Andrew Joseph Haefele v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedOctober 18, 2022
Docket0508212
StatusPublished

This text of Andrew Joseph Haefele v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Andrew Joseph Haefele v. Commonwealth of Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrew Joseph Haefele v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Chief Judge Decker, Judges Beales and White PUBLISHED

Argued at Richmond, Virginia

ANDREW JOSEPH HAEFELE OPINION BY v. Record No. 0508-21-2 JUDGE RANDOLPH A. BEALES OCTOBER 18, 2022 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF SPOTSYLVANIA COUNTY Ricardo Rigual, Judge

James Joseph Ilijevich for appellant.

Leanna C. Minix, Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

Andrew J. Haefele appeals from an order of the Circuit Court of Spotsylvania County

convicting him of two counts of maliciously maiming the livestock of another, in violation of

Code § 18.2-144, and two counts of conspiring to maliciously maim the livestock of another.1

On appeal, Haefele contends that the trial court erred in convicting him of violating Code

§ 18.2-144 because he “acted with the permission and consent of the owner of the animals.” He

also contends that the trial court erred in convicting him of conspiring to maliciously maim the

livestock of another because “the Commonwealth failed to prove the underlying felony offense.”

I. BACKGROUND

“In accordance with familiar principles of appellate review, the facts will be stated in the

light most favorable to the Commonwealth, [as] the prevailing party at trial.” Gerald v.

Commonwealth, 295 Va. 469, 472 (2018) (quoting Scott v. Commonwealth, 292 Va. 380, 381

1 The trial court also convicted Haefele of one count of falsely identifying himself to a law enforcement officer, a misdemeanor, and two counts of possession of a Schedule I or II controlled substance. Haefele did not appeal these convictions. (2016)). So viewed, Halie Morgan owned two small goats and kept them on her property in

Spotsylvania County. In May 2020, following several complaints from neighbors, Dena

Slingerland—a Code Enforcement Officer for the Spotsylvania County Zoning Office—

informed Morgan that “the keeping of livestock is a non-permitted use” on her property, given its

zoning. Slingerland instructed Morgan to promptly remove the goats from her property and

offered her assistance in relocating the goats.

On June 18, 2020, C.P.,2 Morgan’s neighbor, saw Morgan and three men—later

identified as Andrew Haefele, Donald Compton, and Charles McKinney—inside Morgan’s goat

pen. C.P. testified that she saw a man in a white shirt (later identified as Haefele) swinging

“what looked like a two-by-four with spikes wrapped around it” at the goats “as if it was a bat.”

While Haefele “continued to swing at the goats,” C.P. saw Morgan order her two dogs to attack

the goats, and she observed McKinney standing “a little further back.” C.P. also observed

Compton recording the brutal attack on his cell phone, and C.P. herself recorded on her cell

phone some of what she was viewing.

Another neighbor, M.J., also “heard a ruckus out back” and observed “someone swinging

some sort of object” in Morgan’s backyard. He reported the group’s activities to “Spotsylvania

County law enforcement,” and a short time later, Deputy A. Mele of the Spotsylvania County

Sheriff’s Office arrived at Morgan’s property. Deputy Mele spoke with McKinney and Compton

and informed them that the Sheriff’s Office had received a “complaint about the goats on the

property being hit with possible sticks or poles.” When the deputy asked them what had

happened to the goats, McKinney claimed “[t]hat the goats had been picked up that morning” by

a disposal company. The deputy then left without conducting a search of the property.

2 We use initials for each of Morgan’s neighbors in an effort to better protect their privacy. -2- Deputy Mele then spoke with Morgan’s neighbors. C.P. showed the deputy cell phone

video footage that she had taken of what had just occurred with the goats. After viewing this

footage, Deputy Mele became “worried that there were injured animals” in Morgan’s backyard and

returned to Morgan’s property. Deputy Mele spoke with Compton and McKinney again and this

time also spoke with Morgan, who also claimed that a disposal company had picked up the goats

that morning. Morgan consented to a search of her property. During the deputies’ search of the

property, they “found two deceased goats” in two separate locations—each of which was

covered.

A subsequent search of Compton’s cell phone revealed several videos depicting the

group’s attack on the goats.3 In one video, Haefele had armed himself with a “spiked mace,”

which is essentially a wooden club with metal spikes protruding from one end. He violently

swung the weapon at one of the goats, but he missed the goat and struck a wooden structure

instead. As the goat ran from Haefele, Compton exclaimed, “Strike one! That woulda taken its

head right off, dude!” Haefele then instructed Compton to hand him some goat feed and poured

it on the ground. As the goats ate, Haefele swung at and hit one of the goats with the spiked

club, which caused both goats to flee. Haefele continued to seek out opportunities to hit the

goats by again attempting to lure them toward him.

As also recorded on the video, Morgan suggested that they just let her dogs kill the goats

instead, to which Compton exclaimed, “That’s awesome! That’s Animal Cruelty 101!” Morgan

then got the dogs agitated, released them into the goat pen, and repeatedly encouraged the dogs

to “get ‘em.” The dogs chased the goats for approximately five minutes but did not kill the

goats. Even as the dogs chased the goats, Haefele continued to move around the pen and hit the

goats with the spiked club. At one point, Compton instructed Haefele “to go after the weak one”

3 The Commonwealth entered the videos taken from Compton’s cell phone into evidence at trial without objection. -3- and exclaimed that the goat had “too much pep left in his step.” When one of the goats climbed

onto a wooden structure in the goat pen, Haefele took the opportunity to strike it with the spiked

club—knocking the goat to the ground. One of the men joked, “That was his homerun swing

right there!” Throughout the attack on the goats, the group can be heard gleefully making jokes

and laughing about causing the goats’ injuries and suffering.

After several blows from the spiked club and several minutes of being chased by

Morgan’s dogs, Morgan lamented that the goats just would not die. Compton offered to retrieve

his shotgun from the nearby house, but he did not ultimately retrieve it. In a second video,

McKinney grabbed one of the goats and slashed at the goat’s neck with a machete4 until it could

no longer run away. The goat bleated and writhed as it died. In a third video, Haefele grabbed

hold of the other goat, pinned it down, and repeatedly struck at the goat’s neck with a machete.

Despite numerous blows, the goat was still breathing so McKinney approached and cut its throat

with a knife.

Haefele, Compton, McKinney, and Morgan were tried jointly in a bench trial on January

6, 2021. At trial, Dr. Jaime Weisman testified as an “expert in veterinary pathology and

forensics.” She testified that she performed a necropsy on the two goats. During the necropsies,

she observed that one goat had “a minimum of four chop wounds to the neck and the head” and

that the other goat had “a minimum of six chop wounds” to the neck and back of the head. She

testified that “the chop wounds are gonna be the root cause” of the goats’ deaths, but that she

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