Most Popular
-
For women in Iraq, the terrorist could be the guy working beside you
-
Why did Judge Linda Teodosio fire a model detention officer?
-
How do you pass No Child Left Behind . . . when you dont speak English?
-
It took one drunken punch outside a Lakewood bar to end Matt Hockeys life
-
The Kickdrums may be hip-hops next big beatmakers. And they work out of a closet in Avon
-
Why did Judge Linda Teodosio fire a model detention officer? (8)
-
It took one drunken punch outside a Lakewood bar to end Matt Hockeys life (4)
-
Capsule reviews of current area theater presentations. (3)
-
Education at Its Worst (83)
Confessions of a White Hat cubicle farmer
-
Poisoned by Purina: The case of the alpaca massacre (3)
-
For women in Iraq, the terrorist could be the guy working beside you
-
Why did Judge Linda Teodosio fire a model detention officer?
-
How do you pass No Child Left Behind . . . when you dont speak English?
-
It took one drunken punch outside a Lakewood bar to end Matt Hockeys life
-
The Kickdrums may be hip-hops next big beatmakers. And they work out of a closet in Avon
-
Scott Wolstein tries to skimp on worker pay in Flats development
01:34PM 05/08/08 -
Slide Show: The Black Keys at the Beachland Tavern
10:54AM 05/08/08 -
Last Night in Cleveland: The Black Keys
09:32AM 05/08/08 -
Restaurant of the Weekend: Trip out at Tommy’s on Mother’s Day
08:45AM 05/08/08 -
Cavs-Celtics: You can only hope to contain Boston's go-to extra-terrestrial
07:45AM 05/08/08
What we are writing about
- alt-country
- alt-rock
- Blame the (blank)!
- blues
- Cleveland art
- Cleveland dining hotspots
- Cleveland theater
- country
- Dennis Kucinich
- great documentaries
- great video games
- hip-hop
- hot venues
- indie-rock
- indie pop
- indie rock
- jazz
- legal eagles
- metal
- murder & mayhem
- must-see movies
- political clap-trap
- pop
- punk
- R&B
- read your music
- rock
- singer-songwriter
- sporting life
- Wii
Recent Articles By Denise Grollmus
-
The Lottery League: Where lots of Pabst and idealism have turned the Cleveland music scene on its head
-
Justice Maureen OConnor says campaign money doesnt affect her
-
Cash Machine
A Virginia company encounters the horrors of Ohio courts, where the "for sale" signs never come down.
-
Judge Nasty
A renegade reformer lets power go to his head.
-
Jesus for Sale
Meet the real Rex Humbard, the father of televised religious fraud.
National Features
-
The Pitch
We (Heart) Matt
The Shawnee Mission East class of '08 loves its gay homecoming king.
By Jen Chen -
Broward-Palm Beach New Times
Things That Go Bump on the Flight
Something went horribly wrong on American Airlines Flight 48--and we've got the pictures to prove it.
By Ed Newton -
Seattle Weekly
Being Gary Busey
Everybody thinks Jeff Swanson is somebody famous. And he does nothing to dissuade them of the notion.
By Aimee Curl
Magical Farms sits on 1,000 acres in Litchfield, a place so quiet you can hear the wind smack against the branches of naked trees far off on the horizon.
The googly eyes of 1,600 alpacas peer curiously from a maze of pens, where mothers feed their young and mammoth males with names like Powder Keg and Pulitzer anxiously wait to breed. They are mythical-looking creatures, shrouded in clouds of brown, white, and caramel fur that's as warm as wool and as soft as cashmere. These are the Rolls-Royces of livestock, worth anywhere from $20,000 to $1 million apiece.
Owner Jerry Forstner started buying alpacas in 1993 after reading a story describing them as a solid and easy investment. Their valuable fleece is shaved once or twice a year and then sold to textile manufacturers for sweaters, hats, and blankets.
Forstner, who founded Lube Stop and a mini-storage company, already had a giant horse farm. He began importing alpacas from deep within the Andes ranges of Peru. After two years, Forstner fell in love with their serene demeanor. He sold off his horses, bought more land, and hired the former operations manager of the Cleveland Metroparks Zoo, Diane Pekarek, to oversee his farm, now the largest in North America. "They are such shy, curious animals," says Pekarek, as one gently gnaws grass from her hand. "It's so cool to finally gain their trust."
But things weren't always so peaceful and prosperous here.
That hazy morning in 2003 felt as calm as any other. But as the farmhands arrived and extinguished their cigarettes, it was clear that something was terribly wrong.
