SO NOTORIOUS AN AUCTIONEER REJECTS THEIR BIDS

SO NOTORIOUS AN AUCTIONEER REJECTS THEIR BIDS

A CAUTIONARY ‘TAIL’

On Sunday night, January 25, 2026, I received a Facebook private message.

To be clear, I already knew the advertisement was circulating. But I never mind getting information like that more than once — it’s always better to know than not know, and repetition often confirms patterns.

The message was about a boarding ad being run under the name Stephanie Alessia which of course is one of the many aliases used by the notorious Stephanie Redlick.  The ad was/is offering full board at a barn supposedly located in Milton, Ontario.

The problem was obvious immediately.

The photos being used were of a property in Norwich, Ontario — a barn Stephanie Redlick had been evicted from earlier that same week.

Norwich and Milton are more than 100 kilometres apart, in completely different communities. The ad did not reflect reality.

That, unfortunately, is not a new ploy of Redlick’s.

THE SCAM ARTIST IS STILL AT IT… 

BUT…

What caught my attention was not the boarding offer itself, but the direction of the questions that followed from the person who shared it.

The person messaging me seemed far more interested in two horses that the Redlicks had recently abandoned — where they were, whether Stephanie Redlick would be getting them back, and what was happening with them.

And even when I gave her some information and promised there would be a public post soon, she was persistent.

She wasn’t alone in asking but there was just something in the way she asked – over the course of a few conversations… over  a couple of days.

I responded carefully and truthfully.

Yes, I knew exactly where the horses were.

Yes, they were safe.

And yes, more information would be shared when appropriate.

As the week went on, something about the tone of the messages from the same ‘account’ began to feel off.

The Facebook profile appeared real.

The concern sounded plausible. But the questions circled the same points repeatedly — there was just something that left me feeling uneasy.

THANK YOU TO ALL WHO HAVE REACHED OUT 

At the same time, I was receiving messages from others:

“Stephanie Redick was just here asking about board.”

“She called me about a horse I have for sale.”

“She told me she’s a rescue… a breeder… that she owns a hundred-million-dollar thoroughbred.

[Yes, really!  Just how stupid does Redlick think people are?]

A steady trickle — a few messages a day.

But this particular conversation that started on Sunday evening stood out.

By Thursday, the messages and calls from others began to slow noticeably.

That same day, Stephanie Redlick was scheduled to appear in criminal court — and she did not show up.

A discretionary bench warrant was issued.

Despite Redlick’s repeated claims — including those made during a 15-minute on-camera interview with Rebel Newsthere was no publication ban on those proceedings.

In that interview, Redlick attempted to explain only a portion of what she is accused of, while David Menzies read out just some of the charges on the record: animal neglect, causing distress, 13 Animal Welfare Services (AWS) charges, and multiple criminal charges.

By mid-week, with the sudden quiet, I began to wonder whether Redlick had already found another place to land — another barn to board at, another property to rent, or perhaps I should say one to squat on – because let’s face it –  how many places in the last 2.5 months have the Redlicks been evicted from for non payment?

Eventually, the person messaged me again and sent a screenshot showing that Stephanie Alessia AKA had sent her a friend request.

With a bit of digging, it became clear that this woman – who started sending messages on Sunday night –  was offering full board at a very low rate – and I came to realize that she also hauls horses, as she later told me — “for a living”.

Maybe that explained the persistence?  I was suspicious.

Was she some how connected with Redlick?  Was she planning to either board horses for the Redlicks or haul for them or…?

I continued to be honest.

The mare and foal were safe. They had been examined by a veterinarian. Fecals were done.

A nail that had been left embedded in the mare’s hoof by the last farrier had been addressed.

They were on a feeding program, and the foal — in particular — required extra nutritional support.

Maybe, even if  this person was somehow in communication with Redlick, she didn’t realize that Stephanie Redlick already knew exactly where the 2 horses the Redlicks abandoned were?

A PATTERN OF INTIMIDATION TACTICS 

On the Friday night before that Sunday message, Stephanie Redlick and her father showed up at the farm where the horses are now staying.

They parked on the road outside the property and turned off their lights.

Was this an attempt to intimidate the owners of the property?

The owners confronted them, followed them, and called the police.

The police pulled the Redlicks over and spoke with them.

In rural communities, officers often know the people they serve.

In this case, they  know the farm owners, the amazing charitable work they do, and their impecable reputation.

And with Redlick’s growing list of criminal charges, it does not take long for anyone in law enforcement to know ‘what’ they are dealing with.

By Friday evening – 5 days after the intial contact with the woman who first reached out to share an ad Redlick was (is) running – my gut told me I needed clarity, so I put my phone number into the Facebook Messenger chat. The person who’d been asking questions since Sunday night took the hint and called.

During that call, she let something slip.

“I didn’t offer boarding to anyone else.”

I stopped her immediately.

I thought you said you weren’t offering her boarding — that you wanted nothing to do with her.

She had just contradicted herself.

And if I had to bet, I would say I may have stumbled onto where Redlick was hoping to land next.  Or maybe where Redlick is heading once she secures horses?

I didn’t end that call — she did.

