Reprinted with permission
from DemocracyNow.org
Originally aired April 9, 2013
[Ed. Note: Original Video here. See followup Debate: After Activists Covertly Expose Animal Cruelty, Should They Be Targeted With "Ag-Gag" Laws?]
And within 45 minutes of arriving on my first day, there was the—I filmed the incident that you discussed of someone putting a chain around a downed cow’s neck and dragging her out of a stall. The manager, Felipe, of that site, the Dry Creek Dairy site, he shocked the downed cow about 50 times with a hand-held device. He was the one who put the chain around her neck. I still don’t understand why he was not charged for that crime. But there it was, on my first day, that management was involved in the most hideous act of abuse that I saw while I was there.
An animal rights investigator details how he has spent over a
decade secretly filming animal abuse and why that work is now imperiled by a
wave of laws sweeping the country. Speaking on the condition we conceal his
identity, "Pete" has secretly captured animal abuse on farms and
slaughterhouses after applying to work at the location. He has released
video footage to law enforcement and activist groups such as Mercy for
Animals, helping spark national outcry and charges against the abusers. His
investigations and footage have led to at least 15 criminal cases and have
been used in several documentaries. But now Pete’s work is under threat. A
dozen or so state legislatures have introduced bills that target people who
covertly expose farm animal abuse. Nicknamed "ag-gag" laws, they would make
it illegal to covertly videotape livestock farms or apply for a job at one
without disclosing affiliations with animal rights groups. They also require
activists to hand over undercover videos within 24 hours, preventing them
from amassing a trove of material and publicizing their findings on their
own.
This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.
AARON MATÉ: In recent years, activists and investigators have gone
undercover to reveal shocking cases of animal cruelty at some of the
nation’s largest plants and farms. In many cases, they have made secret
videos of the abuses, leading to prosecutions, closures, recalls and vows
from the offenders to change their practices. In 2008, this undercover
investigation by the Humane Society exposed wrongdoing by a California meat
processor. A warning to our viewers, some of the images are very graphic.
VIDEO - An investigation by the Humane Society of the United States uncovers
abuse of downed dairy cows, cows too sick or too injured to stand, at a
California slaughterhouse. What’s more, the meat is being served to children
through the National School Lunch Program.
AARON MATÉ: That undercover investigation by the Humane Society resulted in
the largest meat recall in U.S. history. In the last two years, activists
have also caught on camera employees of a Tyson Foods supplier in Wyoming
flinging piglets into the air, workers at Bettencourt Dairies in Idaho
shocking cows, and the searing of beaks off of young chicks at Sparboe Farms
in Iowa. In the case of Tyson and Bettencourt, the employees were charged
with cruelty to animals. In the case of Sparboe Farms, the company lost one
of its biggest customers: the fast food giant McDonald’s.
AMY GOODMAN: But the videos have also sparked a reaction in the oppose
direction: criminalizing those who blow the whistle. A front-page article in
The New York Times this weekend noted that a dozen or so state legislatures
have introduced bills that target people who covertly expose farm animal
abuse. These so-called "ag-gag" bills, as they’re known, make it illegal to
covertly videotape livestock farms or apply for a job at one without
disclosing affiliations with animal rights groups. They also require
activists to hand over undercover videos immediately, preventing them from
publicizing findings and sparking public outcry or documenting trends.
Five states already have ag-gag laws in place. North Carolina has just
become the latest state to consider such a law, joining a list that includes
Arkansas, California, Indiana, Nebraska, Pennsylvania, Tennessee and
Vermont. Many of these bills have been introduced with the backing of the
American Legislative Exchange Council, or ALEC, a mechanism for corporate
lobbyists to help write state laws.
In a moment, we’ll host a debate on the so-called "ag-gag" laws, but first
we’re joined by one of the activists whose undercover work has sparked their
passage. The activist agreed to join us today on the condition he could use
a pseudonym and conceal his identity. He asked us to refer to him simply as
"Pete." Pete is an undercover animal rights investigator who has secretly
captured animal abuse on farms and slaughterhouses for the past 11 years. He
has released footage to groups such as Mercy for Animals, helping spark
national outcry and charges against the abusers. His investigations have led
to at least 15 criminal cases, and his videos have been used in a number of
documentaries.
