Alberta woman charged with dog hoarding and cruelty nabbed in Manitoba - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 11, 2024, 05:11 AM | Calgary | -1.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Calgary

Alberta woman charged with dog hoarding and cruelty nabbed in Manitoba

April Dawn Irving was believed to be living in Jamaica for a period, but has now been arrested in Manitoba and RCMP want her back in Alberta to face charges.

April Dawn Irving in custody awaiting return to Alberta

April Dawn Irving was arrested Wednesday in Manitoba. She's currently waiting to be returned to Alberta to face charges. (Milk River RCMP/AARCS)

An Alberta woman accused of dog hoarding and animal cruelty, who was believed to be living in Jamaica for a period, has been arrested in Manitoba.

RCMP want her back in Alberta to face charges.

More than 200 dogs were seized from the Milk River, Alta., property of April Dawn Irving, then 55 years old, in 2014.

The seizure was the worst case of neglect an animal rescue society says it has ever seen.

Irving also had more than 80 dogs taken from her property near Foam Lake, Sask., in 2010. That resulted in her being slapped with a 10-year ban on owning more than two dogs a time.

She was convicted under Saskatchewan's Animal Protection Act after she was accused of operating a puppy mill in 2013 and also faced charges in Fort McMurray under Alberta's Animal Protection Act that were later dropped.

Animal welfare workers in Jamaica said Irving was living there in 2017, after failing to show up to court dates in Lethbridge the previous year.

Police say Irving, who at times went by "Carol," was picked up late Wednesday in Manitoba by Stonewall RCMP.

"Irving is currently in custody in Manitoba and is awaiting transport back to Alberta," RCMP spokesperson Paul Manaigre said Friday.

The Alberta Animal Rescue Crew Society (AARCS), which originally helped the SPCA seizeIrving's 201 Milk River dogs, said it looks forward to acourt date.

"We never gave up hope that she would one day stand trial," AARCS wrote in a Facebook post.

"Our hope now is that her day has come and these defenseless animals will finally have the justice they deserve."

With files from Helen Pike, Stefani Langenegger and Stephanie Wiebe