Dustin Kittle Profile picture
Apr 29 9 tweets 15 min read Read on X
THE REAL KRISTI NOEM STORY AND WHY THIS RANCHER CALLS BULLSHIT:

I was born on a cattle and poultry farm — I have spent the majority of my life living on the farm — and I currently have a ranch in Tennessee with cattle, horses, and sheep — and what I am here to tell you is that Kristi Noem was wrong.

From the time I could crawl, I’ve been around hunting dogs — my dad raised treeing walkers and we currently have a treeing walker and a German shorthair pointer bird dog on the farm with us now.

I am neither a Republican nor a Democrat and have limited knowledge of Noem’s political dealings — I base my opinion on her own words in describing what was done; words that many people supporting her decision have not read.

As a rancher and an agricultural attorney, I 100% support the right of farmers and ranchers to protect their stock, including the use of deadly force on any animal, dog or otherwise, who is attempting to kill the stock — or poultry, as it was in this case.

But contrary to the false narratives being posited on this site, that is not what occurred in this case.

In the quotes published to date, Noem spends a fraction of the time in addressing the poultry incident, while attempting to justify her actions by opining on the dog’s hunting abilities.

The dog in question was a 14-month old German wire-haired pointer, a bird dog in training to hunt pheasant. Noem had taken the dog on a hunt with some older dogs to help train her but said the dog ruined the hunt with her overexuberance and puppy-like behavior.

On the way home from the hunt, Noem stopped by a friend’s house; however, Noem or someone else from her party apparently did not latch the kennel, and the young dog got out, got in with the neighbor’s chickens and began taking one bite at a time to kill each chicken, then moved on to the next one.

I have seen that exact behavior previously from young hunting dogs with chickens, to include our own GSP. That is not a blood-thirsty killer, but is in fact a condition of curiosity in most any dog’s behavior who finds themselves face-to-face the first time in a pen of chickens.

If Noem’s friend had walked inside her home, grabbed her deer rifle, and shot Cricket right between the eyes before she killed another of her chickens, that is an act I would fully support and is an act that is allowed under the law.

And while that is the scenario some are screaming in support of regarding Noem, it is not at all what occurred in this case.

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To dispel another myth being posited by those who have not examined the facts, the first quote attributed to Noem in relation to the dog having ever bit a person came yesterday — and I would surmise it was included in the release to add a legal defense.

Let me explain.

The only reference to the young dog and biting a person came in the quote in which Noem said the dog “whipped around to bite me.” Unlike the positions made defending Noem, there is no evidence the dog had bit anyone, lest Noem would have said, the dog whipped around and bit me.

It may be semantics in some people’s mind, but the plain reading suggests otherwise. And even still, the dog’s actions do not approach the standard for euthanasia under the State’s “vicious” dog statute.

I would add this — if the rationale for Noem’s shortsighted decision was about protecting livestock, it would matter not, for her to offer, that she was “worthless as a hunting dog”. It’s simply a tell on Noem’s part to draw a distinction, implying the dog might not have suffered the same fate if it was a promising hunter.

In her statement made yesterday, Noem, like those supporting her acts being the way of life on the farm, referenced South Dakota’s statutory exemption for killing dogs “found chasing, worrying, injuring or killing poultry or domestic animals.”

The word “found” is integral to the statute’s interpretation, as its inclusion creates a plain reading that negates the interpretation that you may kill dogs who have chased, worried, injured, or killed poultry or domestic animals. And the distinction is an important one, which implies the exemption is one of present circumstances to stop a wayward dog in the act of chasing or killing — in order to protect poultry or livestock.

A review and analysis of a national survey of cases on similar statutes backs up the law’s plain reading, as a North Carolina court in the 2019 case of State v. Barnett delineates in whether the dog was killed in hot blood, so to speak, or at a later time, in cold blood; while finding the latter to indeed be an illegal act.

In that instance, a neighbor’s dogs had attacked the individual’s stock, and a few hours after the incident had taken place, the owner of the stock drove down the road and ran over and killed the dogs while they were on another property.