I tried calling her back. She texted that she was on another call. She never returned mine.

The next day, I sent a general message — not a threat, just a boundary.

Anyone who knowingly offers boarding space to Stephanie Redlick, understanding who she is and what she is accused of, will be publicly identified. The same applies to anyone who knowingly hauls horses for her.

If Redlick cannot find a place to keep horses, it becomes much harder for her to acquire them.

If she cannot find anyone willing to haul for her, the same is true.

She responded that this “wasn’t fair,” explaining that hauling is how she makes her living.

What she failed to acknowledge is that many professional and part-time haulers have already reached out to say they will never haul for Redlick again.

Others have said they’ve refused her outright. Some have warned colleagues.

This woman who may have committed to board horses for Redlick, knowing full well who she is – who it appears is willing to haul for her is not the norm, she is the exception.

She also suggested that it would be better to know where the horses are — that this way they could be properly cared for.

What that argument ignores is reality.

Stephanie Redlick does not pay board or rent for barns.

She does not reliably pay farriers, those who deliver hay – or haulers.

She does not cover emergency veterinary care.

When she disappears, barn owners are left holding the bag — financially and legally.

Even when a barn is not offering full board, if horses on that property are neglected, the property owner can be held responsible and charged by Animal Welfare Services.

Feed bills, vet bills, legal fees — all of it lands on the person who believed things would somehow be different.  That maybe they could squeeze some money out of Redlick.

On Saturday, Stephanie Redlick, her father Sammy, and her mother were all present at Ontario Livestock Exchange (OLEX).

We are aware that at least one bid by Sammy Redlick was ignored by the auctioneer. The horse ultimately sold for less than his bid, yet his bid was passed over.

Did you get that? 

A horse had a $200 bid, the auctioneer was asking for $300 – Sammy Redlick, Stephanie’s father was waving and trying to bid $250. The auctioneer ignored his very obvious bid and the horse sold to someone other than the Redlicks for less than what Sammy was willing to bid.

Anyone who has followed Ban Horse Slaughter for any length of time knows we have never been fans of Ontario Livestock Exchange (OLEX), given their long-standing relationship with kill buyers.

But in this instance, credit where it’s due.

Thank you to the auctioneer at OLEX.

He took a stand.  He sent a message.  

That message, that a horse would be better off going to slaughter than into the hands of a known abuser and I think we can safely assume that he’s saying “We don’t want to do business with the likes of you”.]

[And yes, we do know and we are not happy to report that at least one horse bid on by the Redlicks went to a known buyer who ships horses to be slaughtered in Quebec.]

[This auction is separate and distinct from Cookstown Livestock Exchange, where Stephanie Redlick is accused of passing an altered cheque for more than $15,000.]

Stephanie Redlick has multiple upcoming court appearances:

– two jurisdictions for Animal Welfare Services charges

– thirteen counts related to sixteen seized horses

– one horse so far gone that euthanasia was the only humane option

– and two separate sets of criminal charges still before the courts

I’m not going away. Nor are others I’ve been lucky enough to lock arms with.

They know who they are, they are not looking for glory, they have contributed in many ways with more hours over the last year than anyone could ever imagine.

I will continue to track patterns, verify information, and share what can responsibly be confirmed – and again I am not alone in this.

And I want to thank every single person who has stepped forward to say:

“She was here.”

“She called me.”

“I found this ad from Redlick.”

“I saw her there.”

That collective awareness is why horses are safer today than they were last year at this time.

One final note.

The woman with Stephanie Redlick at the auction on Saturday was her mother — the same woman who was present the night a newborn foal was abandoned.

The same woman who promised to stay, to keep the foal warm and fed, in a drafty structure that was little more than a shed.

The foal was dead by morning.

So no — this has never been about just one person.

Please know and get that Stephanie Redlick and her father Sammy Redlick are out and about looking for a place to keep horses AND looking to buy or take free horses.  

Please warn your family, friends and neighbours even if they don’t have horses — or what you would consider a horse property.

We’re doing our best to get the word out but since November 11th, the Redlick’s have managed to take advantage of 3 unsuspecting families – let’s stop them squatting on a 4th property. 

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BOTH AIRLINES OFFER PASSENGER FLIGHTS TOOKorean Air and All Nippon Airways (ANA) have facilitated the air transport of live horses from Canada to slaughter in Japan. Through cargo operations associated with these airlines, heavy draft horses are shipped on long...

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STEPHANIE REDLICK IN CRIMINAL COURT

STEPHANIE REDLICK IN CRIMINAL COURT

STEPHANIE REDLICK AKA STEPHANIE ALESSIA -  NO SHOW IN CRIMINAL COURT TODAYFor over a year, Stephanie Redlick — also known as Stephanie Alessia — has publicly claimed she has a ‘hot shot legal team’ preparing legal action against those who speak out. Today, in criminal...

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HORSES SLAUGHTERED FOR HUMAN CONSUMPTION

Every year thousands of horses are routinely slaughtered in Canada, for human consumption, but you can help us ban horse slaughter in Canada and beyond.

Some of the meat is consumed in Canada, and much of it is shipped to the European Union, and other markets, including Japan.

