STEPHANIE REDLICK OWES $116,229,12

STEPHANIE REDLICK OWES $116,229,12

REDLICK VERSUS CHIEF ANIMAL WELFARE INSPECTOR 

Stephanie Redlick AKA Stephanie Alessia LOST.  

AGAIN.

COMPLETELY.

And now she owes $116,229.12 for the care of the horses she neglected and then tried unsuccessfully to blame everyone else for their horrific condition.

Please note that when she defaults on paying – which we know she will – it will be Ontario tax payers footing the bill.

THE SET UP (AKA HOW WE GOT HERE)

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

She did not appeal:

– the removal of the horses

– the decision to keep them in care

———-
Because she didn’t pay the first bill, the horses were legally forfeited to the Crown in August 2025.

After that, AWS sent her a second bill for the real costs of:

– transportation

– boarding

– veterinary care

– ongoing animal care

That bill? $118,831.19 (later reduced slightly).

WHAT REDLICK CLAIMED (SPOILER: NONE OF IT WORKED)

Stephanie Redlick argued that:

1. The horses were fine and never should have been removed

2. The seizure was illegal

3. Any health problems were someone else’s fault

4. The costs were unnecessary

5. Everyone was biased against her

She also:

– Tried to throw out AWS evidence on a technicality (failed)

– Filed multiple bias motions against the adjudicator (failed harder)

– Repeatedly disconnected from the hearing when things didn’t go her way

– Accused the adjudicator of abuse… for enforcing basic rules like “don’t interrupt”

Yes. Really.

WHAT THE BOARD SAID (IN POLITE LEGAL LANGUAGE)

The Animal Care Review Board found that:

– AWS followed the law

– The costs were real, documented, and reasonable

– The horses were boarded for nearly six months, at standard market rates

– Veterinary care was necessary, reviewed line-by-line by an independent equine veterinarian

– Redlick offered zero evidence that:

– costs were inflated

– cheaper alternatives existed

– care was unnecessary

In fact, she never actually challenged the numbers — she just kept trying to relitigate the seizure she never appealed in the first place.

That’s not a legal strategy. That’s denial.

ABOUT THE “BIAS” CLAIMS

The adjudicator made this crystal clear:

Disagreeing with rulings does NOT equal bias

Being told to follow rules does NOT equal abuse

Interrupting, disconnecting, and attacking the adjudicator does NOT equal proof of unfairness

There was no evidence of bias.

None. Zip. Zero.

The motions were dismissed — repeatedly — because they were baseless.

THE MONEY

Here’s where the bill landed:

– Transportation: reasonable

– Boarding: ~$28–30 per horse per day (very normal)

– Vet & care costs: reviewed and mostly upheld

– Small reduction applied (about $2,600) after expert review

Final amount owed:

$116,229.12

Payable to the Minister of Finance.

THE BOTTOM LINE

– Redlick ignored orders to properly provide for 16 horses

– Didn’t appeal when she should have

– Didn’t pay when required

– Lost the horses

Then tried to dodge the bill by blaming:

– AWS

– the boarding facilities

– the vets

– the adjudicator

– the process itself

In other words she blamed everyone but herself.

The Board wasn’t buying it.

This wasn’t a close call.

This was a methodical dismantling of excuses, theatrics, and bad faith arguments.

TRANSLATION INTO PLAIN ENGLISH

Redlick you don’t get to:

– neglect animals

– ignore lawful orders

– force the public to pay to clean up the mess

– and then cry foul when the invoice arrives

You made the problem. You pay the bill.

And this time, the system held.

TRANSCRIPTS

THE PART EVERYONE NEEDS TO UNDERSTAND

(& WHY THIS IS NOT OVER)

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

Nothing in this decision bans Stephanie Redlick from owning, handling, or acquiring horses in Ontario. AT LEAST NOT YET.

Why?

Because this part of the proceedings was 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:

This Thursday, January 8, 2026:

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

Next Thursday, January 15, 2026:

She appears again on a whole new set of theft and fraud criminal charges

Different files.

Yet again – theft and fraud charges

Same pattern.

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 talk.

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.

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STEPHANIE REDLICK CRIMINAL COURT APPEARANCES

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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 <==

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
ONTARIO BARN OWNER DENIED RENT

ONTARIO BARN OWNER DENIED RENT

IF YOU ARE NOT PROVIDING BOARD

Bottom line

In Ontario:

The Innkeepers Act does NOT apply to unpaid barn rental with no services.

