Conoy Township supervisor pleads guilty to animal cruelty
  • Stephen Mohr

By BRETT HAMBRIGHT
Conoy Township
Updated Jan 23, 2013 14:35

Former Pennsylvania Game Commissioner Stephen L. Mohr pleaded guilty Wednesday to animal cruelty for keeping dogs in foul conditions.

Mohr, also a Conoy Township supervisor, admitted to keeping five dogs in wet and dirty conditions at a Bainbridge farm.

Mohr, 62, pleaded guilty to two counts of animal cruelty and paid a $100 fine.

"The dogs were living in complete filth," Assistant District Attorney Christine L. Wilson said afterward. "Hopefully, Mr. Mohr will realize he was given a second chance today and will take the necessary steps to clean up his dogs' living quarters."

Acting on a tip last year, Humane Society Officer Keith Mohler said he discovered the dogs in foul conditions at the Stackstown Road farm and directed Mohr to clean up the cages.

However, when Mohler returned on Oct. 15, little had changed.

"They were still totally unacceptable," Mohler said on Wednesday. "The law says clean and sanitary conditions and these dogs had neither."

Mohler said the dogs -- three German short-haired pointers and two beagles -- were living in feces and mud "inches deep."

In exchange for Mohr's guilty plea, prosecutors agreed to withdraw three of the five charges.

After serving as a member of the Pennsylvania Board of Game Commissioners from 1998 to 2006, Mohr has become one of the state's leading critics of the agency's deer management program.

He is president of Unified Sportsmen of Pennsylvania, which consistently objects to the program.

bhambright@lnpnews.com

blog comments powered by Disqus
Switch to Full Site
Download our Apps
Tablet Zoom Control: Zoom | Normal