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Agriculture Industry Pushes To Make Undercover Filming Of Farm Animal Abuse Illegal

Filming Animal Abuse Illegal

By ANDREW DUFFELMEYER   03/14/11 03:12 AM ET   AP

DES MOINES, Iowa -- Angered by repeated releases of secretly filmed videos claiming to show the mistreatment of farm animals, Iowa's agriculture industry is pushing legislation that would make it illegal for animal rights activists to produce and distribute such images.

Agriculture committees in the Iowa House and Senate have approved a bill that would prohibit such recordings and punish people who take agriculture jobs only to gain access to animals to record their treatment. Proposed penalties include fines of up to $7,500 and up to five years in prison. Votes by the full House and Senate have not yet been set.

Doug Farquhar, program director for environmental health at the National Conference of State Legislatures, said Iowa would be the first state to approve such restrictions but Florida is considering similar legislation. The Iowa measure was introduced after a number of group released videos showing cows being shocked, pigs beaten and chicks ground up alive.

"It's very transparent what agribusiness is attempting to do here," said Bradley Miller, national director of the Humane Farming Association, a California-based group dedicated to protecting farm animals from abuse. "They're trying to intimidate whistleblowers and put a chill on legitimate anti-cruelty investigations. Clearly the industry feels that it has something to hide or it wouldn't be going to these extreme and absurd lengths."

Legislators and farming groups respond that they're only trying to prevent people from fraudulently seeking jobs in order to shoot videos that may give an unfair perspective on livestock operations. Rather than videotape and publicize abuse, supporters of the Iowa measure said people should report wrongs they see and work through proper channels to prevent them.

They point out that in cases such as at a hatchery in Spencer, where video of male chicks being tossed into grinders was secretly made in 2009, no complaints were filed.

"We believe this can help prosecute those people who, while they claim to have animals' interests at heart, don't really follow through and report the animal abuse – if in fact there actually is anything – immediately like they're required to," said Tom Shipley, a lobbyist with the Iowa Cattlemen's Association. "They hang on to that information for publicity purposes."

He also said the bill would prevent businesses from being hurt by people who were hired under false pretenses. Agriculture is an important industry in Iowa, where the U.S. Department of Agriculture said it was responsible for $24.7 billion in direct sales in 2008.

"There are definitely groups out there that have an agenda that don't want animal agriculture in business and that's not right," said Kevin Vinchattle, chief executive officer of the Iowa Poultry Association. "I think that some people will go a long way to do or say anything to try to make a group of people look bad."

Paul Shapiro, a senior director at the Humane Society of the United States, called the Iowa measure "draconian" and said only through awareness created by publicity can the nation work to protect farm animals. The Humane Society releases secretly filmed videos several times a year, and its efforts have led to plant closures and the recall of millions of pounds of meat, Shapiro said.

"This is a pretty novel concept and it's one that's intended to basically keep animal cruelty problems secret on factory farms," Shapiro said. "What's needed is reform of these factory farms that will prevent cruelty to animals. What's not needed is to make factory farming cruelties more secretive."

Nathan Runkle, executive director of Chicago-based Mercy for Animals, which was responsible for the chick video recorded at Hy-Line North America, took a similar position. Many hatcheries still kill male chicks that way because they have little value, he said.

"We feel the agribusiness industry should be trying to root out animal cruelty and expose it," Runkle said. "As a moral society, it is our obligation to prevent all cruelty to animals and it's difficult to end abuse when you can't expose it."

The Iowa bill is expected to be approved in the Republican-controlled House, but it's unclear whether the Democratic-controlled Senate will pass it.

Florida's bill has been introduced and referred to several committees but has not yet been subject to a vote.

Republican Rep. Annette Sweeney, a rancher from the north-central Iowa town of Alden who is sponsoring the bill, said she remains hopeful the proposal will be approved. She believes it will encourage people to report abuses.

"As a livestock producer, I want people to feel if they see something going on this bill empowers them," Sweeney said.

