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Update (June 8, 2026): A 16-year-old horse named Deniz dropped dead after being forced to pull a carriage in New York City's Central Park. Eyewitnesses report that he struggled in agony on the pavement for ten minutes without medical attention while traumatized onlookers watched helplessly.
Deniz is far from the first victim. In 2022, an emaciated horse named Ryder collapsed on a busy New York City street, likely due to illness and heat exhaustion. He lay on Ninth Avenue for over an hour—with no veterinary care—while his driver slapped him, whipped him, and screamed at him to get up. Ryder died malnourished, sick, and elderly—his owner had lied about his age to the city. Ryder’s driver has been charged in New York City Criminal Court with overdriving, torturing, and injuring animals. In 2025, another horse, Lady, collapsed and died pulling a carriage in Midtown Manhattan. Another, Michelle—emaciated and covered in sores—was forced to haul tourists in sweltering heat even after residents reported her condition to authorities.

These are not isolated incidents. Laws regulating the industry have long failed these animals. The city lacks the resources or inclination to enforce regulations, and carriage operators fight and flout every rule meant to protect horses and the public. A ban is the only real solution—and momentum is building.
Horses are not machines. They are individuals—social beings who deserve to live on their own terms, not haul strangers through traffic. PETA has joined NYCLASS and other local advocates to demand the city end this exploitation, but these horses can no longer wait.
Please urge New York City Council Speaker Julie Menin to fast-track Ryder's Law and ban horse carriages in New York City.