Pete, we welcome you to Democracy Now! Can you talk about what it is that
you do?
PETE: Sure. Thank you for having me.
What I do is go undercover to work for an extended period of time, maybe two
weeks, maybe longer, maybe six weeks or so, at farms, ranches and
slaughterhouses. And the main thing that I do is focus on any and all
criminal activity that exists at a facility. So, an undercover
investigator’s job is to show everything that occurs, whether it’s legal or
illegal. There’s a lot of standard practices that may look cruel, but
they’re legal. And that is up to a campaigns department and lobbyists and
the public to decide if they want to change that.
For an investigator, the main objective is to document all illegal activity
and get that information to the authorities. And every single facility,
whether it is a corporate facility or a family farm, whether it has a couple
hundred animals or whether it has a million chickens on it, every one that
I’ve worked at has been breaking the law. And because we keep finding
illegal activity, and because we’re getting more cooperation from law
enforcement now, I believe that has fueled some of these ag-gag laws in an
attempt to try to stop us.
AARON MATÉ: And Pete, how do you go about doing it? Obviously, here we’re
calling you Pete, not your real name. Do you give your real name when you’re
applying for these jobs?
PETE: Yes, I do. I give—you know, because I have to fill out a W-2, and so
I’m obligated to put my real name. You know, these investigations are done
legally, so we don’t use fake IDs. You know, we don’t use fake names. And
the most critical point is that when we’re hired, we do everything how they
tell us to do it, so, you know, we try to fit in. We generally—you know, an
investigator’s—part of the job is to always make sure that if you’re doing a
good job, you get them to note that and let you know you are in fact doing
your job: They can’t blame any problems on you.
AMY GOODMAN: I want to ask you about your time working at the Ohio hog farm
in 2006. You captured this footage showing hundreds of impregnated pigs
crammed into gestation crates that restrict their movement. They’re held in
these crates, standing up or collapsed on the floor, for up to 116 days. The
investigation was featured in the HBO documentary Death on a Factory Farm.
Let’s go to a clip.
PETE: It’s a large farm. Basically, their operation is to birth and raise
the pigs, then send them off to become hogs ready for slaughter. They use
gestation crates and farrowing crates, just like most other hog farms in
America. Gestation crates are where sows are impregnated in those crates,
and they’re waiting while they’re pregnant.
(from video)
PETE: How do they know which ones are pregnant? How
do you know on a pig?
HOG FARMER: Huh?
PETE: You just see on the belly?
HOG FARMER: All these are pregnant.
PETE: You can just tell on the belly?
HOG FARMER: Yeah.
PETE: They are totally confined, shoulder to shoulder so they can’t move,
for about 113 to 116 days. If they lie down, they have to plop straight
down.
AMY GOODMAN: That is an excerpt of the HBO documentary. Pete, what happened
here? How did you document it? And what resulted from your findings?
PETE: So, in that investigation, that was a little bit different. And in
that, we actually had a whistleblower complaint that they were hanging
crippled sows to death. They would—they would wait until they had too many
sows, the female hogs, that were downed, and they started to become a
nuisance. And so then they would be dragged out. They’d put a chain around
their necks, then hang them from a front loader. And it would take about
four to five minutes for them to be hanged to death.
Normally in an investigation, the targets are actually chosen randomly, and
we consistently find violations of the law, regardless. But in this case, I
went in because there was a whistleblower who complained about that specific
act. However, a judge determined that hanging hogs to death was a legal
means of euthanasia, and so they were not prosecuted for that act.
AARON MATÉ: Pete, I just want to clarify, you said earlier that you find
cruelty 100 percent of the time?
PETE: One hundred percent of the time. You know, I mean, it would stand to
reason that there has to be a farm out there, at least one, that’s not
breaking the law. That would stand to reason. The only thing I can tell you
is that I have not found it yet.
