Friday, May 13, 2022

Lee County sheriff gains ownership of Sheeba, the mixed-breed female bulldog seen abused on video

 


Lee County sheriff gains ownership of Sheeba, the mixed-breed female bulldog seen abused on video 


Michael Braun
Fort Myers News-Press

Published May 13, 2022 



Chiddister remains in Lee County Jail on $25,000 bond and awaits a May 23 arraignment on felony animal abuse charges related to the case.

Howse, with Chiddister at the time of the accused beating and said the dog was hers, was also named in the civil motion but not charged in the abuse.

During Thursday's hearing, Chiddister was seated at the defendant's table, in restraints, and for the first 10 minutes calmly observed proceedings. 

But when Gill gave him an opportunity to ask questions of Sheriff's Office deputy Adnan Selimovic, Chiddister became agitated, started shaking, stood and began talking loudly that he couldn't handle the hearing, was having a panic attack and wanted to be removed.

"I can't do this, I can't do this," Chiddister said, flailing his arms and crumpling papers. "I'm going to have an anxiety attack. Get me outta here, please get me outta here."

Ownership of Sheeba, an allegedly abused dog previously owned by Marcus Lynn Chiddister, 22,  above being re oved from the courtroom after an outburst, and his girlfriend, Kiara Howse, 23, was given to Lee County Sheriff Carmine Marceno after a civil hearing Thursday.

Gill ordered a 10-minute recess and then looked other avenues for the hearing, such as a larger courtroom or providing the hearing via Zoom.

The Zoom option was selected and the hearing continued. 

However, after another 10-15 minutes of testimony with Chiddister in another room watching and commenting via Zoom on an iPad, he began shouting and cursing and threw the iPad and his Zoom screen went black.

The judge again called a recess.

When the hearing resumed it was announced Chiddister had been returned to a holding area and would no longer be involved in the hearing. His girlfriend, Howse, was allowed to remain at the defendant's table and participate.

Ownership of Sheeba, an allegedly abused dog previously owned by Marcus Lynn Chiddister, 22,  at left on computer screen, and his girlfriend, Kiara Howse, 23, was given to Lee County Sheriff Carmine Marceno after a civil hearing marked by several outbursts by Chiddister.

During the remainder of the hearing Gill had to instruct Howse on proper courtroom procedure, the difference between questioning and testimony as well as admonishing her to not make statements.

Howse refuted almost everything contained in a Sheriff's Office report on the incident as well as testimony by two deputies and a veterinarian who examined Sheeba.

She said she did not identify Chiddister as the person who beat Sheeba, that the injuries described on the animal were from a previous owner whom she said had shot the dog in the head, and that she and Chiddister never abused the animal.

Marcus Chiddister, 22, of Fort Myers, is facing felony animal abuse charges in the alleged March 29 beating of a dog at a Fort Myers gas station. The female bulldog-mixed-breed canine involved, Sheeba, is now the focus of an ownership lawsuit filed Tuesday by Lee County Sheriff Carmine Marceno. A hearing on that ownership Tuesday was continued until May 12.

Furthermore, Howse said that when she was questioned about the person in a video showing the dog being abused she did not identify that person as Chiddister.

"I don't know, that doesn't look like Marcus to me," she said she told deputies at first, adding that her statement was "I did not see any dreads, and I did not see any tattoos."

About the car being hers Howse said: "I'm at that RaceTrac every day. I would not be surprise if my car was in a video."

A veterinary exam of the animal after the incident found multiple injuries including broken teeth, hemorrhaging and swelling of the eyes, and bruises around the neck caused by blunt force trauma, not accidental but consistent with unnecessary suffering and animal cruelty, a Sheriff's Office report indicated.

However, Howse testified that the bruises were from a "medallion" on a leash the dog wore and hemorrhaging of the eyes was from the alleged earlier gunshot wound.

Chiddister's mother, Joann Chiddister, and a trainer, Jenna Horton, also testified and provided documents saying the dog was not abused, and that Marcus Chiddister suffered from and took medications for PTSD.

Records of that evidence could not be found in filings to the clerk of court that were to be made before a court-imposed deadline Tuesday, despite Joann Chiddister and Howse claiming they were.

Joann Chiddister could not produce a receipt for the evidence, but Gill allowed the information to be examined by Sheriff's Office lawyers who had objected to the information being used.

Gill ruled on the motion nearly two-hours after the hearing began. Howse, leaving the courtroom after the hearing commented "what a joke."

A tipster identified Chiddister after a video taken on March 29 appeared to show a male punching and/or beating a dog in the backseat of a gold or tan Chrysler 200. 

Investigators from the Sheriff's Office Animal Cruelty Task Force initially learned of the incident via a private Facebook group.

Marceno said he was glad the ownership question had been settled and advised there had been no mention of Sheeba being shot previously.

"First I heard about it," he said. 

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