This barbaric practice is currently not legal in the United States, so horses from the United States are shipped to Canada, and to Mexico, to be slaughtered.

In addition Canada allows for the transportation of live horses to Japan to be slaughtered for human consumption, and unfortunately the transportation of horses destined for slaughter within Canada, and by air to Japan for slaughter, is far from humane.

LEARN MORE HERE <==

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FORGOTTEN STALLIONS

FORGOTTEN STALLIONS

“UNIMAGINABLE NEGLECT” & WHY THIS KEEPS HAPPENING

In late December, ten Standardbred horses were rescued from what authorities and rescuers described as “unimaginable neglect” on a farm in Rensselaer County, New York. The shocking conditions triggered a formal police investigation into their owner and required a coordinated emergency response from multiple rescue organizations. Four stallions were discovered trapped inside filthy stalls, standing atop towering piles of manure and decomposing hay — some reaching nearly five feet high.

“Their heads were in the rafters,” said Jennifer Straub of Dorset Equine Rescue, who took part in the arduous process of freeing the stallions from the barn. “It’s one thing to see a picture or video, but another thing altogether to be standing there, looking up at them. It was like they were standing on a cliff of manure. It was heartbreaking to see that.”

Rescuers believe the stallions had not left their stalls for years, with no consistent farrier care, dental treatment, or basic veterinary attention.

Their hooves were severely overgrown, their bodies showed clear signs of neglect, and access to clean water was extremely limited.

Outside, five Standardbred mares, along with a paint mare and a cow, were left in a deteriorated pasture environment, while a sixth mare was isolated in a barren paddock without shelter.

Multiple horses were underweight and in poor physical condition, reflecting prolonged deprivation and suffering.

The situation came to light only after the owner’s elderly grandmother — who had been struggling to care for the horses herself before suffering a stroke — reached out desperately for help.

What rescuers found upon arrival was so severe that multiple rescue organizations had to coordinate a large-scale emergency response to safely remove the animals and begin urgent medical treatment.

Several equine rescue groups stepped in to transport and rehabilitate the horses, and the United States Trotting Association contributed emergency funding to assist with their care.

Authorities have since confirmed that a criminal investigation is underway.

HORSES ARE OFTEN TREATED AS DISPOSABLE

This case exposes yet another devastating reality: when horses are treated as disposable property, extreme neglect becomes inevitable.

These Standardbreds were once part of an industry built on profit and performance — yet when their usefulness faded, they were abandoned to horrific suffering.

Sadly, this story is not an isolated incident.

It reflects a much broader crisis facing horses across North America, where overbreeding, racing and breeding exploitation, weak enforcement, and slaughter pipelines intersect, leaving thousands of horses vulnerable once their economic value declines.

In theory, cases of this severity should result in strong legal consequences. In reality, criminal charges are rarely laid, even when horses suffer prolonged and extreme neglect.

A heartbreaking example is the Stephanie Redlick case in Ontario, which we have been following closely.

Despite 16 horses being seized, extensive evidence of neglect, and more than $116,000 in taxpayer-funded care costs, criminal charges were not pursued — only provincial animal welfare charges.

[Redlick is facing criminal charges for theft, fraud, etc., but those charges are unrelated to animal nelgect charges.] 

This troubling pattern underscores a systemic failure: severe animal neglect is still too often treated as a regulatory issue rather than what it truly is — criminal abuse.

Until meaningful legal consequences exist for those who exploit and neglect horses, these tragedies will continue to repeat.

THE RACING INDUSTRY’S OVERBREEDING CRISIS

More recently, Redlick publicly claimed that she purchased a horse from the racing industry for $1,000, insinuating that the horse must have had pre-existing medical problems to be sold at that price. This narrative is deeply misleading.

The reality is that perfectly sound, young, healthy horses from the racing industry routinely sell for far less than $1,000.

Due to chronic overbreeding, enormous numbers of horses never make it to the track, fail to perform competitively, or are discarded early in their careers.

As a result, many are sold for a few hundred dollars — or even given away for free — simply to clear stalls and reduce costs.

A low purchase price does not indicate poor health.

It reflects an industry that produces far more horses than it can responsibly support, funneling surplus animals into neglect, auctions, kill pens, and ultimately, slaughter pipelines.

WHY THESE TEN HORSES SURVIVED

These ten forgotten stallions and mares are alive today only because someone finally spoke up — and because compassionate rescues acted fast.

Their survival stands as both a testament to the power of intervention and a stark reminder of how many horses suffer unseen behind closed barn doors.

Their story is a powerful call to action.

It underscores why systemic reform, stronger animal protection laws, meaningful criminal accountability, and an end to slaughter pipelines are urgently needed — not only to respond after suffering has occurred, but to prevent it in the first place.

Because no horse should ever have to wait years in darkness, filth, and isolation before someone finally notices.

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BOTH AIRLINES OFFER PASSENGER FLIGHTS TOOKorean Air and All Nippon Airways (ANA) have facilitated the air transport of live horses from Canada to slaughter in Japan. Through cargo operations associated with these airlines, heavy draft horses are shipped on long...