Across the fields, a dozen alpacas lay dead. More screamed in pain, blood dropping from their eyes, legs collapsing. The final death toll reached 120. Another 300 were left with damaged kidneys and hearts. "It was the worst day of my whole life, and I'm an old fart," Forstner says. "We were carting dead bodies out of the field, one after the other. It was more than most normal people can bear."
Forstner contacted experts at Ohio State, who conducted necropsies. It turned out that the feed they'd been eating, purchased from the Purina Mills plant in Massillon, had been dosed with salinomycin — a chemical used to kill parasites in pigs and chickens, but which is deadly to alpacas.
Forstner called Purina Mills headquarters in Minneapolis to relay the news. He also phoned other alpaca farms across Ohio, but it was too late. Their animals were dying too.
It took Purina Mills almost a week to get back to Forstner. The company sent out its own expert, who analyzed the feed and confirmed OSU's results. "He also agreed that it was the feed that killed [them]," Forstner says. "After that, we never heard from him again."
For the next six months, Forstner tried his best to get the company to compensate him for his ravaged herd. He estimated his losses at $12 million. "I was hoping they'd be good corporate citizens and take responsibility," he says. "I simply wanted them to pay for the animals we lost. But they wouldn't even return our calls." So Forstner sued.
It would prove a costly and painful endeavor — a battle that has become the Michael Clayton of the animal kingdom.
Over the next four years, Purina Mills conducted damage control — or as Forstner describes it, "a major cover-up." (Brian Delgado, spokesman for Purina Mills' parent company, Land O'Lakes, refused comment.)
Since 1894, the company has been one of the nation's largest feed producers, until it split in 2001. Its dog- and cat-food lines were purchased by Nestlé, while its livestock division went to Land O'Lakes.
The company readily admitted to producing tainted feed. But it thought that Forstner was vastly overstating his animals' value. So began a protracted legal war that would take four years to arrive in court. Twenty-four of the dead alpacas were removed from the case on a technicality — they were owned by Forstner's wife; she would have to sue separately.
The trial didn't commence until March 2007. Since Land O'Lakes had already confessed its sins, culpability wasn't the issue. This was a fight over damages.
They painted Forstner as a greedy man trying to exploit the massacre. They pointed to instances where Forstner wanted as much as $325,000 for one alpaca, though he'd purchased it for just $18,000 five years earlier. Land O'Lakes also hired an economist who testified that the average price of Magical Farms' alpacas was around $14,000.
But the value of livestock isn't so easily distilled, says Cindy Berman, spokeswoman for the Alpaca Owners and Breeders Association. Prices are predicated on such intangibles as lineage and breeding potential. "They are like any other livestock — where prize animals can go for thousands, but everyday animals can go for just a couple hundred."
Forstner claimed his alpacas' coveted Peruvian lineages made them priceless. But the jury was unimpressed. It found Land O'Lakes guilty, but awarded Forstner only $1.6 million — not even enough to cover his legal fees. "Part of the problem was the jury's ignorance of the animals' worth," Pekarek says. "To them it was just livestock, just a bunch of animals, like cows."
Forstner has appealed, and he and his wife now await the trial for her animals, which will begin in Medina County this month.
Whatever the outcome, the sense of injustice within Pekarek won't subside anytime soon. "To watch them die the way they did — people probably figure that it's just livestock, we got our money, what are we complaining about? But that's not the point. The point is that the company poisoned these animals and didn't want to take responsibility. That's the point."










Wow my heart goes out to you. I can not even imagine the horror that you have suffered. This is a great sham and I don't use Purina products but I will not use that now that is for sure. I will stay in touch with this story and hope that the outcome is what is deserve, no animal should have to suffer like this. No person should have to witness this either. Just horrible to imagine.
Faye
Comment by Faye — May 3, 2008 @ 01:35PM
I can not imagine what this has done to you and I am sorry for your loss. My heart also goes out to you. To me they are not just animals but they are family whether a cat or a dog or a horse or an alpaca it doesn't matter they are definitely priceless.
As for me I do feed my puppy the pedigree puppy and I pray everyday that it does not get recalled or make my baby girl sick but when you are on a fixed income what else can you do?
I pray one day Purina is brought to justice for what has happened.
God bless you
Comment by Tara — May 3, 2008 @ 04:19PM
Sorry to read about the deaths.....very sad. Please keep in mind Purina Mills is NOT associated with Neslte Purina Pet Care Company. Purina Mills is owned by Land-O-Lakes while Nestle Purina is owned by Nestle. Purina Mills makes agricultural food while Nestle Purina makes pet food. Purina Mills was spun off the orginal Ralston Purina Company in 1986.
Comment by valentine — May 8, 2008 @ 07:04PM