But Jeff Kerr, general counsel for People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, said the Iowa legislation is misguided, at best.

"They're trying to criminalize someone being an eye witness to a crime," Kerr said. "The people who do the very difficult job of documenting that criminal conduct should be applauded."

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DES MOINES, Iowa -- Angered by repeated releases of secretly filmed videos claiming to show the mistreatment of farm animals, Iowa's agriculture industry is pushing legislation that would make it ille...
DES MOINES, Iowa -- Angered by repeated releases of secretly filmed videos claiming to show the mistreatment of farm animals, Iowa's agriculture industry is pushing legislation that would make it ille...
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02:45 PM on 04/01/2011
This must not happen...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Marioam
03:50 PM on 03/30/2011
This is serious busness, it would give any pervert or sadistic person the license to keep using farm animals as their means of venting or enjoyment. If the big farm cooperatives have nothing to hide then they should not want this law. I say in this case, and there's plenty of proof, guilty until proven innocent.
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peacekitten
primum non nocere.
09:03 PM on 03/23/2011
god help these poor animals.
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peacekitten
primum non nocere.
08:57 PM on 03/23/2011
if they have nothing to hide, they shouldn't need to push for such legislation.

clearly, they know what they are doing is wrong, but rather than right the wrong, they simply want to cover it up deeply enough to make it "disappear." 

it will never disappear.  ever.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Hypnos Rises
Rebel/hybrid monster
08:31 PM on 03/22/2011
The industry of death, torture and butchery calls it's humane critics unreasonable.

I read a story awhile back. It was about a man protested the wrongs of a kingdom. The kingdom then forbade him, and anyone else to protest any further. In essence, they made illegal. Despondent, the man lay awake nights wondering what he could do to fight such unreasonable injustices. Then it came to him.

He burned the kingdom down.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BebeLush
The Tao of Pooh
05:52 PM on 03/21/2011
So James O'Keefe gets to record videos undercover, heavily edit them, which often results in people getting fired from their jobs, and all he gets is a praise from the wingnuts? Something is not right with this picture.
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peacekitten
primum non nocere.
08:53 PM on 03/23/2011
what's wrong with this picture is that the animal activists are trying to stop cruelty, which should be a no-brainer.

what o'keefe was trying to do was entrap someone through fraud, and then feign outrage at a crime he created.

big difference.
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peacekitten
primum non nocere.
09:02 PM on 03/23/2011
i should add, trying to stop cruelty, especially the mind-numbing amount of it that goes into factory farming, should be something people should be rewarded for, not punished.  every decent human being should be opposed to cruelty to animals in all forms.  every last one.

james o'keefe was trying to create a tempest in a teapot and he deserves to be punished.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tabuism
04:46 AM on 03/20/2011
Meat companies, want you to eat meat, that's where they obtain their profit. They are not spiritual, and have no concern or knowledge, of the price of karma. Nor do they really care about the environmen­­t or fate of our planet.

The facade that the company creates, looks pleasing and comfortabl­­e. You walk into the butcher section in any supermarke­­t, you don't see the blood, the fear, the horror.

What that animal experience­­s in the moments before death, is indescriba­­ble, most are not killed instantane­­ously(not that it matters, as they should not be killed in the first place), but are only allowed a slow and excruciati­­ng death. All you see is what is displayed in the freezer counter,
so far away from the actual "inhuman horrific brutality"­­.

Humane slaughter ? These two words are contradict­­ory at best, when used together: to slaughter, is not humane: to be humane, is not to slaughter, or they justify there killing, by saying that "our animals feed free range, play in the sun and have a good life".

Death row is death row, no matter how comfortabl­­e you make me feel, before the execution. Only the blind will see "Humane Slaughter" as Humane ! Give me a good life, then slash my throat, Oops, I almost forgot to thank you, for being so good to me.

