Sled dog killer avoids jail sentence - Action News
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British Columbia

Sled dog killer avoids jail sentence

The man convicted in connection with the slaughter of 56 sled dogs after the 2010 Olympics in Vancouver has been handed a sentence of three years' probation with no jail time, plus a $1,500 fine.

Man gets probation for slaughter of 56 sled dogs in wake of 2010 Olympics

Sled dog sentencing

12 years ago
Duration 2:06
The Crown recommends the man charged with slaughtering sled dogs not serve jail time

The man convictedin connection with theslaughter of 56 sled dogs after the 2010 Olympics in Vancouver has been handed a sentence ofthreeyears' probation with no jail time, plusa $1,500fine.

The sentence was deliveredThursday in a North Vancouver courtroomagainstformer dog handler Robert Fawcett.

Sled dogs rest at a kennel operated by Outdoor Adventures near Whistler, B.C., on Feb. 5, 2011. Dozens of dogs were put down after the 2010 Olympics but it was only discovered months later. (Darryl Dyck/Canadian Press)

The 56 dogs weredisinterredfrom a mass grave near Whistler by the B.C. SPCA afterdetails of the killings came to light in January 2011.

Fawcett admitted to slaughtering the sled dogsand burying them in a pit on his property, claiming he had no other option when the sled dog industry collapsed following the Olympics.

He faced a maximum penalty of five years in prison and $75,000 in fines after pleading guilty to causing unnecessary pain and suffering to nine of the animals.

The dogs at the Whistler-based company were killed shortly after the Olympics ended, but the slaughter wasn't detected until nearly a year laterwhen documents surfaced showing Fawcett had filed a WorkSafeBC claim for post-traumatic stress.

Workers dug up a mass grave of sled dogs near Whistler, B.C., in May 2011. (CBC)

After the information leaked out about the cull, Fawcett and the company that bought his business, Outdoor Adventures, issued a statement in February 2011 that many of the dogs were old and sick, and efforts to have them adopted were unsuccessful.

The company said no instructions were provided to Fawcett on how to kill the animals, but that he was known to have put down dogs humanely on previous occasions.

With files from The Canadian Press