Custodian responsibility DOES apply.

Non-payment or rent = loss of permission to be on the property EVEN if horses are left there.

Refusal to leave = trespass.

Horses cannot be used as leverage to squat.

Barn owners have both the right — and the obligation — to act.

Custodian Responsibility vs. the Innkeepers Act — What Actually Applies

There is growing confusion around whether the Innkeepers Act prevents barn owners from acting when someone refuses to pay rent and leaves horses behind.

In a barn-rental-only situation, the law is clear.

❌ The Innkeepers Act does NOT apply here

The Innkeepers Act was designed for hotels and lodging for people, not agricultural buildings or private barns.

It does not apply when:

A barn is rented privately

No accommodation for people is provided

No board, feed, or care is provided

No services are being rendered

Rent has not been paid

A barn owner renting empty stall space is not an innkeeper.

There is:

No “guest”

No “inn”

No service-based lien

No board = no lien under the Innkeepers Act.

A claim we are seeing more and more often is that a barn owner is somehow prevented from acting because of Ontario’s Innkeepers Act.

That claim is wrong in law in a barn-rental-only situation.

Under Ontario’s Innkeepers Act, a lien over a guest’s property can arise only when BOTH of the following conditions are met:

Services are actually provided, and

Charges are owed for those services

In the current cases we are seeing with the Redlicks — and in many similar cases across Ontario — no services are being provided at all.

If the barn owner is:

❌ Not feeding
❌ Not watering
❌ Not mucking
❌ Not providing care
❌ Not providing supervision

There is NOT ANY service-based lien under the Innkeepers Act.

Simply renting empty stall or barn space does not create an innkeeper–guest relationship, and it does not give rise to an innkeeper’s lien.

Renting space alone is not enough.

Non-payment of rent ends permission

When barn rent is not paid:

The agreement is breached

Permission to occupy the barn can be revoked

The person keeping horses there loses the right to remain

This is contract law, not tenancy law.

Once permission is withdrawn, continued presence is trespass.

Custodian status DOES apply — and this is critical

While the Innkeepers Act does not apply, Ontario’s Provincial Animal Welfare Services Act (PAWS) does.

Under PAWS, a person can become a custodian simply by:

Allowing animals to remain on their property

Knowing the animals are there

Providing shelter (even unintentionally)

⚠️ Even if NO feed, water, or care is provided, the property owner can still be exposed to liability if animals are neglected or harmed.

This is why doing nothing is dangerous for barn owners.

Can the horses be moved?

Yes.

When:

Rent has not been paid

Permission has been revoked

The owner refuses to remove the horses

The barn owner faces welfare or legal liability

The barn owner may:

Arrange for the horses to be removed

Move them to a safe location

Seek a veterinary assessment

Contact Animal Welfare Services (PAWS)

Act to protect the animals and their property

This is not theft when properly documented and done to prevent harm.

“But we were told the Innkeepers Act stops us”

This is a common and incorrect claim.

The Innkeepers Act does NOT override:

Property rights

Contract law

Trespass law

Animal welfare obligations

It cannot be used to force a barn owner to host unpaid horses indefinitely.

When ANIMAL WELFARE SERVICES should be called

Call Animal Welfare Services if:

Horses are being used to force continued access

The owner is absent or uncooperative

Welfare standards are uncertain

You are being told to “wait” while liability grows

ANIMAL WELFARE SERVICES can:

Issue orders

Direct removal

Declare abandonment

Provide protection for the property owner

Practical steps for barn owners

Put termination in writing (text/email is sufficient)

Set a clear removal deadline

Document unpaid rent

Photograph stall and horse conditions

Keep all communication

Contact police for trespass if necessary

Contact PAWS if welfare is at risk

Are the horses “abandoned” if barn rent isn’t paid and they aren’t moved?

Short answer…

Not automatically.

Non-payment of rent alone does not instantly make horses “abandoned” under Ontario law.

However, continued failure to act after notice, combined with lack of care or refusal to retrieve the horses, can lead to a finding of abandonment — but that determination is made by Animal Welfare Services (PAWS), not the barn owner.

What “abandonment” means under PAWS.

Under the Provincial Animal Welfare Services Act, 2019 (PAWS), abandonment is not defined by one single act.

It is assessed based on conduct and circumstances, including:

Failure to provide adequate care

Failure to make arrangements for care

Leaving animals without reasonable supervision

Refusing or failing to retrieve animals after being directed to do so

Allowing animals to remain where their welfare is at risk

Unpaid rent + refusal to remove horses + no meaningful care can support an abandonment finding — but PAWS must make that call.

