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Originally published February 4, 2025.
Updated February 7, 2025.
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.
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.
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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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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How can Stephanie Redlick AKA Stephanie Alessia still have access to horses after
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
& 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.
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
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.
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.
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...
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...
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.
Recently, Stephanie Redlick posted the following statement about Animal Welfare Services.
Let’s take it line by line — and match claims to facts.
Stephanie Redlick AKA Stephanie Alessia you are most definitely entitled to disagree.
What you’re not entitled to do is rewrite reality after enforcement action has already occurred — lawfully, documented, and upheld.
Disagreement does not invalidate seizures.
It does not erase charges.
And it does not undo forfeiture orders.
Or your bill of over $116,000.
“There are animals in distress, and your actions seem to undermine our farming operations.”
Interesting choice of words.
Since November 11, 2025, the horses currently connected to you have been moved three or is it four times, across rented properties.
That is not a “farming operation.”
That is instability.
Oh wait, are you finally admitting that animals are in distress who are under your care?
Your horses were definitely in distress when Animal Welfare Services (AWS) seizured 16 horses in your so called ‘care’ back in February of 2025.
You seem to forget that charges were laid because animals were already in distress.
And that thousands of citizens in Ontario reached out to those at Animal Welfare Services to complain that those seizures were taking way too long.
“We take pride in maintaining high-quality livestock.”
Then let’s talk about outcomes.
– Permanent forfeiture ordered
– Multiple animal neglect charges
– Over $116,000 owed for their care
“High-quality livestock management” does not end in seizure, forfeiture, and six-figure care costs billed to you but will likely ultimately have to be paid by the taxpayers of Ontario.
That’s not pride.
That’s a paper trail.
“…our family farm…”
Family farm?
In your dreams.
There is no family farm.
There is no owned farm property.
There are 3 rented locations in under two months.
3 addresses is not agriculture.
Oh but wait we say ‘rented’ but have you fully paid for any of those property rentals?
It’s eviction roulette.
“…allegations of misconduct and theft amounting to millions of dollars.”
This is where projection enters the chat.
Stephanie Redlick you are currently facing:
– Criminal fraud and theft charges laid May 2025, as reported by CTV News
– Additional fraud charges laid December 2025, again, as reported by CTV News
– Multiple animal animal neglect charges
Calling enforcement “the biggest crime in Ontario history” while standing in criminal court is bold — we’ll give you that.
Accuracy, however, remains elusive.
“I would like to connect with others who have interacted with Animal Welfare Services…”
Translation:
“I would like to crowdsource grievance.”
Anecdotes do not override statutory authority.
Nor do they erase inspection findings, veterinary reports, or court decisions.
“We are currently involved in a class-action lawsuit…”
This one deserves special attention.
Real class actions against Ontario:
– Are brought by major law firms
– Involve multiple plaintiffs
– Require independent evidence
– Demand deep financing
– Take years of litigation planning
What they are not:
– Facebook announcements
– Books and movies “in motion”
– Single defendants in criminal court who brag that they more than qualify for legal aid
– Claims without named plaintiffs, counsel, or court filings
– A lone defendant with seized animals and six-figure care costs is not a “class.”
That’s not litigation.
That’s attempted posturing.
“…anticipate releasing video evidence…”
Please do.
AND funny you should mention that – we have so many more pictures and videos that have of course been given to the authorities and that we will release to the press and public just before you go to trial.
Courts love evidence.
They’re less impressed by trailers, teasers, or cinematic universes — but actual footage?
That belongs in an evidence brief.
We look forward to your version of Exhibit A.
“Effective farm management is crucial… having grown up on a farm…”
Let’s review what YOUR “professional farm management” looked like in practice:
– Horses standing ankle-deep in manure
– Little to no shelter (for the majority)
– Minimal hay — mouldy, strings still attached
– Open wounds
– Hooves desperately overdue for trimming
– Horses reduced to skin and bone
Experience doesn’t excuse neglect.
