Washakie Countyâs top prosecutor has probable cause to keep prosecuting a local man accused of tormenting his own dog with six shots from a 9 mm pistol, a judge ruled Thursday.
Donald âDudleyâ Wayne Wright, 59, of Worland was charged in February with cruelty to animals, using a gun to commit a felony, property destruction, two counts of breach of peace and three counts of stalking.
His case is now headed to the felony-level Washakie County District Court, where he may go to trial or establish a plea agreement.
Wright is accused of going into his back yard while drunk the night of Jan. 13, to shoot a 5-to-7-month old border-collie mix named Axel, after the dog ate Wrightâs heart medication and tore up his house outside the town of Worland. Some bullets remain in Axel's body, and he has a plate in his jaw, among other injuries, his new guardian told Cowboy State Daily prior.
Wrightâs attorney H. Richard Hopkinson argued at the manâs Thursday preliminary hearing in Worland Circuit Court that the state doesnât have probable cause to keep prosecuting Wright on two felony charges â because Wright was merely trying to put his own dog down.
âThe fact is that his intent was to put the dog down because of what it had done,â said Hopkinson. âThe fact that he was a lousy shot doesnât mean that he hadnât made the attempt to put the dog down, and he wanted to stop any continued suffering by finishing killing the dog.â
Court documents say Wright shot the dog in his yard, then chased it to a next-door home of which heâs part-owner but in which he does not live and tried shooting it through the floorboards of a porch. Then he went into his home.
In the night, a woman who lives in the next-door house took the dog to the vet, and when Wright tried to find it the next morning to finish it off, he could not, the case affidavit says.
Hopkinson tried to verify in court that Axel, who has since been adopted by a local woman, was Wrightâs dog. The deputy testifying said he wasnât sure if it was Wrightâs dog.
âThatâs Tortureâ
At some point Wright also told investigators that the dog had been attacking chickens. Washakie County Attorney Tony Barton rebutted that in Wrightâs Thursday preliminary hearing, saying there werenât chickens or chicken corpses found in the yard or home that day.
Barton also countered Hopkinsonâs reasoning, saying the first felony with which Wright is charged â cruelty to animals â doesnât fall apart if the person was trying to kill an animal.
The statute applies to someone who, while intending to kill an animal or make it suffer unduly, beats it with cruelty, tortures, torments or mutilates it.
Barton argued that Wrightâs conduct fits that language, because even if he was intending to put the dog down, he did it in a way that caused âtorture.â
âHe didnât shoot it once in the head, he apparently took it out into a darkened back yard at 9 oâclock at night in January, and had at it with a 9 mm,â said Barton. The dog hid under a porch, according to court testimony and a documented blood trail, said Barton.
âHe didnât get a flashlight, look under the porch, aim and shoot the dog,â the prosecutor continued. âThe defendant went on top of the porch and fired wildly through the floorboards⌠Just fired wildly at the dog. Thatâs torture.â
Defendants charged with animal cruelty can defend themselves by saying they fall under certain exceptions to the charge, such as humanely destroying an animal, or managing livestock.
If Wright wants to argue to a jury in the felony-level court that he was defending chickens he may do so, said Barton, who nevertheless called that theory into doubt.
Going Up
Worland Circuit Court Judge Edward G. Luhm said regardless of who owned the dog, the evidence in this case bears enough probable cause to get the case to the higher court.
Thatâs not a finding of guilt: only of enough evidence to let the prosecution continue.
â(Axel was) shot multiple times in a non-lethal manner, but a serious manner, over a course of time,â said Luhm.
The count of felony cruelty to animals is punishable by up to two years in prison and a fine of $5,000. Wrightâs second felony charge of using a gun while committing a felony, carries a penalty of up to 10 years in prison and $10,000 in fines.
Luhm said the gun charge also had enough evidence behind it to rise to the higher court, and the misdemeanor charges will follow as a matter of course.
The remaining six charges are all misdemeanors. They are:
Property destruction (punishable by up to six months in jail and $750 in fines)
Two counts of breach of peace (up to six months and $750 each)
Three counts of stalking (up to one year and $750 each).
The stalking charges stem from claims that while hunting for Axel, Wright harassed the women who live in the home next door.
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.







