Carriage Driver Kicks Horse In Head After It Collapsed In Busy Road

By :
Krista Knight/Facebook

A carriage driver has been caught on camera kicking a horse that collapsed, telling it: ‘Get up, f*cking lazy b*tch.’ 

Advertisements

Veterinary nurse Krista Knight filmed the shocking footage in Melbourne, Australia, showing the fallen horse – named Tuesday – and the abusive carriage driver as the public surround him.

As the driver started to shoot at and hit the horse, witnesses begged him to stop, provoking him to lash out at those around him.

Advertisements
Advertising

Check out the video below (warning: some viewers may find content distressing): 

Knight posted the video to her Facebook account, which has been amassing a steady stream of views as people take to the comments to air their outrage, with one user writing: ‘The poor thing. What an arsehole.’

Knight wrote alongside the video: 

Kicking a horse is not okay. There were no negative comments only people trying to help. The carriage driver was abusive to civilians and also the this beautiful mare causing her to thrash and bleed from the mouth.

Krista Knight/Facebook

As Knight pleaded with the man to stop abusing the horse, trying to explain it couldn’t move as it was still attached to the carriage, the Unique Carriage Hire driver wrote: ‘Love, I know what I’m doing. Get out of the way.’

Advertisements

While the business’ owner, Dean Crichton, concedes that the driver shouldn’t have called the horse a ‘lazy b*tch’, he says there was no malice in the kick.

Advertising

Crichton told the MailOnline

He did not kick that horse with any malice, it was just a nudge like come on get up, like if your mate fell over outside the pub. Wayne lost his cool but it was a very stressful situation with everyone yelling at him. It was out of character for him to use language like that.

It would have been better if that vet had put her phone in her pocket and helped, and they would have got the horse up straight away.

Krista Knight/Facebook

Allegedly, Crichton recruited the driver 30 years ago from the streets, and trained him up under his wing. While ‘he’s not the sharpest, he can’t read or write’, he isn’t a ‘burden on society’, and ‘he loves horses and would never hurt them’.

Advertisements
Advertising

Crichton added: 

The horse just stumbled, she wasn’t hurt at all she just needed a bit of help to get up. The last time one of our horses stumbled was five years ago, you see more kids fall over in Federation Square in five minutes.

Tuesday was back at work the next day, having suffered no injuries in the incident.

If you have a story you want to tell send it to UNILAD via story@unilad.com