So, I have worked at a—for example, just with the dairies alone, I’ve worked
at Bettencourt Dairy in Idaho, which at the one site that I was at, one of
their numerous sites, there were about 6,000 cows, and, you know, people
were breaking the law every day there. I’ve worked at the Conklin Dairy Farm
in Ohio. It was a family-owned farm, had about 200 cows, the most sadistic
animal abuse that I’ve ever seen. And I’ve worked at the E6 Cattle Ranch in
Texas, also family-owned, and the owner was convicted for cruelty to
animals. Another MFA investigator worked at a large dairy in New York, and
he worked alongside a mechanic. And it just so happened that the one worker
that he was working alongside was also convicted for breaking the law for
cruelty to animals.
AMY GOODMAN: I want to talk about one of the dairies, Pete. You recently
infiltrated Bettencourt Dairies in Idaho and released some shocking footage.
The video shows a cow being dragged on the floor by a chain attached from
her neck to a moving tractor. It also shows dairy workers viciously beating
and shocking cows and violently twisting their tails. Additionally, your
hidden camera captured unsafe and unsanitary conditions, including
feces-covered floors that cause cows to regularly slip, fall and injure
themselves. There were also sick and injured cows suffering from open
wounds, broken bones and infected udders left to suffer without veterinary
care. Now, Bettencourt Dairies is Idaho’s largest dairy operation and cheese
supplier for Kraft and Burger King. Three of the dairy workers were charged
with misdemeanor animal cruelty due to your investigation. Tell us exactly
what happened, how you got the video out, how you made it public, and who
these people were who were convicted.
PETE: Absolutely. So, the entire purpose behind the Bettencourt
investigation was that—I guess I should start by saying that my identity has
been made public by the Animal Agriculture Alliance, and they’ve been trying
to prevent me from getting undercover at farms and slaughterhouses. So the
whole reason that I went to Idaho is specifically because Mercy for Animals
hired me to just work at any facility that I could. And so I went to Idaho
because I’ve never been there, and I chose the dairy industry because I
hadn’t worked at a dairy in over two years. On that alone, I decided to go
apply at Bettencourt. They were the first place to hire me.
And within 45 minutes of arriving on my first day, there was the—I filmed
the incident that you discussed of someone putting a chain around a downed
cow’s neck and dragging her out of a stall. The manager, Felipe, of that
site, the Dry Creek Dairy site, he shocked the downed cow about 50 times
with a hand-held device. He was the one who put the chain around her neck. I
still don’t understand why he was not charged for that crime. But there it
was, on my first day, that management was involved in the most hideous act
of abuse that I saw while I was there.
The investigation lasted three weeks, and there were acts of unnecessary
cruelty, of people beating and punching cows in the face and punching them
in the eyes, and so forth, throughout that time. Once we felt that we had
established a pattern of abuse and showed everyone who was involved in it,
though no cow during that time had an imminent threat to their so that we
felt we needed to cut the case immediately, we then went to law enforcement.
AMY GOODMAN: And what happened to these people? Are they still working in
the plant, though they were charged with misdemeanor? And the companies that
use Bettencourt, the largest plant in the state?
PETE: Right. So, I guess first I should say Felipe, to my knowledge, is
still running that site. He was not charged. There were three workers that
were charged. Two fled. One was convicted. And the company itself was not
charged.
So, the Bettencourts said that, you know, they’re going to put up cameras
and that they’re going to have people sign a policy saying, "Don’t abuse
animals." I want to make this very clear: Most facilities that I’ve worked
at, you have to sign a form that says you will not abuse animals. I have
worked at more than one facility that has cameras that are operating there.
I don’t know who’s behind the camera, but certainly they’ve never uncovered
anything that I’ve been able to find with my hidden cameras. So I don’t
believe that that’s going to actually do anything to minimize the amount of
illegal cruelty at Bettencourt.
AARON MATÉ: Pete, I also want to ask you about what you uncovered at the
Martin Creek Kennel in Arkansas. Your investigation was featured in the 2006
HBO documentary called Dealing Dogs. Let’s go to a clip. And again, a
warning to our viewers: These images are very graphic.