Now that act clearly may have moral justification to it if all of the facts are considered, but the court said the only fact that mattered was whether the defendant had intentionally ran over the dogs in cold blood or whether it was simply an accident.

The defendant pled it was unintentional and was acquitted on appeal for violating the law, as the court lacked evidence to prove, conclusively, that it was intentional.

Noem presents a different case.

Keep in mind that her dog, by all accounts, had never bothered stock or poultry previously, and did so in this case because it was taken to a farm with chickens, after a hunt, and its owner negligently left open the kennel to allow a young dog and the group of chickens to get together.

But make no mistake, Noem shot the dog, with a shotgun I might add, sometime later — both intentionally and in cold blood.

Noem drove the dog back to her home; certainly angered by what had just transpired, and perhaps realizing the part she played in allowing the hunting dog to get in with chickens.

She then leashed the dog up,walked it to a gravel pit — and with the dog having acted on instinct alone and having no cognizant awareness at that moment as to what was even going on — she executed it.

It’s not inconsequential that she did so with a shotgun rather than a rifle; perhaps using bird shot, with it following the hunt — and the little thought given as to whether the dog would suffer due to that callous selection or her profound ignorance.

Now read the last 12 words of the statutory exemption allowing a person to kill a dog in South Dakota in the protection of poultry or stock.

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As to the livestock exemption, such a law allows property owners to take matters into their own hands; a point I wholeheartedly agree with, as a farmer or rancher has a duty to protect the animals entrusted to their care.

And in those last 12 words of the South Dakota statute, much clarity is given to the statutory intent, implying that the dog may not be shot on the owner’s own property.

That is because the protection of the livestock exemption is one from a defensive posture, again to take care of an individual’s own stock, lest the individual is the dog’s owner.

What the State of South Dakota appears to take in its statute is the common sense position that a dog’s owner may not be entitled to use deadly force against a dog who is chasing stock on their own property; seemingly implying that, if that dog is chasing stock, then we know who is to blame — and that owner has a duty to control their dog by training them, penning them, or giving them to someone else who can — but a dog is protected from execution by its own owner’s failure(s).

The language further covers the facts at hand, although clearly, it was not contemplated that someone who retrieved their dog to stop a present situation at another’s property — a property that didn’t 14-month old German wire-haired point did not drive itself to that day — would bring it back home and shoot it, and cite this statute to defend themselves.

Now while Noem has suggested the incident took place as far back as 20 years ago, it is possible she may get a legal reprieve due to the passage of time since the act; but to avail a procedural defense has nothing at all to do with the substantive facts.

And that is where the goat comes in.

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Goats are one of the few species of livestock that I have not successfully raised.

When I was about 4 years old, my grandparents had goats and thought it would be a good idea to grab one out of the pasture and let me lead it at the junior goat show at the County Fair. As it would turn out, the goat, named Hammer Jack, was not ready for his primetime debut quite yet, and neither was I, as we took turns dragging each other around the ring.

My next goat venture came about 30 years later when I purchased the goats below — Registered Kiko mates we named Heart and Soul.

Six months after, I called the seller and offered for him to keep the money I had paid for them and I would throw in a sack of feed on top of it if I could bring them back to him.

If you are considering getting goats, check first to see if your fences will hold water — if they will, they might be able to hold a goat.

Based upon the quotes from Kristi Noem, it appears we were about on the same level of knowledge when it came to raising goats.

A relevant note is made up front in that Noem’s goat was an intact Billy or Buck — and it does not appear that it was some prized breeding piece, which leads me to this advice: If you have a male sheep or goat, who is not a breeding piece, and particularly if you have children, you should castrate it for a number of reasons ranging from sanitation to risk of injury.

We have 14 mature Bulls in our Herd Sire lineup, but it is our 2 Rams in our sheep flock who I keep the closest eye on, as mature male sheep or goats can become quite ornery and they can hurt you, without question.

I don’t know why Kristi Noem had an intact goat on her farm and I’m not sure why she allowed her children in with what appears to be a mature billy; but those decisions, without relation, explain the goat’s stench.

A male goat will have urine on its beard, its front legs, and its chest, in a mating instinct that goes back as long as goats have been around.

