Horse switch probe rocks carriage debate

A carriage horse returns to the Clinton Park Horse Stables on Sunday, March 9, 2014. Credit: Charles Eckert
A city investigation into a Central Park carriage-horse driver accused of trying to pass off an older horse with a breathing ailment as a healthy one half its age created fresh uproar Tuesday in the debate over the industry's future.
City health officials in March alleged driver Frank Luo of Staten Island altered a hoof ID number in order to present a 22-year-old horse as a 12-year-old one, The Associated Press reported, citing documents from a Freedom of Information request.
Luo Tuesday told Newsday he "never switched the horses" and claimed a city veterinarian conducting an inspection confused the two horses because they're the same breed and color.
Dan Mathews, senior vice president of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, said the incident shows a ban is warranted.
"These people can't be trusted," he said. "They've been singing this song and dance over the last few months, pretending they love their horses so much."
Demos Demopoulos, secretary-treasurer of Teamsters Local 553, the carriage drivers' union that opposes a ban, said of Luo:
"If he's found guilty of these accusations, he should be punished to the fullest extent of the law." But Demopoulos said the city's probe proves that "the regulations work."
A separate probe by the consumer affairs department is continuing, agency spokeswoman Abigail Lootens said.
Both Mathews and Demopoulos went to City Hall Tuesday to lobby City Council members, most of whom a Newsday survey has found are either against a ban or undecided. Mayor Bill de Blasio has called for a ban, but no council bill has been introduced.
PETA was accompanied by a Tulsa, Okla., couple who were visiting the city last week when they witnessed a carriage horse accident near Central Park.
Stefanie Sinclair and Rodger Curlik, 31, said after a bus spooked the horse, its carriage flipped over, pulling the horse to the ground.
The carriage drivers at the scene didn't unhitch the horse and became angry when Sinclair took photos, she said.
"Their reaction was: we don't want people knowing about this," Curlik said.
The couple told their story to several council members, including Stephen Levin (D-Brooklyn). He called it "compelling" but said he still has to study the issue further.
Councilman Costa Constantinides (D-Queens), a ban foe, said the fallen horse -- 12-year-old Spartacus -- was treated afterward and found to be healthy.
With Matthew Chayes
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