BLOOMINGTON — A man faces animal-cruelty-related charges stemming from the alleged torture and drowning of two puppies he adopted.
Connor Lappin, 29, of Bloomington, admitted during an April 8 interview with police that he intentionally killed the dogs by drowning them, then poured bleach on them, wrapped them up, and buried them in wooded areas, according to a probable cause affidavit filed April 12.
Bloomington police began their investigation on April 7 after receiving a report indicating Lappin may have been sexually abusing and killing a puppy he adopted on Feb. 10 from the Monroe County Animal Shelter.
Investigators were told that Lappin, before adopting that animal, had described in detail how he drowned his last dog in his bathtub. They were told he held the dog underwater until it almost died but repeatedly let it back up before eventually drowning it to death, according to the affidavit.
Persons interviewed by police said they believed Lappin sexually assaulted the dogs before killing them.
Police spoke with Lappin on April 8 at the Monroe County Jail, where he was being held in connection to an unrelated arrest. There, he initially told police the dog he adopted in February ran away before admitting he had drowned two puppies sometime between late last year and February and buried their bodies, according to the affidavit.
Lappin told police he had the second dog for about a week before he killed it. When asked why he killed the dogs, Lappin said he had been using methamphetamine and that one of the dogs had urinated everywhere, the affidavit alleges.
Lappin was charged with two felony counts each of torturing or mutilating a vertebrate animal and failure to properly dispose of a dead animal.
A pretrial conference for Lappin is scheduled for June 13 at Monroe Circuit Court.
-
‘13 FIRES’: One family’s story of resilience amid turmoil along Indiana Avenue
“13 FIRES” by Curtis K. Rogers tells the story of one family's resiliency while living along Indiana Avenue in 1956.Dominated by No.2 Ohio State for years, No. 5 Indiana has a chance for payback
If Indiana beats Ohio State and closes out the season with a win over Purdue, the Hoosiers will be in the Big Ten championship for the first time since the inception of the game in 2011.Preparing for the political chatter around the table on Thanksgiving
IU psychology professor Edward Hirt offers insight on navigating through this first big family get-together, since an historic and polarizing election.No. 16 Indiana remains unbeaten with 69-58 win over UNC Greensboro
Myles Rice scored 14 of his 20 points in the first half, freshman Bryson Tucker finished with a season-high 14 and No. 16 Indiana got past UNC Greensboro 69-58 on Thursday night.