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STEPHANIE REDLICK IN CRIMINAL COURT

STEPHANIE REDLICK IN CRIMINAL COURT

STEPHANIE REDLICK AKA STEPHANIE ALESSIA -  NO SHOW IN CRIMINAL COURT TODAYFor over a year, Stephanie Redlick — also known as Stephanie Alessia — has publicly claimed she has a ‘hot shot legal team’ preparing legal action against those who speak out. Today, in criminal...

read more

HORSES SLAUGHTERED FOR HUMAN CONSUMPTION

Every year thousands of horses are routinely slaughtered in Canada, for human consumption, but you can help us ban horse slaughter in Canada and beyond.

Some of the meat is consumed in Canada, and much of it is shipped to the European Union, and other markets, including Japan.

This barbaric practice is currently not legal in the United States, so horses from the United States are shipped to Canada, and to Mexico, to be slaughtered.

In addition Canada allows for the transportation of live horses to Japan to be slaughtered for human consumption, and unfortunately the transportation of horses destined for slaughter within Canada, and by air to Japan for slaughter, is far from humane.

LEARN MORE HERE <==

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0% goes towards salaries. Yes, ZERO.

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BAN HORSE SLAUGHTER

FOR HUMAN CONSUMPTION OR ANY PURPOSE
DONATESHOP TO SAVE HORSES
THE ONE WHERE REDLICK CLAIMS SHE IS A REGISTERED CHARITY

THE ONE WHERE REDLICK CLAIMS SHE IS A REGISTERED CHARITY

BUT WAIT, NOW SHE’S TRYING TO SAY SHE NEVER SAID THAT…

Originally posted Juy 19th, 2025 & UPDATED January 28th, 2026.

Recently Stehanie Redlick — AKA Stephanie Alessia or what ever one of her over 40 aliases  she is going by at the moment — was interviewed – at her request – by Rebel News.  <== Watch the video there.

To the best of our knowledge she first claimed to be operating a rescue AFTER 16 horses of hers were seized by Animal Welfare Services (and 13 animal neglect charges were laid..)

[You can learn more about her aliases, animal seizures, related charges and the unrelated fraud and theft criminal charges she is facing here.]

Redlick reached out to Rebel News, the same way she reached out to Orillia Matters – asking for someone to tell her side of the story.

Well the story got told but we don’t think it was what she’d hoped for.

You’ll see below that Orillia Today reached out to the Canada Revenue Agency AFTER Redlick insisted she was a fully registered charity.

Hmm.  That was NOT confirmed.

When David Menzies interviewed her she changed her story and said she’d never claimed to be a registered charity and that she did NOT ask for donations.  If you have watched the video you know…

Menzies asked her several different ways if she ever claimed to be a charity — just to be sure she couldn’t come back later and say she didn’t understand the question.

Hmm.

We have screen shots of her website from last week where she is asking for donations.  Rebel News found the same thing when they visited her site last week and they are featured on the video in the opening remarks.

And we have screen shots from her social media (below).

PLUS of course as you scroll down you’ll see that she told the reporter at Orillia Matters that she was a registered charity.

OH, but wait, she also said she doesn’t take funds…

A CLOSE CALL & STARK REMINDER

This afternoon, we received a call from a friend—part of a chain of concerned women trying to help a young horse owner in her 20s.

Struggling to afford board, the young woman was considering surrendering her horse to a rescue. But thankfully, our friend warned her contact to be very cautious—too many horses are unknowingly relinquished to kill buyers and end up in the slaughter pipeline.

It turns out the “so-called” rescue contacted was Above the Stars Equine Rescue.

They requested $150 to secure a spot, plus an additional intake fee.

The woman was told—by Stephanie Martin, also known as Stephanie Redlick—that the horse would be taken to a property in the Ottawa Valley. Once picked up, she would never be allowed to see her horse again.

As reported by Orillia Matters, Above the Stars is not a registered charity—despite public claims to the contrary. The owner of the so called rescue – Stephanie Redlick who also goes by over 30 aliases including Stephanie Martin – is now facing multiple animal neglect charges by Animal Welfare Services AND criminal charges related to cattle theft and fraud.

“They are not, and never have been, a registered charity,” said Charity Intelligence Canada managing director, Kate Bahen, in the July 2025 Orillia Matters article.

Thankfully, the women advising this young horse owner quickly connected the dots. The horse is safe—and will not be surrendered to this so-called “rescue.”

Let this serve as a critical reminder:

Do your homework. Ask questions. Trust your gut.

And when in doubt—reach out to those who can help vet the situation before it’s too late.

UPDATE NOVEMBER 2025:

We continue to receive troubling reports involving Stephanie Redlick, who is already facing multiple animal neglect charges filed by Animal Welfare Services of Ontario, along with unrelated criminal charges for fraud and theft reported by CTV News.

Redlick now appears to be operating alongside a partner, Lilianna (Lili) DiMatteo, and continues to represent herself publicly as both an equine therapist and the operator of a so-called horse rescue called “Under the Stars Equine Rescue.”

According to several accounts, Redlick has been offering “therapy” sessions, describing herself as “like a doctor but not a licensed therapist, so OHIP doesn’t cover my charges.”