PETE: Up at the trench, there’s a table sitting right next to the trench
with a bloody knife on top. And the whole table is just covered in dried
blood. The area around the table is just littered with dog organs.
These are lines of trenches. Started out here, and he keeps digging new
trenches as he fills them up. More dogs, whole dogs. OK, this dog here had
been cut open.
AARON MATÉ: That’s a clip from the 2006 HBO documentary Dealing Dogs. Pete,
talk about what you found there.
PETE: Sure. So, that facility, they had been suspected for a long time of
abusing animals. And it was a place that was licensed by the USDA to sell
random-source dogs and cats to research labs. That’s called a Class B
license. A few of those still exist, and most of them now buy their dogs and
cats from pounds. So they go to the local shelter and then—or animal control
facility, and then they’ll resell them to research. That facility was the
largest in operation, having over 600 dogs at a time, over 100 cats at a
time. And they would sell to universities for research all over the country.
Not only were they abusing the dogs on a daily basis, but they were also
getting a lot of stolen pets.
That facility was eventually shut down. The U.S. attorney’s office got
involved, because they were also involved in a felony fraud. They had a
veterinarian pre-signing their interstate health certificates without
checking the dogs. And so, for every one of those that crossed state lines,
it was a felony. It’s kind of like hitting Al Capone for tax evasion. But
anyway, all of the animals were rescued once the U.S. attorney’s office
raided the facility, and they were permanently shut down.
That said, there’s an interesting point about that case, which is that, you
know, you look at—you look at a facility like that, it’s licensed by the
government, and you wonder how can they be doing these things. Like, how can
all of these farms and slaughterhouses be breaking the law, and no one but
undercover activists finds out about it? Well, at Martin Creek Kennel, I
watched a USDA inspection. I watched two federal inspectors walk through the
facility, and they did not find a single dog that was dying of open wounds
that I was able to document that day at that facility. I’ve seen federal
inspections at several facilities that I’ve worked at, and they don’t find
any of the crimes that I’ve uncovered while I’m there. So, I applaud the
USDA for all of the action that they take, and I’m not trying to—I’m not
trying to come down on them. But what I’m trying to say is that an
inspection alone or third-party verification does not find the kind of
criminal activity that an undercover investigation will find. And there is
no law enforcement agency that exists in this country to do undercover work
of puppy mills, factory farms and slaughterhouses.
AMY GOODMAN: Pete—
PETE: It’s up to nonprofit groups.
AMY GOODMAN: Can you talk about the so-called ag-gag bills that would
criminalize the undercover work you do? Republican State Senator David
Hinkins of Utah told his local station, KSL-TV, he doesn’t understand
opposition to the so-called ag-gag bills. Hinkins said, quote, "If a wife
were abusing her husband, we wouldn’t sneak into their living room and set
up a hidden camera. We don’t want people mistreating animals. ... There are
authorities they can contact. They don’t need to be detectives or the Pink
Panther sneaking around." Your response?
PETE: Two things. Number one, animals cannot speak for themselves. So, of
course, domestic violence is a complicated issue, but ultimately, you can
question a battered spouse and try to get the truth from them. You cannot
ask an animal, "Who kicked you?" or "Who’s neglecting you?"
The second thing—and I hesitate to say this because I have so much respect
for law enforcement, and we’ve seen so much cooperation from law enforcement
especially in the last few years, but corruption and apathy from law
enforcement still is a big problem that we find when we’re dealing with
animal cases. And if you’re a cop, and if you hear that, and that shocks
you, it’s because you’re a good cop. But I can’t tell you how many times it
is that we find clear violations of the law, and the local authorities won’t
do anything. And it’s tough. You know, it’s very hard, if you’re a police
officer in a rural county, you go to church with, and you live alongside, or
you’re involved in the same business as the people who some activist comes
in and starts showing conditions that, you know, they point out are illegal,
but that you may—you may do yourself, or your friends may do themselves.
