• You must be logged in to see or use the Shoutbox. Besides, if you haven't registered, you really should. It's quick and it will make your life a little better. Trust me. So just register and make yourself at home with like-minded individuals who share either your morbid curiousity or sense of gallows humor.
Murdering children gets you less time too.

You know what i think led to the extravagant sentencing here, Pennsylvania. Ive spent some time in that miserable state, and it honestly is often VERY difficult to tell the difference between the women and the livestock. I can understand how people in such a state would end up having such a disproportionate level of care and concern for horses and really any farm animal.
 
A court decided last Thursday that three farmers must continue serving their decades-long prison sentences after reportedly having sex with horses, goats, dogs, and a cow. Matthew Brubaker, 32, Marc Measnikoff, 36, and Terry Wallace, 42, were convicted after engaging in bestiality and recruiting a teenage boy to help them film and participate in their depraved acts, Penn Live reported. Investigators revealed how all three men lived in rundown trailers on a farm near Muson, where they reportedly had sex with their livestock for four to five years. The teenager, who cannot be named for legal reasons, told detectives that he was tasked with retrieving animals and dropping them into a custom chute the men had designed to have sex with them. The teenager also revealed that the trio lured him into their farm by soliciting help in caring for livestock, but later ordered him to partake in the sex abuse.

The boy would eventually report the abuse to the cops, who busted up the ring in 2018. Authorities immediately shut down the farmers' sick operation and took the teen into protective custody. The Pennsylvania Superior Court panel -- in an opinion presented by President Judge Emeritus John Bender -- upheld the 20-41-year prison sentences for Brubaker, Measnikoff, and Wallace at a hearing on Thursday. According to the report, the trio argued that their sentences were too harsh -- insisting that Judge Paul Cherry, who originally sentenced them to jail, did not consider their rehabilitation needs but solely focused on the nature of the crimes and the teen's involvement.

The trio had pleaded guilty to charges of "corruption of minors, 730 counts of sexual intercourse with animals, and 730 counts of cruelty to animals" in Clearfield County court. In his verdict, Cherry had explained that the long sentences were to allow Meansikoff "adequate time to work on his mental health through treatment and time to refrain from said acts."
 
Back
Top