Redlick reportedly requires payment upfront for multiple sessions via e-transfer, and if someone asks to meet her or see the property where the horses and sessions supposedly take place, she allegedly insists that payment must be made first — after which she proposes to meet the person at a Tim Hortons, rather than at any facility.

These reports are deeply concerning — especially given Redlick’s existing criminal and animal welfare history.

We urge anyone approached by Stephanie Redlick or Lilianna DiMatteo regarding horse purchases, therapy services, or “rescue” operations to exercise extreme caution and verify all claims before engaging in any transaction.

We are NOT going to be ignored.  Please join us in demanding answers and ensure that AWS does its job to protect animals in the future. Details below — we need your voices now more than ever.

SPEAK UP - IT TAKES LESS THAN A MINUTE

This 2-click "done for you" email sends a clear message to elected officials that Ontarians will not accept a system that allows repeat harm.

It takes less than a minute — and it puts real pressure on decision-makers to close the loophole that allows Redlick to keep accumulating horses - even after 16 were seized, 13 animal welfare charges were laid - and she owes over $116,000 for their care.

Pictures and videos on this page are courtesy of Summer Secord, Crystal Mitchell and Celia Carletti.

Press contact: marie@banhorseslaughter.com or phone: 250 801 8231

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ACTOR KATE DRUMMOND WEARS THEM

STEPHANIE REDLICK’S 2 HORSES ARE SAFE

STEPHANIE REDLICK’S 2 HORSES ARE SAFE

STEPHANIE & SAMMY REDLICK ABANDONED 2 HORSES

Stephanie Redlick is a name many in Ontario’s horse and animal welfare communities have come to recognize — and fear. Her history includes 16 horses seized by Animal Welfare Services, 13 animal welfare charges, and multiple sets of criminal charges (see here and here), yet she remains legally permitted to continue acquiring horses.

On November 11, 2025 Redlick had a mare picked up and transported it to a property she was immediately barred from. Redlick was NOT allowed on the property.

The barn and boarding operation owner provided excellent care for 9 days – which she was not paid for.

On November 20th, 2025 Redlick had that mare hauled to yet another property and along the way a 4 month old colt was picked up.

Redlick – in typical Redlick fashion was immediately barred from that property and only allowed on with an Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) escort.  The rent she promised to pay never materialized.

The horses were hauled away from that property near the end of the month under the custodian clause in the PAWS Act – even though she claimed they were stolen.

That story is here.

The horses then spent 6 days receiving much needed medical attention – no thanks to Redlick – she didn’t pay for any of the treatment or board.

Once again on that property she was only allowed onto the property with an OPP escort.

Next – due to a loop hole – she had them moved to a property on Curries Road in Norwich where the horses were lucky if she checked on them once per day and for at most 2 hours — but the majority of the days she showed up — it was only for 45 minutes to an hour.

Who leaves their horses unchecked for 23 hours per day – or even worse leaves them for 2 days?

After yet again presenting a check that bounced and neither she or her father Sammy Redlick making good on it – Redlick was officially and legally evicted from that property — and the horses considered abandoned.

Don’t worry, the horses are safe. They have been transported to a well recognized and highly regarded facility – where they are getting a full vet work up and all the appropriate care.

We have all the details and will share LOADS more soon – but in the meantime please know and get that Redlick will be looking to buy more horses and to secure another spot to keep them — so please warn your family and friends.

AND yes, she is allowed to accumulate horses even with all the charges against her.

PLEASE help us demand that the loophole in the PAWS Act that allows someone like Redlick to have horses be closed.

Please see the easy to fill out form letter below.

Horse slaughter in Canada is sadly, alive and well — both through the live export of horses for slaughter and through domestic slaughter here at home.

Horses are enduring brutal transport, and Canadians are being exposed to serious food safety risks tied to drugs never meant to enter the human food chain.

Parliament and the Senate had a chance to stop this.

Bill C-355 passed the House of Commons but stalled in the Senate and died when an election was called. That means the cruelty continues — unless Canadians speak up.

We’ve created a done-for-you email that makes it easy to take action in minutes.

Your message will go directly to the Prime Minister, the Minister of Agriculture, Senator Dalphond, and your local MP.

Click below to add your voice and help push for legislation that protects horses and public health.

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BOTH AIRLINES OFFER PASSENGER FLIGHTS TOOKorean Air and All Nippon Airways (ANA) have facilitated the air transport of live horses from Canada to slaughter in Japan. Through cargo operations associated with these airlines, heavy draft horses are shipped on long...

read more
STEPHANIE REDLICK IN CRIMINAL COURT

STEPHANIE REDLICK IN CRIMINAL COURT

STEPHANIE REDLICK AKA STEPHANIE ALESSIA -  NO SHOW IN CRIMINAL COURT TODAYFor over a year, Stephanie Redlick — also known as Stephanie Alessia — has publicly claimed she has a ‘hot shot legal team’ preparing legal action against those who speak out. Today, in criminal...

read more

HORSES SLAUGHTERED FOR HUMAN CONSUMPTION

Every year thousands of horses are routinely slaughtered in Canada, for human consumption, but you can help us ban horse slaughter in Canada and beyond.