That likely explains to Noem why her goat stunk.

She then implies the goat was knocking her children down, not causing any physical harm it seems, but getting their clothes dirty.

Again, this entire situation underscores how little Noem, and those who support her actions, know about raising livestock.

A young child should never be in a pen with a male goat or sheep who has not been castrasted, as they will display breeding and territorial instincts that could cause harm, or even death, to a child by being rammed, with a child right at their level to get injured. If you intend to keep back a male goat or sheep, castrate it to eliminate those instincts for the safety of your kids, or keep those male sheep or goats in a secure pen; if they are not in to breed your females at the time.

Kristi Noem killed her bird dog after the incident with the chickens, that was caused by her own negligence. Noem then went straight out to the pasture, got the goat in question, who by all accounts was minding its business doing what goats do, and she brought it back to the gravel pit and she shot it too.

The goat, apparently outsmarting Noem, jumped just as she shot; leaving it maimed by the shotgun blast and suffering until she could retrieve another shotgun shell to finish the goat off, who had the misfortune of drawing Noem’s ire on the day she was executing animals.

And note the quote from Noem’s daughter; who if the math adds up was around 7 years old at the time. She got off her school bus and asked where Cricket, the GSP, was — to show this dog was no aggressive menace her children feared, but that it was instead the victim of Noem’s own stupidity and temper.

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Now I would be remiss if I failed to mention that Noem’s initial response, which is likely all that most of her supporters cared to read, noted she killed her pheasant-hunting dog in training and the stinking goat, because that’s just how farmers handle business.

Bullshit.

And that’s where I come into this, as I consider myself a farmer and a rancher, and the last thing I want is for the American public to believe that its farmers and ranchers are a bunch of ignorant savages, although I’ll admit that I’m covering for the ones amongst us who are.

But, in a scenario I’ll admit is short on facts, Noem makes clear that she has extended her death warrants to three elderly horses in recent weeks.

The likelihood of three horses being in need of euthanasia at the exact same snapshot in time is next to impossible, and I hope you’ll forgive me for not giving Noem the benefit of the doubt given her prior acts.

I have heard of two elderly horses being euthanized together if the time for one of them was done and the other may mourn their loss without any other companion. There is a level of compassion in that decision that is certainly understandable, relatable, and if handled in the proper manner, moral.

The story on Noem’s horses, and their respective condition at the time of euthanasia, should be examined in more depth. But I will say that she somehow found a way to dig her hole down even further than she was.

It also jumps off the page to me to see Noem attempt to capitalize on the buzz created by her actions by encouraging folks who to buy her book to hear more “real, honest, and politically incorrect stories.”

With respect to that I’ll say this, no one thinks you’re tough for killing a defenseless animal. There are times on a farm that, due to suffering or circumstance, animals must be put down, often for their own benefit.

The fact that Kristi Noem seeks the protection of the types of decisions which must be made on a farm as a justification for her actions should be offensive to every farmer or rancher who takes seriously their responsibility and commitment to the animals entrusted to their care.

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And finally, Noem took one last shot yesterday to, first, promote her book and, second, to reshape the facts.

She even gets in a reference to her leadership during Covid, which I’m sure was stellar, but is of no consequence to the firestorm that she has single-handedly created.

She then states she makes the best decisions for the people in her life, apparently including killing those animals who may create, for her, an inconvenience or embarrassment.

Noem further suggests that she followed the law — otherwise known as a gaslighting attempt to keep her supporters cheering her on, without taking the time to consider that her actions fall outside of the statutory exemptions for protection of stock.

Which is why, likely through her legal team, she included yesterday, for the first time I have seen it in print, a new allegation — that Cricket bit people.

I would surmise that would have been a leading fact to reveal in her decision to kill the dog, following the return to her property after the hunt — and would be much more relevant than the dog’s hunting prowess, or lack thereof, per Noem’s evaluation.

Noem closes by saying the easy way isn’t always the right way; and on that astute point, we do agree.