Can the barn owner declare the horses abandoned?

No.

A barn owner cannot unilaterally declare horses abandoned and take ownership simply because rent hasn’t been paid.

Doing so risks:

Civil liability
Criminal allegations (theft / conversion)
Complicating PAWS enforcement
This is a key distinction.

Can the barn owner sell the horses?

No — not without PAWS or a court order.

In your fact pattern:
No board provided
No agister’s lien
No innkeeper’s lien
No court judgment

The barn owner does NOT have the legal authority to sell the horses.

Selling them without legal authority would be high risk and could expose the barn owner to serious legal consequences.

SO, HERE IS THE GOOD NEWS…

Can Animal Welfare Services of Ontario step in and seize the horses?

YES — and this is the correct pathway.

Under PAWS, Animal Welfare Services (AWS) can:

Attend the property

Assess welfare

Issue orders to the horse owner

Set deadlines for compliance or removal

Seize the horses if:

They are in distress

Orders are not complied with

The owner is absent, uncooperative, or refuses to act

The situation amounts to abandonment

Once AWS seizes the animals, they — not the barn owner — control disposition.

That may include:

Transfer to a rescue
Sale
Adoption
Long-term placement
Euthanasia (if medically necessary)

This protects the barn owner from liability.

What the barn owner can do (and should do)

Step-by-step safest route:

Terminate the barn rental in writing
Set a clear deadline for removal of horses
Document non-payment and non-compliance
Contact Animal Welfare Services (PAWS)

Advise PAWS that:

Horses are on your property
Rent is unpaid
Permission is revoked
You cannot assume care
You are concerned about welfare and liability

Do not sell or rehome the horses yourself

Cooperate fully with PAWS or police attendance

Why PAWS involvement matters

Once PAWS is involved:

The abandonment determination is legally grounded
The barn owner is shielded from accusations
The animals’ welfare is prioritized
Disposition is handled lawfully

This is exactly how the legislation is designed to work.

BOTTOM LINE: 

Unpaid rent alone ≠ automatic abandonment
Barn owner cannot sell the horses
PAWS can assess, order removal, and seize
Abandonment determinations belong to PAWS
Acting unilaterally creates risk
Calling PAWS protects everyone — especially the animals – OR at least it is designed to.

REFERENCES:

Provincial Animal Welfare Services Act, 2019 (S.O. 2019, c. 13)

Custodian definition and duties regarding animal distress and care.

Trespass to Property Act (R.S.O. 1990, c. T.21)

Authority to revoke permission and address unauthorized presence on private property.

Innkeepers Act (R.S.O. 1990, c. I.7)

Applies to inns/hotels providing lodging to the public — not private barn rentals without services.

Residential Tenancies Act, 2006 (S.O. 2006, c. 17)

Generally excludes agricultural and non-residential premises such as barns.

Legal Disclaimer

This article is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. The application of Ontario law depends on the specific facts and circumstances of each situation. Nothing in this article should be relied upon as a substitute for obtaining legal advice from a qualified lawyer licensed in Ontario.

KNOWN ALIASES OF STEPHANIE REDLICK

Stephanie Redlick hides behind numerous aliases, operating over 30 Facebook accounts and multiple Kijiji profiles under fake names.

Even though Redlick is facing criminal and animal welfare charges she's not stopped creating new profiles to attempt to publicly discredit anyone speaking out against her.

Sammy Redlick (December 2025)

Ontarios Shadiest Horse Dealers

(NOTE: the missing 's)

Stephanie Alessia

Sammy Zee (December 2025)

Madison Blake

Stephanie Okay

Professional Equine Sales (Nov. 2025)

SS Racing

Bella Mia Thoroughbreds

Stephanie Alessiia

Tyler Bowen (Sept. 2025)

Stephanie Stephanie

Stephanie Martin (July 2025)

S & L Cleaning Services

SBR Breeding & Equine Sales, LTD.

Healthy Equine Homeopathy

Healthy Horse Homeopathy

Stephanie Schwartz

Alicia Bloomberg

Summer Alessia

Sammy Red

Stephanie Kauffman

stephalessiaxo on SnapChat

Precision Stables

King Horse Transport & Hire

King Livestock Transportation

King Farms

Circle R Livestock

Sammy Srz/Sammy Szn (her father)

Mathew Crowe has purchased horses for Redlick.