Some of the meat is consumed in Canada, and much of it is shipped to the European Union, and other markets, including Japan.

This barbaric practice is currently not legal in the United States, so horses from the United States are shipped to Canada, and to Mexico, to be slaughtered.

In addition Canada allows for the transportation of live horses to Japan to be slaughtered for human consumption, and unfortunately the transportation of horses destined for slaughter within Canada, and by air to Japan for slaughter, is far from humane.

LEARN MORE HERE <==

We are 100% volunteer & crowdfunded.

0% goes towards salaries. Yes, ZERO.

JOIN ACTOR KATE DRUMMOND &

HELP US SPREAD THE WORD

BAN HORSE SLAUGHTER

FOR HUMAN CONSUMPTION OR ANY PURPOSE
DONATESHOP TO SAVE HORSES
NEWBORN FOAL LEFT TO DIE

NEWBORN FOAL LEFT TO DIE

STEPHANIE REDLICK - NEGLECTED HORSES? 

YOU BE THE JUDGE

Originally published February 4, 2025.

Updated February 7, 2025.

JIM HORNE WRITES: 

On Sunday, February 2, 2025, at 4:30 pm I was called by my second cousin’s wife, Dianne Beleskey to ask if I could help Stephanie Redlick whose mare had given birth the night before.

Dianne works at a gas station close to a property that Stephanie Redlick leases and Stephanie came into the gas station to get some water for the mare.

Stephanie Redlick told Dianne the foal was born during the night in a small uninsulated barn in Oro-Medonte, Ontario. The outside temperature was minus 18 Celsius. (Minus 26 with the wind chill factor.)

The newborn somehow got hung up over a chain that goes from a gate to a post at the end of the stall and the foal was stuck there until Stephanie - who lives over an hour away in North York - arrived the next day. 

JIM HORNE CONTINUES: 

Once freed from the gate the foal's back legs were stiff.

I arrived at approximately 6 pm.

When I went into the small barn, which is more of a shed, I saw the mom and her foal.

The stall had about 3 feet of manure in it and the mare was eating hay that was also her bedding.

The baby was uncovered and cold. I immediately got a bottle from Stephanie, fed the foal and asked Stephanie to milk the mother and get more milk to feed the filly.

I covered the foal in blankets and rubbed her.

I squeezed her back legs and was happy to get a response to the pressure.

I lifted her up and she was putting some weight on her back legs but she was not strong enough to keep standing on her own.

I laid her back down and fed her again.

She had a vigorous appetite.

I told Stephanie that the mare and foal needed to go to the Ontario Veterinary College at the University of Guelph and that I would arrange for transportation.

Redlick said she couldn’t afford trailering, so I said I would pay for it.

Stephanie’s mother was there as well. I told both of them that they must stay with the baby all night feeding her, keeping her warm and allowing her to sleep between feedings.

I warned them that she would die if they did not do as I asked.

They both agreed to stay all night in their vehicle and care for the foal until I picked her up in the morning.

I received a text from Stephanie around 6:15 am saying she just went back to Toronto (an hour away from the foal) to nap and that I could load her and take her.  [MDB writes: That turned out to be a lie.]

I said she had to be present as I didn't want to later be accused of stealing her.

She then said she had to take her dad to the hospital and would not be able to get back to the barn till later.

I asked her when the foal was last fed. She said 7:15 a.m. which didn't make sense as she sent me a text at 6:15 a.m. that she was an hour away napping - and wouldn't be able to come to the property until later in the morning.  She didn't get to the barn until after 9 a.m.

I looked after my horses and then headed over to the property Stephanie leases to wait for Stephanie and to feed the foal while I waited.

When I got there I could see the baby half covered with the blankets and she had digging marks all around her, made by the mother trying to get her up.

The foal was dead.

Stephanie did not stay the night and texted Dianne during the night to say she didn’t stay because she was too tired.

When Stephanie arrived, I looked at her and told her the foal was dead.

I asked her if she stayed all night and she swore she did and said she fed her every twenty minutes and rubbed her all night to keep her warm.

That didn't make sense based on what she'd texted Dianne Beleskey.

I am including a screenshot (below) of the message Stephanie sent to Dianne on Sunday evening February 2, stating that she'd left.

Stephanie did not appear upset in any way, she Just wanted to know how to dispose of the body. I told her to call a dead stock company but instead after 2 days of the dead foal lying in the stall with the mother, she dragged it to the woods for coyotes to eat.

I would also like to note that inside the "barn" any water buckets were frozen solid and the outside water troughs were empty.

I am haunted by this situation.

Had I known what I was dealing with I would have stayed.

I’m certain the foal would have lived.

At that point, I vowed that this beautiful foal's death would not be in vain and that I would do anything and everything I could to stop Stephanie Redlick from inflicting such cruelty on any other trusting beautiful soul.

Horses only have us to protect them and now after a week of endless phone calls and police visits I am frustrated that it feels like my complaints and concerns are falling on deaf ears.

Jim Horne

FOAL DEATH DUE TO NEGLECT?