Although you did not kill that animal, the moment you consume a piece of it's flesh, you assume some of the karma, that is associated with it's death.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BebeLush
The Tao of Pooh
05:48 PM on 03/21/2011
Wonderful words! You are fanned.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tabuism
02:40 AM on 03/22/2011
Thank you : )

Their is a heated debate at;

The Steps to Becoming a Veganist
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/kathy-freston/vegan-food_b_835664.html#
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
maxwelldog
even if i don't go anywhere, I'll still be late.
12:58 AM on 03/20/2011
Fact is I hate peta with a passion. They tried to talk me into killing my dog out of humane reasons, but not only did she live for another three quarters of a year, but ran and played and had a great time with the other dogs (all of whom she controlled, anyway)
And
I can't raise animals. I can't raise chickens or pigs because I would name the animal.
and, boy...you just don't eat an animal you name.
I even cry when I pass dead raccoons on the side of the road. Dead squirrels (SQUIRRELS!) possums, even skunks.
Deer.
Turtles.

but....

I do like me some bacon.
Eggs with that is good.
Biscuits and gravy, cheese sprinkled on top.
mmmMMMmmmmMMMmmmmmmm

and my secret chicken recipe (nonfat italian dressing) is mouth watering, and easy to make. Brown the meat (legs and thighs work best) pour on the dressing, cover, turn to low for an hour...hour and a half. Uncover and reduce to sauce...

but I'm sorry.
I eat boca burgers a lot, too.

(try my recipe. It's free)
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DebbyM
09:55 PM on 03/25/2011
So you don't mind abusing some animals? Nice.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
maxwelldog
even if i don't go anywhere, I'll still be late.
08:06 PM on 03/26/2011
Debby, I think you're sitting a bit high on your horse.
I said I empathize with animals but, I eat them.
I like animals.

Evidently, you don't.
So, yeah.
High horse...
On...
You're...

d=^))
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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hornedcog
Tax Tea Now!
10:56 PM on 03/19/2011
More laws and more government courtesy of the Republicans.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
06:50 PM on 03/19/2011
Hopefully, Iowa being an agriculture state has enough citizens who understand just what these “undercover” videos are. Doctored, secretly taped , over a period of time videos, - not arrive at the home and made the same day. The sole purpose of them is to bring attention to their groups and “bring in the money and attention”. It is not about the animals The legislators in Iowa know what it is all about and its good to see an attempt for sanity. I hope they get it passed. I would not like being secretly video taped by a trusted person either – would you in your home, your business, your life?
fourtruth
9th Ammendment, Bill of Rights
04:17 PM on 03/20/2011
That is all just NOT true.

Animal cruelty and those that foster it, such as yourself, is the crime.

This law passes and I will boycott everything from and about Iowa and bad mouth it up one side and down the other.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
09:37 PM on 03/20/2011
It is true that they are pieced together and sometimes even staged. . It is true that they are illegally taped. There is a reason they do not allow secret taping, videoing for evidence in court because it is onesided and can be doctored. It is true that the sole purpose of the worker sent to these places is to spy on them, get video and post it for the money and the attention. We are not all fooled by this. People from Iowa understand this. It is true that if I secretly taped you at your home or business with your children ,or with your wife or with your coworkers, for a long enough period of time I could get a video that would make you look however I wanted it to look. AND it is true that if I was allowed to do this to anyone and post it for others to see without their permission, it would be a crime.
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peacekitten
primum non nocere.
08:57 PM on 03/23/2011
i'll join you.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tokyomary
Progressively liberal.
11:18 PM on 03/21/2011
Those are just lies. And I guess that if I was doing the things these businesses were doing, I WOULDN'T like to be taped. How about if they do the right thing, and then no one would NEED to tape them?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Var Enyo
My micro-bio didn't meet their demands...
06:43 AM on 03/19/2011
Well we can add another notch on the old republican belt. Hate old people, the poor, the mentally ill, anyone who has sex without wanting 19 kids, people who are the wrong color, and small animals. Sounds like a serial killer profile.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tabuism
05:50 PM on 03/18/2011
An Iowa bill that would prohibit the type of undercover videos and photographs upon which humane groups rely to expose what they view as abuses in animal agriculture passed the House by a vote of 66-27 this morning.