Anna Koch

Silverbrook Farms

Ashley Watson

Silverbrook Meadows Stables

Simcoe Kennel Club

Rose Barton

Janice Wilson

Serena  @serena10457

Julie Hyde

Jane Smith

Madison O'Donald

Naomi Reid

Aless Stephanie

Alessia King

Above the Stars Equine Rescue (SCAM)

Under the Stars Equine Rescue

Stephanie Quickfall

HorseSales.com

Stephanie Schwartz

Doug Almira

Silverbrook Meadows

Carl Dickson

Jeff Lawson

Stephanie Redlick has more than a few phone numbers including:

226) 988-2005

(647) 220-3691 | (437) 600-7158 | (647) 695-3057 | (705) 998-7705 | (613) 263-0641 | (647) 797-0289 | (705) 315-0588 | (316) 746-8529 | (647) 474-4071 | (705) 535-0525 | (705) 300-0340 | (226) 988-6961 | * (416) 885-9422 | Sammy Redlick: (226) 988-2005 | Dec. 2025: (705) 370-6661 | (647) 365-1265 | (705) 995-3697 | (778) 400-0408 |

FAQ: How does Stephanie Redlick AKA Stephanie Alessia have so many phone numbers?

That's a GREAT question and one that the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) in British Columbia answered after it was reported to them that someone bought a horse from Redlick - that she promised to deliver and $10K later the horse was not delivered.

Later it was discovered that Redlick NEVER had the horse she "sold" in her possession - that the pictures she used were ones she simply found on the Internet.

The RCMP recognized where all the phone numbers came from - "A known service to be widely used by 'professional' scam artists". VERY cheap to secure phone numbers.

It is of course free to set up multiple Facebook profiles and multiple profiles on Kijiji, etc.

And Gmail email address are cheap and easy to set up - she has even more email addresses than phone numbers and fake names.

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

Stephanie Redlick's default tactic is to aggressively smear and discredit anyone who dares to expose the truth which only makes us more determined to raise awareness and demand accountability from Ontario’s Animal Welfare Services.

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.

BOUVRY HORSE SLAUGHTER PLANT CLOSED

BOUVRY HORSE SLAUGHTER PLANT CLOSED

SIGNS OF CHANGE BUT THE FIGHT IS NOT OVERThere are signs that Canada’s horse slaughter industry is shifting—and not a moment too soon. But while one door may be closing, others remain wide open. Here's what we know right now: 1. Bouvry’s (Horse) Slaughter Plant in...

read more
BAN LIVE EXPORT & DOMESTIC HORSE SLAUGHTER

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HELP BAN HORSE SLAUGHTER IN CANADA & BEYONDCanadians are horrified to see some countries eat dogs & cats, yet in Canada, in a largely unknown business, beloved horses are being tortured and killed for their meat for human consumption - INCLUDING pet horses.Every...

read more
STEPHANIE REDLICK CRIMINAL COURT APPEARANCES

STEPHANIE REDLICK CRIMINAL COURT APPEARANCES

STEPHANIE REDLICK APPEARED IN 2 CRIMINAL COURTS TODAY For over a year, Stephanie Redlick — also known as Stephanie Alessia AKA Stephanie Kauffman — has publicly claimed she has a ‘hot shot legal team’ preparing legal action against those who speak out about the...

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

DID YOU REPORT STEPHANIE REDLICK?

DID YOU REPORT STEPHANIE REDLICK?

HAVE YOU REPORTED ANIMAL NEGLECT OR ABUSE IN ONTARIO?

We need your help.

If you, at any time, reported concerns about the neglect of horses by Stephanie Redlick to Animal Welfare Services (AWS) or the Ontario Provincial Police (OPP), we want to hear from you.

Additionally, if you have ever reported any case of animal abuse or neglect in Ontario under the province’s new Animal Welfare System (which replaced the Ontario SPCA), and feel that AWS failed to take appropriate action, we encourage you to reach out.

NEED TO SPEAK WITH SOMEONE FIRST?  CALL (250) 801 8231

Your identity will remain completely confidential if required.

Please send an email to aws@banhorseslaughter.com with the following details:

1. Your name and contact information (this will remain confidential).

2. When you made the complaint (an estimate is fine).

3. What the complaint was about.

4.  How you reported it (phone, email, in-person, etc.).

5.  Who you contacted (AWS, OPP, or both).

By coming forward, you can help ensure accountability and better protection for animals in Ontario.

Thank you for speaking up for those who cannot speak for themselves.

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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