AGAIN, YOU BE THE JUDGE

Stephanie Relick sent this text to Dianne Beleskey at 12:03 AM on February 3rd, just after midnight.

Earlier, she had assured Jim Horne that she would stay with the newborn foal throughout the night, ensuring she was fed every twenty minutes and kept warm.

Jim had emphasized that if Stephanie didn’t stay, the foal—who was too weak to stand and unable to nurse from her mother—would not survive.

Despite this, Stephanie appears to have left the barn around 11 PM, possibly even earlier. Again she lives an hour away from where the foal was and she promised to stay the night but she didn't come back till after 9 a.m. the following morning.

As a result, the helpless foal was left alone in the freezing barn. By the time Jim arrived to take the foal to the vet - offering to haul her for Redlick - because she couldn't afford hauling - the foal was dead.

Many people have stayed silent out of fear—because anyone who speaks out about Stephanie Redlick’s behaviour quickly becomes a target.

Her default tactic is to aggressively smear and discredit those who expose the truth. That intimidation has been effective in silencing people and delaying accountability. But when one person is willing to stand firm, it changes everything.

Jim Horne’s willingness to stick his neck out is exactly why we picked up this story. He spoke openly, knowing the personal cost, and refused to back down when others had been pressured into silence. Nor did his neighbour and friend, Crystal Mitchell back down.

Crystal also chose integrity over safety and stood her ground knowing she would be targeted as well. What happened next—and the courage it took to keep going—explains why this story continues, and why it must be told.



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SPEAK UP - IT TAKES LESS THAN A MINUTE

This 2-click "done for you" email sends a clear message to elected officials that Ontarians will not accept a system that allows repeat harm.

It takes less than a minute — and it puts real pressure on decision-makers to close the loophole that allows Redlick to keep accumulating horses - even after 16 were seized, 13 animal welfare charges were laid - and she owes over $116,000 for their care.

Pictures and videos on this page are courtesy of Summer Secord, Crystal Mitchell and Celia Carletti.

Press contact: marie@banhorseslaughter.com or phone: 250 801 8231

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WHY IS REDLICK ALLOWED TO HAVE HORSES?

WHY IS REDLICK ALLOWED TO HAVE HORSES?

THAT IS A REALLY GOOD QUESTION 

How can Stephanie Redlick AKA Stephanie Alessia still have access to horses after

16 were seized,

animal-welfare charges were laid,

permanent custody of the animals was lost,

and more than $116,000 is owed to the Ontario government for their care?

The answer isn’t comfortable, but it’s important.

The short version is this: Ontario’s animal-welfare system is reactive, fragmented, and full of gaps that allow repeat harm unless courts step in decisively.

Let’s break it down — and then talk about what can still happen when the Animal Welfare Services’ charges she’s facing go before a judge.

SEIZURE DOES NOT MEAN A BAN ON HORSE OWNERSHIP

16 horses were seized by Animal Welfare Services in February 2025 after Stephanie Redlick failed to comply with orders under the PAWS Act.

When animals are seized by Ontario Animal Welfare Services, the law is focused on immediate distress, not future prevention.

A seizure:

– Removes animals that are currently suffering

– Transfers custody of those specific animals

– Allows the Province to recover costs for care

What it does NOT do automatically is ban someone from ever owning animals again.

We know, we know – that seems criminal – doesn’t it?

Unless a court explicitly orders a prohibition, the law treats any future animal as a “new situation.”

That’s how someone can be deemed unfit to regain seized horses — yet still legally obtain others.

THE PART EVERYONE NEEDS TO UNDERSTAND

(& WHY THIS IS NOT OVER)

 Yes — she is still legally allowed to have horses. For now.

Nothing in the FIRST part of the decisions by Animal Welfare Services that Redlick owes over $1116,000 for the care of the horses seized by AWS in March 2025 bans Stephanie Redlick from owning, handling, or acquiring horses in Ontario. AT LEAST NOT YET.

Why?

Because these first  proceedings were only about the money — the cost of caring for the 16 horses after they were seized.

It was not a prohibition hearing.

It was not a trial to determine if she was guilty of abuse.

That will come later.

And it had nothing to do with future ownership restrictions.

So despite:

-16 horses seized

– horses forfeited to the Crown

– over $116,000 in public costs confirmed

– ongoing animal-welfare charges

She can still legally possess horses today.

That is a gaping hole in Ontario’s animal-protection framework.

AND YES – SHE ALREADY HAS MORE HORSES

At present, Stephanie Redlick has two horses in her possession. And the cheque for the barn rental where they currently are – bounced – no surprise – right?

Which means:

– she needs somewhere to keep them

– she needs someone willing to board them

– and she has every incentive to move them quietly, quickly, and without scrutiny

If history is any guide, she will be looking for:

– a field

– a “temporary” arrangement

– a sympathetic or uninformed barn owner

– a private individual outside the horse world

And she will not lead with the full story.

THIS IS WHY THE AWS REGULATIONS NEED TO CHANGE

Ontario currently allows someone to:

– have animals seized for neglect

– rack up six-figure care costs

– lose animals by forfeiture

– and immediately go out and get more animals

All before:

– animal neglect/abuse charges are resolved

– guilt is proven

– sentencing occurs

That is backwards.