If you review my mentions, you will find plenty of vitriol over this issue, with references to bleeding hearts and a lack of my understanding on what it really means to be a farmer and a rancher in this world. And that’s ok, because I am secure in who I am; and I won’t shy away from something when I believe it is right.

I have had some say this will alienate me from the farming community — and serve as a detriment to my legal action demanding President Biden to appoint a full Farm Credit Board.

I do not care.

I act and I speak on my beliefs as to what is right and what is wrong; and I’ve always tried to be a voice for those who may not have one.

The truth is there are some amongst us in the farming community who want a license to do as they please on their own land, and I understand that to a point — but when Kristi Noem makes the case that her story is just a part of the same farm life I have grown up in and lived, I must speak up, lest, by association, others may relate the life I live to hers.

My Dad was a dedicated farmer and rancher until he passed away 10 years ago. He hated to see any person or any animal mistreated.

I’m not perfect by any means; and I fall short as to my own patience at times in handling stock — but the general population in this country covets empathy and honesty; and I do not want there to be a trust lost there as to what the farmer believes.

Kristi Noem does not speak for me — and she does not share in what I believe when it comes to what it means to be a farmer or a rancher — instead, she’s a reckless cowboy, or as it turns out here, a reckless cowgirl — and we are not the same.

Dustin Kittle

Tennessee Rancher | Agricultural and Environmental AttorneyImage
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Based upon your understanding of the facts and the law, should South Dakota Governor @KristiNoem resign?

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More from @dustinkittle

May 16
🚨🧵— CONGRESS WAS WARNED THAT THE U.S. FARM CREDIT SYSTEM HAD WENT ROGUE:

In a 2017 letter to the House Ag Committee, the Independent Community Bankers of America sounded the alarm that the U.S. Farm Credit System had went rogue and was actively manipulating legal directives —

1 — of — 5Image
Note the reference to a $725 million loan from Farm Credit to Verizon —

2 — of — 5 Image
Note the reference that CoBank has been the lead lender on non-agricultural loans; despite the status of Farm Credit as a GSE (government sponsored enterprise) —

3 — of — 5 Image
Read 5 tweets
May 3
TENNESSEE RANCHER AND AGRICULTURAL ATTORNEY DUSTIN KITTLE ISSUES 10-DAY DEMAND TO U.S. FARM FARM CREDIT ADMINISTRATION CHAIRMAN VINCENT LOGAN:

On August 24, 2021, Tennessee Rancher and Agricultural Attorney Dustin Kittle reported to the United States Farm Credit Administration that he was being extorted by one of its System lenders, Alabama Farm Credit. Over the next 75 days, Kittle would submit nine (9) additional follow-up reports, including emails, letters, and recorded calls detailing the lender’s threats, including an eventually threatened wrongul foreclosure on his farm if he refused to cooperate in turning over a list of his agricultural law clients, signing a release of legal claims, and swearing to full confidentiality as to all that occurred.

Kittle had never missed nor even been late on a loan payment; but he did represent the Alabama Contract Poultry Growers Association; with more than one-third of Alabama Farm Credit’s entire loan portfolio consisting of poultry farmers.

It has now been discovered that, in 2021, during the time Kittle’s loan account was hijacked by a private law firm, Bradley Arant Boult Cummings, following their hire by the Officers and Directors of Alabama Farm Credit, as much as $60 Million was absconded from the funds-held accounts of the farm credit lender’s farmer borrowers. The vast majority of those funds were taken from the accounts of poultry growers in North Alabama.

Kittle was ultimately forced to sell his family’s home in order to pay off his farm loans 20 years early to escape the extortionate scheme. Doing so, Kittle was able to maintain his right to free speech in representing the farmers’ interests.

The U.S. Farm Credit Administration would deliberate on Kittle’s matter for what is believed to be a record 657 days — ultimately finding its System lender to have violated multiple federal laws in its treatment of Kittle and his family. The findings were issued to Kittle on June 12, 2023, with a note thanking him for reporting the matter and stating they could offer no remedy for their System lender’s violations or their own delay, by citing Kittle was no longer a System borrower; as he had paid off his loans in full in late 2021.

