Excerpt from New Haven Register, June 4, 1998
By Lynn Fredricksen
Register Staff
The death of a steer at a weekend benefit rodeo in Guilford has prompted
Special Olympics Connecticut to adopt a policy stating the organization won't
participate in fund-raising rodeos in the future.
Members of the executive committee of the board of directors for Special
Olympics made the decision Tuesday night, spokeswoman Karen Brand said.
The rodeo, sponsored by the Guilford Police Benevolent Association, also
benefited the Make-A-Wish Foundation. Officials from the organization could
not be reached for comment Wednesday.
"We took this incident very seriously and decided rodeos are not an
appropriate vehicle for fund raising," said Karen Brand, public relations
director for Special Olympics Connecticut, in Hamden.
The steer, estimated to be about 1 to 1 ½ years old, was injured during a
rodeo event in which cowboys were required to flip the animals onto its back.
When the steer remained standing, the cowboys grabbed it by the horns and
twisted the head sharply, sending the steer to the dirt.
The action broke its neck, according to Andy Camputaro, who owns Double R
World Championship Rodeo, the company featured at the event.
Camputaro, who says the steer died before a veterinarian could reach him,
claims the animal did not suffer.