There must be a mechanism allowing Animal Welfare Services to:

– prohibit ownership

– prohibit custody

– prohibit handling or care

– on an interim basis

…where there is a demonstrated pattern of neglect, non-compliance, or risk — separate before being found guilty.

Public safety allows this in other contexts.

Animal safety should too.

A DIRECT WARNING TO BARN OWNERS

& RURAL PROPERTY OWNERS

If you are approached to board one to two or more  horses — especially under:

– vague circumstances

– short timelines

– sob stories

– without a contract, vet references, barn references, ID, deposit and first month

– “temporary” arrangements

Stop. Ask questions. Verify.

Because once horses are on your property, you may be the one left feeding them, caring for them, or dealing with the fallout – and the fallout can include being held responsible for any neglect.

This is not hypothetical.

This has already happened — repeatedly.

AND FINALLY – REDLICK IS STILL BUSY IN THE FEDERAL CRIMINAL COURTS

Separate and apart from animal-welfare matters:

Stephanie Redlick is back in criminal court on theft and fraud charges

CRIMINAL CHARGES LAID: May, 27, 2025

CTV NEWS REPORTS: [Stephanie Redlick] accused of fraud totalling more than $26,000, theft over $5,000, making forged documents, as well as false pretences with intent to defraud using cattle worth more than $5,000.

Provincial police said a fraud investigation began earlier this year after receiving a complaint about “transportation and financial irregularities of livestock being transported from a farm in Tay Township and sold at a Cookstown stockyard sale in September of 2024.”

In June, South Georgian Bay Ontario Provincial Police revealed a warrant for the arrest of Redlick was issued. Redlick, who lives in North York, was arrested by Toronto police. Investigators revealed she was known to police.

(Barrie) (Midland)

Next court appearance:

Case number: 3811998258230046000

THURSDAY, January 29, 2026

——————————————————

Stephanie Redlick is set to appear again on a whole new set of theft and fraud criminal charges…

Different files.

Yet again – theft and fraud charges

Same pattern.

DEC. 9, 2025: CTV NEWS reports:  Stephanie Redlick, 29, of Bradford has been charged by South Simcoe police with uttering a forged document, fraud over $5,000, and being in possession of the proceeds of crime and forgery.

According to court documents obtained by CTV News, Redlick is accused of passing off an altered cheque to defraud a livestock auction house in Cookstown out of more than $15,000 in March.

Provincial police confirmed a warrant was issued for Redlick’s arrest and she was picked up by police in Toronto. Investigators confirmed Redlick is known to police.

(Bradford)

Next court appearance:

Case number: 3811998258130159400

Thursday, February 12, 2026

BOTTOM LINE

Until Ontario closes this loophole:

– animals remain at risk
–  the public keeps paying
– and people like Redlick keep cycling through the system

Seizure without prohibition is a half-measure.

And half-measures still leave animals exposed.

This is why vigilance matters.

This is why people need to share information about known abusers to protect their family and friends.

And this is why “just two horses” is never just two horses.

SPEAK UP - IT TAKES LESS THAN A MINUTE

This 2-click "done for you" email sends a clear message to elected officials that Ontarians will not accept a system that allows repeat harm.

It takes less than a minute — and it puts real pressure on decision-makers to close the loophole that allows Redlick to keep accumulating horses - even after 16 were seized, 13 animal welfare charges were laid - and she owes over $116,000 for their care.

DONE FOR YOU PUSH BUTTON EMAIL CAMPAIGN

DONE FOR YOU PUSH BUTTON EMAIL CAMPAIGN

BOTH AIRLINES OFFER PASSENGER FLIGHTS TOOKorean Air and All Nippon Airways (ANA) have facilitated the air transport of live horses from Canada to slaughter in Japan. Through cargo operations associated with these airlines, heavy draft horses are shipped on long...

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STEPHANIE REDLICK IN CRIMINAL COURT

STEPHANIE REDLICK IN CRIMINAL COURT

STEPHANIE REDLICK AKA STEPHANIE ALESSIA -  NO SHOW IN CRIMINAL COURT TODAYFor over a year, Stephanie Redlick — also known as Stephanie Alessia — has publicly claimed she has a ‘hot shot legal team’ preparing legal action against those who speak out. Today, in criminal...

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HORSES SLAUGHTERED FOR HUMAN CONSUMPTION

Every year thousands of horses are routinely slaughtered in Canada, for human consumption, but you can help us ban horse slaughter in Canada and beyond.

Some of the meat is consumed in Canada, and much of it is shipped to the European Union, and other markets, including Japan.

This barbaric practice is currently not legal in the United States, so horses from the United States are shipped to Canada, and to Mexico, to be slaughtered.

In addition Canada allows for the transportation of live horses to Japan to be slaughtered for human consumption, and unfortunately the transportation of horses destined for slaughter within Canada, and by air to Japan for slaughter, is far from humane.

LEARN MORE HERE <==

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0% goes towards salaries. Yes, ZERO.

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