Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
Watch Live

Former Board Member And Veterinarian Details Problems With Finances, Medical Practices At HiCaliber Horse Rescue

Michelle Knuttila, HiCaliber Horse Rescue's founder, walks the ranch on March 2, 2018.
Brandon Quester / inewsource
Michelle Knuttila, HiCaliber Horse Rescue's founder, walks the ranch on March 2, 2018.

HiCaliber Horse Rescue’s former veterinarian and board member told inewsource Tuesday he has shared medical records and his concerns about HiCaliber’s founder practicing veterinary medicine without a license with the California Veterinary Medical Board.

Dr. Daniel Grove served on HiCaliber’s board of directors from its inception in 2013 until 2016 and was their primary veterinarian during that period. He also joined two other former HiCaliber board members in saying he never saw the group’s finances, which contradicts what HiCaliber reported to the Internal Revenue Service.

“I never saw any account statements, a checkbook, nothing. And nothing was presented formally to the board,” Grove said. “I guess I should have pressed harder for it, but it was not something that I was involved with.”

Advertisement

HiCaliber is currently being investigated by at least nine local and state agencies due to accusations of fraud and animal cruelty. HiCaliber’s founder, Michelle Knuttila, told inewsource she has done nothing wrong and is not concerned about the allegations.

The California Veterinary Medical Board is a state agency that protects consumers and animals and enforces laws relating to the practice of veterinary medicine in California. A spokesperson for the agency confirmed its investigation into HiCaliber last week.

Grove said the veterinary board specifically requested his medical records regarding HiCaliber. He also said he discussed Knuttila’s practicing medicine without a license with the agency.

Grove said one of the concerns he conveyed was about Knuttila going “above and beyond” what she should be doing when it comes to veterinary medicine. He pointed to HiCaliber’s online videos, in which Knuttila talks about performing a regional limb perfusion, which he said she “should not be doing.”

He said he felt working with HiCaliber was a great training experience for up-and-coming veterinarians in his practice, but “I kick myself in the pants a bit that I didn’t leave earlier.”

Advertisement

Grove also said he didn’t agree with what the group said when soliciting donations.

Asked for an example, Grove said HiCaliber solicited donations saying “they needed $250 to have a set of teeth done, and it was costing them roughly $160 or $165 – and I felt that that was kind of false advertising.” Grove said his practice was providing that and other services to HiCaliber at a heavy discount.

Two other former board members, Niki Avila and Miles Dunbar, reached out to inewsource Monday to say they had never reviewed the troubled organization’s 2014 tax filing – despite a checkbox on the form stating it had been shared with the board. Dunbar submitted a complaint about the inaccuracies to the IRS in March 2016 and added that he was reaching out now to “cover my a--, basically, for lack of a better term.”

When asked why he was reaching out now, Grove told inewsource he didn’t want to be held liable “for the time I was there for things someone else had done that I didn’t have much power over.”

Knuttila did not respond to an inewsource request for comment Tuesday afternoon.