The bill, Iowa House File 589, faces further voting in the Senate.

Proponents include the bill’s chief sponsor, Rep. Annette Sweeney. Those opposed include Rep. Jim Lykam and Sen. Matt McCoy.

In 2009 Mercy for Animals (MFA) released disturbing video obtained at Hy-Line International, an egg hatchery in Spencer, Iowa. The group’s undercover investigator “covertly documented the systemic cruelty chicks at this hatchery are subjected to,” according to MFA’s “Hatchery Horrors” video.

The video shows male chicks being roughly tossed onto conveyor belts and into machines that grind them up alive. The practice, used to eliminate millions of unwanted male chicks per year because they don’t lay eggs and “don’t grow large or fast enough,” according to MFA, is legal and common in Iowa as well as in many other states.

Listen to AnimalBeat.org’s Animal Air audio interview with Tom Colvin, executive director of Animal Rescue League of Iowa, and president of Iowa Federaton of Humane Societies.

Several voice mail messages left for Rep. Sweeney have not yet been returned.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tabuism
05:50 PM on 03/18/2011
FROM IOWA HOUSE FILE 589 -

Sec. 9. NEW SECTION . 717A.2A Animal facility interference.

15 1. A person is guilty of animal facility interference, if the person acts without the consent of the owner of an animal facility to willfully do any of the following:

(1) Produce a record which reproduces an image or sound occurring at the animal facility as follows:

(a) The record must be created by the person while at the animal facility.

(b) The record must be a reproduction of a visual or audio experience occurring at the animal facility, including but not limited to a photographic or audio medium.

(2) Possess or distribute a record which produces an image or sound occurring at the animal facility which was produced as provided in subparagraph (1).

(3) Subparagraphs (1) and (2) do not apply to an animal 29 shelter, a boarding kennel, a commercial kennel, a pet shop, or a pound, all as defined in section 162.2.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tabuism
05:50 PM on 03/18/2011
Sec. 10. NEW SECTION . 717A.2B Animal facility fraud.

1. A person is guilty of animal facility fraud, if the person willfully does any of the following:

a. Obtains access to an animal facility by false pretenses for the purpose of committing an act not authorized by the owner of the animal facility.

b. Makes a false statement or representation as part of an application to be employed at the animal facility, if the person knows the statement to be false, and makes the statement with an intent to commit an act not authorized by the owner of the animal facility.

2. A person who commits the offense of animal facility fraud is guilty of the following:

a. For the first conviction, the person is guilty of an aggravated misdemeanor.

b. For a second or subsequent conviction, the person guilty of a class “D” felony.

3. A person convicted of animal facility fraud is subject to an order of restitution as provided in chapter 910.

4. This section does not apply to an animal shelter, a boarding kennel, a commercial kennel, a pet shop, or a pound, all as defined in section 162.2. 6 Sec. 11.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tabuism
05:07 PM on 03/18/2011
Making the transition toward a vegan diet and lifestyle is the single-mos­t effective step an individual can take toward living sustainabl­y on the planet. For further evidence of this fact, please read about the 2006 report from the United Nations: 'Livestock­'s Long Shadow'.

By making vegan choices, people can lessen their ecological footprint more than with any other lifestyle change, as well as gain control over their health, take part in eliminatin­g world hunger, rediscover their connection with the many different animals who share our world, and make a powerful personal contributi­on toward the beginning of peace on earth.

•Global warming – Animal agricultur­e generates 40% more greenhouse gas than all cars, trucks and planes combined.

•Water – It takes far less water to generate vegan food. A vegan could leave their shower running year-round­, and still not waste as much water as a non-vegan.

•World hunger – Most of the world’s grain is fed to food animals. On a plant-base­d diet, we could feed the entire human population­. Millions of people who are starving (including 40,000 children who die every day) as a result of the unfair distributi­on of food could be fed by the many tons of grain that are currently cycled through animals.

•Pollution – Animal agricultur­e is the single biggest polluter of the planet.