Over the course of the past three years, Kittle has received one offer from anyone affiliated with the U.S. Farm Credit Administration. That offer came in early 2024 when attorneys from Smith Gambrell & Russell, a national private law firm, extended a conditional offer to Kittle.

The SGR legal team included three partner-level attorneys out of its Atlanta office; with one attorney, Ronald Barab, listing in his bio to be outside counsel for AgFirst District, one of the four national farm credit banks within the System. Of note, Alabama Farm Credit is not within the AgFirst territory; and is instead assigned to the Farm Credit Bank of Texas District.

In making what was termed a best and final offer, Barab passed along to Kittle that he would receive a total of $1.2 Million Dollars, $800,000 up-front with $400,000 paid to him through a consulting contract for Kittle to come to work for Farm Credit. Kittle was also to swear to full confidentiality as to the investigation and findings.

If accepted, Kittle would have violated the rules of professional ethics, in accepting what amounted to a bribe. By becoming a retained consultant for Farm Credit, it would have forced Kittle to withdraw from representing any of the borrowers of Alabama Farm Credit against them for at least the next 5 years. Farm Credit and its private counsel were aware Kittle represented more than 200 farmer borrowers in the System.

In his demand made to Logan last week, Dustin Kittle has simply asked for his farm loan to be restored and to return to him his status as a Stockholder in the U.S. Farm Credit System. Alternatively, Kittle issued a monetary demand.

Chairman Logan and the U.S. Farm Credit Administration will have until Thursday, May 9, 2024 to respond to Kittle’s demand.

For more on the U.S. Farm Credit Case, including the Filed Complaint and Exhibits in Kittle v. Biden (in which Kittle has filed a writ of mandamus in an effort to force President Joe Biden to nominate a full, three-member Farm Credit Board for oversight of the Farm Credit System), click here:

Kittle's full demand correspondence to Chairman Vince Logan is in the comments to follow.

If you are a farmer or rancher in this country or someone who values America's farmers and ranchers, we would greatly appreciate your sharing this message to help place a spotlight on the need for immediate oversight and supervision in the U.S. Farm Credit System to protect from a further erosion of American family farms.

Thank you,

Dustin J. Kittle
Tennessee Rancher || Agricultural and Environmental Attorneylinktr.ee/dustinkittleImage
Chairman Logan:

It would be difficult to account for how many American family farms and ranches have been lost due to the Farm Credit Administration’s incompetence, inadvertence, inattention, and indifference over the years. However, you are now being provided an opportunity to potentially save at least one of those. Your public policy mission delineated by Congress of improving the income and well-being of American farmers and ranchers should make the following an easy decision.

I direct this communication to you, Mr. Logan, given your capacity as Chairman of the Board and the Chief Executive Officer of the Farm Credit Administration, and also given you are the only Board Member in an unexpired term and actually present at headquarters. I am the attorney representing Dustin J. Kittle (“Mr. Kittle”), a Tennessee-based rancher and agricultural attorney, in his suit against President Joe Biden in the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee. Mr. Kittle has petitioned the Court seeking a writ of mandamus requiring President Biden to fulfill his Congressionally mandated duty of providing you, the Farm Credit Administration (“FCA”), with a fully-functional, three-member Board.

As you are intimately aware, two of the three current Board Members are in expired terms, with at least one exercising his option to relocate to Iowa while in holdover status. Until President Biden makes the appointments, the FCA continues to function without a majority of its Board physically present and fully attentive to the needs of the Farm Credit System, its institutions, and most importantly, its borrowers.

As the regulator of the System, you have the authority to enforce borrower rights. In fact, you are the sole judicial or administrative body with the authority to enforce System borrower rights. As set forth more fully in the Kittle v. Biden Complaint, in response to System-wide mistreatment of borrowers during the farm crisis of the 1980s, the legislature introduced H.R. 3030, which would eventually become the Agricultural Credit Act of 1987, spelling out a borrowers’ bill of rights.Image
In sponsoring the legislation, Senator Fowler said:

“I am particularly proud to be the sponsor of legislation that spells out a borrowers’ bill of rights. The borrowers in this system have been abused, misled, and coerced by Farm Credit Administration banks and officials who have sought to remake this system along new lines, but to the detriment of local control and cooperative principles. To protect against such abuses in the future, the bill provides borrowers with specific rights, including the following… Borrowers have the right to sue in Federal court any institution of the Farm Credit System for violating duties owed to the borrower.”