If anything, it removes plausible deniability.
“I extend my deepest condolences to all taxpayers of Ontario…”
On this point, we agree.
Taxpayers are footing the bill for:
– Emergency seizures
– Long-term care
– Veterinary intervention
– Enforcement costs
All of which were entirely preventable.
“Our books & movies are in motion…”
By all means — release them.
Just remember:
In court, fiction doesn’t carry any weight.
This is not persecution.
And it certainly isn’t a class action.
It’s a documented case of animal neglect, financial instability, and criminal charges — wrapped in confident storytelling.
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)
Sammy Zee (December 2025)
Stephanie Okay
Professional Equine Sales (Nov. 2025)
SS Racing
Bella Mia Thoroughbreds
Stephanie Alessiia
Tyler Bowen (Sept. 2025)
Stephanie Stephanie
S & L Cleaning Services
SBR Breeding & Equine Sales, LTD.
Healthy Equine Homeopathy
Healthy Horse Homeopathy
Stephanie Schwartz
Alicia Bloomberg
Summer Alessia
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 |
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.
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.
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...
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...
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.
This recording is being shared as a public-warning voice sample, so others can recognize the voice, language, and intimidation tactics used by Stephanie Redlick AKA Stephanie Alessia — particularly important given the repeated use of aliases and rotating phone numbers.
More importantly, it preserves what was said at the time, before later versions of events were asserted by Redlick.
(A brief case study in things that did NOT happen)
In the February 7, 2025 voicemail ABOVE, Stephanie Redlick confidently warned that:
– The Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) would seize horses from Crystal
– A volunteer (Celia) would face harsh criminal trespassing charges
– Redlick’s attorneys would “see you (Crystal) in court”
Bold predictions. Very dramatic.
Also… completely wrong.
This phrase appears repeatedly in communications attributed to Redlick and is used as an intimidation tactic.
However, in criminal court on December 18, 2025, Redlick clearly stated:
“I’ve applied to legal aid several times… Financially, I am capable of getting it.”
This statement sits in stark contrast to ongoing claims of a “hot-shot legal team.”
it is also important to note that in the voicemail, Redlick refers to the horses as “the horses that we have donated to you.”
That matters, because she later claimed the horses were stolen — and later still claimed Crystal owed $20,000 for them.
All three stories cannot be true.
One of the four horses donated – in Redlick’s own words – by Redlick – to Crystal — Seattle Sunrise — was in such severe condition that equine specialists warned he might not survive. He was later humanely euthanized after thousands were spent attempting to save him.
Despite the voicemail’s certainty, the OPP never seized the horses from Crystal.
The three surviving horses remain safely in Crystal’s care, lawfully placed, and untouched by police.
Apparently the OPP did not receive the memo.
Celia was not arrested.
She was not charged.
She was not prosecuted for trespassing — ‘harshly’ or otherwise.
The only criminal courtroom activity that followed this voicemail involved Stephanie Redlick facing TWO sets of multiple criminal charges.
While Celia and Crystal went on with their lives, as CTV News reported — Redlick has been seen in criminal court – multiple times.
According to CTV News, Redlick appeared in court accused of:
Fraud totaling more than $26,000
Theft over $5,000
Making forged documents
False pretenses with intent to defraud using livestock worth more than $5,000
In a separate report, CTV News confirms that South Simcoe Police Service charged Redlick with:
Uttering a forged document
Fraud over $5,000
Possession of proceeds of crime
Forgery
Court documents allege she passed off an altered cheque to defraud a livestock auction house in Cookstown of more than $15,000.
