Regarding Mr Douglas Bryan 'LeConte' Spink, 'Fausty'
An update on all of this is in order I should think!
His last known address was his 83 year old mother's house in Harmony PA., he is now deceased and will be no further trouble to horses, dogs, animals, fowl, mice, or humans!
On the 23rd of January, 2020, metatastic melanoma cancer won the battle, there are posts and threads on twitter.com about it using the search term 'doug spink' and the majority of the comments are rejoycing that the nightmare with this sick individual is finally concluded.
He viciously attacked his ex fiance horse breeder Corinne Super for years, claiming she lost her farm in Canada to a drug seizure and was running a drug operation. In reality she gave the authorities Spink's computers and hard drives and testified against him and his abuse of animals. Super had her farm listed with a real estate broker for sale, it was not seized by anyone, least of all for drug growing.
Here is an article about just some of the problems Mrs Super had with this individual, and how difficult it was to get her show jumper stallion Capone I returned to her, in the end the courts sided with her and her documentation and Capone I was returned to her.
“It was a very personal and emotional struggle,” Super said. “It took a lot out of me. I was so concerned for Capone’s health and welfare. That was my main concern, knowing that he was in a very dangerous situation. My goal was to get him safe.”
Super’s first concern when Capone arrived back to her Langley, B.C., farm was his health. “He was in horrific condition when we picked him up. He was dehydrated and underweight and wormy. His feet hadn’t been done,” she said.“After spending the time with an excellent team of vets and farriers, we brought the horse back to health,” she added. “I slowly started riding him again. I let Capone tell me what he wanted to do. It came to the point where he was physically and mentally stronger and getting bored in the barn. His antics let me know he was ready to do more, so I brought Kyle up and he rode him a few times. He said he thought he felt fabulous and that we should go for it and see what happens.”www.chronofhorse.com/article/capone-i-endures-long-strange-trip-back-grand-prix-ring-hits-desert-circuitA few of the more recent links, some to news sources showing just exactly how far off the deep end this individual had gone.
melissahardy.com/category/douglas-spink/kiwifarms.net/threads/douglas-bryan-spink-fausty-cross-species-alliance-exitpoint-lecontespink.49922/lfpress.com/2016/02/23/douglas-spink-ordered-returned-to-united-states-where-he-is-wanted-for-animal-cruelty/wcm/b7d7feae-2dbb-aba9-47b6-5b3cac0b1788www.butlereagle.com/article/20180912/NEWS12/180919966After Spink was released, he moved onto the farm and lived in a trailer. Investigators found out later that Spink was feeding Ghengis for as long as a year before the dog disappeared.
Spink was re-arrested after he was found with another dog, violating a court order not to own animals. A 90-day sentence for animal cruelty was dealt after he was released.
Months later, Spink turned up in London, looking dishevelled with a towel wrapped around his waist, ranting and raving at a local business. There was a dog that looked like Ghengis in his vehicle that was passed over by police to Spink’s friend in Port Stanley.
That led to the illegal release and the re-arrest.
That should have been the end of Spink’s adventures in southern Ontario. However, LeRoy was told Tuesday Spink came back into Canada in September by walking across an unguarded section of border in Saskatchewan.
He returned to Ontario and to his Port Stanley friend, and possibly Ghengis, who’s never been found, before his meltdown on Nov. 3 that began with a report of a house fire at Spink’s friend’s home on Brayside Street and quickly escalated to his arrest. By the time Spink was subdued, he had been dealt a spate of charges and his most recent sojourn in the local jail.
Aug. 9, 2015: Spink is picked up by London police officers responding to a call of a man acting erratically at a Wharncliffe Road business. He has a dog with him that officers later believe might have been Ghengis. He is held on an arrest warrant for skipping out of a 90-day sentence for animal cruelty in Washington State.
Aug. 10: Spink is mistakenly released from the Elgin-Middlesex Detention Centre.
Aug. 11: Spink is arrested in Port Stanley.
Aug. 12: Spink is driven to the border and turned over to American authorities.
Nov. 14: Spink is arrested in Port Stanley by OPP officers responding to a house fire.
Police were called after a report of a man firing a gun in house.
As officers headed there, there was a report of a man who might have been struck by a car.
The man made his way to the gas station and called 911 to say he’d been robbed and needed help.
Inside, the man was behind the counter and an officer identified him “from previous dealings with him.”
Spink, the suspect, was on the floor in a fetal position. He told police he had knife on him. They found two in his pocket, the documents said.
While officers tried to handcuff him, Spink yelled he was having a seizure and kept kicking the officers, police allege. They threatened to subdue him with a Taser and went as far as to put it on his chest, but the device wasn’t deployed.
Told to get up and walk to the ambulance, Spink got up then dropped to the ground complaining his knee was hurting. He kicked out a rack of cigarettes and pulled other merchandise off the shelves as he was taken outside, causing at least $5,000 in damage, the documents contend.
Outside, Spink kept struggling despite leg shackles. That led to more handcuffs and shackles.
Officers went to Spink’s mother Claire’s home. She said she and her son had “a peaceful dinner” before she went to bed and Spink retired to the basement.
At about 2 a.m., she heard Spink walking around. He came into her room complaining about her car alarm, then later “smashed into her room and took the gun from a box,” threatening to kill himself, holding it to his chin, the documents said.
His mother kept talking to him and the gun went off twice in the kitchen during a struggle.
She told police she believed her son took the gun with him when he left the house.
Police say Spink stopped a motorist on his way to work and got into his car, claiming there was someone robbing his house. He was eventually ordered out of the car, then tried to get into a house.
Police found a loaded .38-calibre revolver half buried in the ground, possibly by someone stepping on it, not far from Spink’s mother’s house.
Spink faces charges of possession of a prohibited firearm, three counts of discharging a firearm into an occupied structure, five counts of aggravated assault, four counts of recklessly endangering another person and four counts of criminal mischief."
And with this, the matter is concluded, good luck to everyone and take care!
BlackWhite