When H.R. 3030 reached the floor of the Senate after committee hearings, Senator Burdick proposed a floor amendment to expressly ensure any person – including persons who were not yet borrowers or who were former borrowers – would have a right to sue under the Act, based on his (and many others’) mistaken assumption that applicants and borrowers already had the ability to sue in federal court to enforce their rights under the Act.

“Currently, any person has the right to sue these two entities. However, the House provision arguably limits this right to borrowers of the System. This restricts rights of persons who are not yet borrowers, or who are former borrowers, to sue. My amendment simply cleans up this problem and restores the rights to all persons, whether borrowers or not.”

Senator Burdick proceeded to withdraw his amendment under mistaken beliefs and assurances, and the bill passed. This is both the best and only explicit explanation of why the private cause of action provision was eliminated at conference.

The borrowers’ bill of rights remains today. However, because the Act does not contain an express private right of action and courts have refused to imply one (contrary to the testimony of the Congressional record), administrative enforcement by you remains the only recourse available to applicants and current or former System borrowers for violations of their rights.

FCA’S REVIEW OF MR. KITTLE’S BORROWER COMPLAINT

Mr. Kittle is a Tennessee rancher and a former borrower of your System institution, Alabama Farm Credit, ACA (“AFC”). In July of 2021, Mr. Kittle and his branch manager, Amanda Simpson (“Ms. Simpson”), were working towards a cash-out refinance which, by Ms. Simpson’s calculations, would have resulted inImage
Read 13 tweets
Mar 24
But I do think I promised to post this, and we will go through this call a lot in the weeks ahead — I set Glenos up so the world would know what happened to us — and the the night of this call is when we got the threat of foreclosure letter, his last desperate play

11.8.2021 AM
And feel free to post your thoughts or questions below and tomorrow we will do our best to answer — but if someone says “hey what’s this Kittle versus Biden” deal all about? — It’s about how the U.S. Farm Credit System was so inept or corrupt that it let …
Me — someone who had inadvertently discovered and reported a fraud committed by Alabama Farm Credit’s Vice President to the U.S. Farm Credit Administration; and while they were investigating that fraud, they let the Vice President hire a private lawyer who extorted us …
Read 56 tweets
Mar 17
We will be posting the GLENOS TAPES right here in 15 minutes!!! Join us!!

cc: @AlabamaStateBar

#AgXtortion #RuralRevolution
Join us @elonmusk bc I’m not sure that what I would consider a crime has ever been posted out live on X before but it will tonight starting right now …

#AgXtortion
@elonmusk Alright let’s get this thing started — the first time I had ever heard the name Chris Glenos in my life was in late July 2021 …
Read 81 tweets
Mar 15
When my Dad was killed in 2014, I think that is when I began to fully understand how selfish this world is — and not because of how he was killed but because of what happened after it …
What I found out then was just how little people cared for each other — my dad had been shot inside his hotel room …
And by the time I made it to the hospital, there was a law enforcement officer who met me there to tell me how much he hated that my dad had just committed suicide
Read 36 tweets
Dec 24, 2023
It was Nov 8, 2021 and the voice on the other end of the line was Chris Glenos, a man I had grown to hate over the past 100 days; once my farm loan account was removed from my branch manager and turned over to him, a private lawyer; but this was also the day I could get him … 🧵
On the evening of Friday, July 23, 2021, I got a call from my branch manager, Amanda Simpson. It was from her cell phone, after-hours, and she was shaken, after just hanging up the phone with her supervisor, Jody Campbell, the Chief Risk Officer of Alabama Farm Credit …
For 6 weeks, Amanda and I had been attempting to close a refinance she had authorized, set to return our family more than a million dollars in equity; but someone had been blocking that refinance from closing, by refusing to engage the final appraisals needed to close the loan …
Read 23 tweets

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