AMY GOODMAN: Pete, how would the ag-gag bills—
PETE: So that makes it a very complicated issue.
AMY GOODMAN: —affect you and your work?
PETE: They would make it illegal for me to do my job.
AMY GOODMAN: How?
PETE: It’s pure and simple. Well, so, the ag-gag laws generally say that if
you document conditions at a facility, if you take a photograph or video of
an animal agriculture facility, you’re breaking the law.
What they’ll also say—and this is the most clever—is they’ll say that if you
see an act of illegal abuse, you have to report it within 24 hours. That’s
misleading. It’s misleading because if you just show illegal activity from
one individual, you can’t then show who else is involved in that illegal
activity. And when one person is busted—and I absolutely swear to
this—they’re not going to—it’s not going to stop other people from breaking
the law. It’s going to let everyone else know they need to be more careful
about how they do it, or they just need to make sure that they’re more
careful about who they hire.
The second thing is that it’s not always clear what is illegal. The first
dairy that I worked at, I saw someone kick a cow right in the side of her
head to try and get her to stand. I documented it, thought it was illegal.
Turns out, it’s perfectly normal to try to do to a cow to make her stand,
that the first thing you should do is kick her right in the side of the head
or the neck. When I saw people hanging crippled sows to death in Ohio, I
assumed that surely that’s illegal. In fact, it looked sadistic. Turns out
that’s perfectly legal. So you don’t always know.
AMY GOODMAN: And so, what happens when you get to continue to record? What
is your point that when you turn it in after 24 hours, it hurts what you do?
PETE: Well, so let’s say that you go to a facility, and you believe that
someone has—in fact, let’s set it up as best we can. Let’s say you see an
act that you believe is illegal, someone admits that it’s illegal, and you
have an attorney standing by within 24 hours to tell you it’s illegal.
You’re very unlikely to meet all three of those conditions. You are then
missing out on any pattern of abuse to determine if this is a one-off
incident. You’re then missing out on an opportunity to determine if anyone
else is involved in breaking the law. And you’re missing out on an
opportunity to find out if management at that facility is aware of this, to
see if it’s more of a systemic problem, like we found at Bettencourt and
like we found at multiple facilities when we do these investigations. So it
really hinders—it prevents you from working a criminal case.
AMY GOODMAN: Pete, you wanted to be a police officer when you were young?
PETE: Yes, absolutely. That’s the reason that I started doing this. I wanted
to go into law enforcement, but, you know, I realized there’s a lot of
people that are going into law enforcement, and there’s very few people
doing this. And there is just no such thing as a cop whose sole job is to go
undercover to look out for farmed animals or for dogs in puppy mills. So I
decided to combine my two passions, since I was an animal rights activist
and I wanted to be a cop, and try and do this job.
AARON MATÉ: And, Pete, since these ag-gag laws have been passed, have you
stopped your work in any of the states where they have gone into effect?
PETE: Yes, I have. The main group that I work for is Mercy for Animals. They
are an extremely gutsy group. They are extremely professional. And they are
very, very focused on not only campaigning for animal welfare, but for
finding illegal activity on farms and slaughterhouses. It’s why I love
working for them. And they do everything completely legally. So, any states
where the ag-gag laws have passed, it’s a no-go to work there.
AMY GOODMAN: Well, we want to thank you for being with us. Pete is the name
he asked us to use; it’s not his real name, though he does use his real name
when he goes undercover; is an undercover animal rights investigator who has
secretly captured animal abuse on farms and slaughterhouses. He has released
the footage to groups such as Mercy for Animals, helping spark national
outcry and charges against abusers. He’s using the pseudonym to conceal his
identity, not disclosing his whereabouts, so he can continue to get hired by
unknowing slaughterhouses, farms and other facilities suspected of animal
abuse. HBO and others have used his video in their documentaries.
This is Democracy Now! When we come back, we’ll have a debate on the
so-called ag-gag bills. Stay with us.
SeeDebate:
After Activists Covertly Expose Animal Cruelty, Should They Be Targeted With "Ag-Gag" Laws?
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