RoPo - The interview is great news!
Try telling your story to Horse magazines too.
Sue the guy the contract was with. The other guy may get prosecuted for buying/receiving/hiding stolen property. That is up to them. They could both get charged with exhortion and fraud. I wish you could have a good lawyer on the interview with you. That would really scare them. The exposure might even make the lawyers want to help. He must be feeling pressure from the cops, the media, and having a hard time making $$$ off the horse since it's well known as stolen.
If you want to retrieve the horse yourself- Look back to page 59 post #583 of this thread. I gave some tips to try to make it safer and hopefully easier. My husband also had a good idea. He said to " Get a couple old cowboys to go to him acting like they may want to buy the horse. They would want to see the horse, what kind of condition he's in, and to try him out. If things went really well- maybe they could test ride him, right off the property line for you ". I would have some people waiting nearby as backup and witnesses. Safety in numbers. I still like the sneaky approach but I understand you don't want it to get dangerous.
Rusty Hills - I didn't know the images where that old. Thanks for the info. The buildings would be likely to still be there and the perimeter fences too. The property boundaries might be shown in area maps- especially arial photography. I've seen stuff like that in real estate websites when checking on sale properties.
Mylittlezoo - Thanks for the compliment. It takes a whole lot to get me angry enough to want revenge. When that happens, I already know its justified, so I do it well. What part of Georgia are you? I used to live near Macon? Pretty area.