❌ No horses were seized from Crystal
❌ No volunteer was charged
❌ No trespassing prosecution against Celia happened
✅ Redlick was arrested (at least TWICE)
✅ Redlick faces multiple criminal fraud and forgery charges
✅ Redlick also faces animal welfare charges after 16 horses in HER so call ‘care’ were seized
It turns out the only person whose legal situation escalated after this voicemail…
was the person who left it – AKA Miss 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)
Sammy Zee (December 2025)
Stephanie Okay
Professional Equine Sales (Nov. 2025)
SS Racing
Bella Mia Thoroughbreds
Stephanie Alessiia
Tyler Bowen (Sept. 2025)
Stephanie Stephanie
S & L Cleaning Services
SBR Breeding & Equine Sales, LTD.
Healthy Equine Homeopathy
Healthy Horse Homeopathy
Stephanie Schwartz
Alicia Bloomberg
Summer Alessia
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 |
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.
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.
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...
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...
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.
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.
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).
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.
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.
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.
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.
– 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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
& 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.
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.
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.
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.
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...
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...
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.
Stephanie Redlick AKA Stephanie Alessia continues to juggle an impressive number of legal problems.
INCLUDING 2 SETS OF CRIMINAL CHARGES – learn more here.
But those charges have not slowed the professional scammer down one little bit.
On December 14, Stephanie Redlick under the alias Stephanie Alessia took to her personal social media to brag about her “great hay,” posting photos of ONE bale (that many commented didn’t look like anything they’d want to feed their horses – or be bragging about) and Redlick was lamenting that it wasn’t available to the public — at least not yet.
According to Redlick, the reason was simple: once she bought “more land,” then quality hay could be grown and then sold.
That claim about owning or buying more alone raises an obvious question:
More land than what, exactly?
To date, there is no publicly known land owned by Stephanie Redlick.
No farm.
No acreage.
No hay fields.
Yet here she was, casually suggesting expansion — as if she were some established agricultural operation temporarily limited by space.
Then there’s the timing.
This post appeared in mid-December — the dead of winter in Canada. After weeks of snow, ice, and severe storms. Fields are frozen. Harvest season is long over. Hay does not suddenly appear 2 weeks later – end of December.
Unless, of course, Redlick has discovered a way to turn water into wine — and snow into hay.
Fast forward just two weeks.
Now the story has changed.
Suddenly, Stephanie Redlick is advertising hay for sale.
No announcement of newly purchased land.
No explanation.
Just hay — now magically available.
This wouldn’t be noteworthy if it weren’t for the broader pattern.
At the same time Redlick has been telling the court she is “more than eligible for legal aid,” she is also presenting herself online as someone with assets, inventory, and an agricultural operation capable of producing and selling feed.
Those two narratives do not sit comfortably together.
Either she is financially destitute and qualifies for legal aid — or she is a land-owning, hay-selling operator with surplus product to sell. Both cannot be true at the same time.
And the attempted scams don’t stop there.
Yes, believe it or not – Redlick is now also claiming to have horse boarding space available, including in Milton, Ontario, and potentially other locations depending on which post you happen to see on any given social media or online marketing platform on any given day.
Again, there are no verifiable details.
No stable name.
No address.
No property records.
No photos of facilities she actually owns or operates.
Instead, Redlick again under the alias Stephanie Alessia – is using photos of a barn she does not own (which by the way is NOT in Milton) to advertise this supposed boarding.
That barn belongs to a property owner who accepted Redlick’s 2 horses based on a post-dated cheque provided to cover stable rental with self board for two horses.
That cheque of Redlick’s and her father – has since bounced.
In other words, the very images now being used to advertise “boarding available” come from a situation where payment was not made – that Redlick no longer has access to.
That barn owner has an interesting set of options that ultimately could easily result in Redlick losing the two horses. Learn more here.
Oh, and we’ll be paying attention on January 8th with Redlick is once again to appear in criminal court on theft and fraud charges.
Stephanie Redlick AKA Stephanie Alessia and her father Sammy Redlick’s behaviour is that of professional scammers.
Buyer beware.
Please share and warn others.
Many people do not realize that Stephanie Alessia is Stephanie Redlick – or that her father is involved as well – and that gap in knowledge is exactly what puts potential human and equine victims at risk.
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.
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...
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...
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.