redeem them," he said.
Edward Parisian, regional director of the Rocky Mountain region of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, said James Leachman of Billings will legally have five days to redeem his horses, if he can pay the costs associated with their care and roundup and the damage that they have caused to the rangeland.
Last year during his bankruptcy hearing, Leachman said he was broke.
With the help of two months of eating 150 tons of donated hay, the horses came back from the brink of starvation last winter.
Leachman has pleaded not guilty to 14 misdemeanor counts of animal cruelty, carrying a maximum penalty of seven years and $7,000 in fines. His jury trial is scheduled for June 3.
Beginning Thursday, the horses will be sorted by age and gender, identified and have temporary neck bands attached.
The Leachman leg bands, some of them now too tight, will be cut off and their brands inspected.
The horses have been roaming on the Home Place Ranch 16 miles east of Billings, tribal lands and neighboring ranches for several years.
The BIA impounded the horses in early March after serving Leachman with a legal notice that his horses were trespassing on tribal lands and neighboring ranches. In late December, Shepherd veterinarian Jeff Peila first warned that hundreds of the horses trapped in one pasture with no grass were on the verge of mass starvation.
Seven horses were found near death, and four were shot on the recommendation of Peila.
With a smile on his face on Monday morning, the veterinarian said there was only one brown mare so far who needed his help and was limping, apparently with a hoof abscess.
"But there would have been a third of them dead and the rest wouldn't have been strong enough to sell if they hadn't been fed," he said.
The Northern International Livestock Exposition in Billings collected about 500 tons of donated hay and more than $55,000 in cash donations and has been feeding the horses for two months with the help of the Yellowstone County Sheriff's Office.
The BIA is paying the tribe $45,000 to round up the horses and feed them until a March 31 sale that could be moved to April 2 and 3.
Memories of the roundup will stay with Jason Shigley, who was shooting video for the Crow Tribe to document the day.
"This is a historic event," he said. "The Crow people are horse people. Everything that has to do with the horse is in our makeup."