Published:
Animal Protection Groups Ask Federal Court to Halt Ringling Bros.' Cruel Chaining and Confinement of Endangered Asian Elephants
WASHINGTON, May 21 /PRNewswire/ -- Today, a coalition of animal protection
organizations and a former Ringling Bros. employee asked a federal district
court inWashington D.C. to immediately order a halt to Ringling Bros. and
Barnum & Bailey Circus (Ringling Bros.)'s cruel practice of shackling and
confining endangered Asian elephants for days on end in a manner that prevents
them from walking or even turning around in place.
Newly obtained evidence based on the circus's own documents reveals that
Ringling Bros. keeps elephants virtually immobilized in chains for the
majority of their lives. Internal records of the circus's train travels show
that the elephants are chained while confined in boxcars for an average of
more than 26 hours at a time, and sometimes for as much as 60-100 hours
without a break as the circus moves across the country.
"The evidence is simply shocking," says Lisa Weisberg, Senior Vice
President of Government Affairs and Public Policy of the American Society for
the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA). "The public should be outraged
at the amount of time these animals are forced to be shackled and confined,
and Ringling Bros. should be ashamed at hiding this cruelty from the public
eye."
"We hope that the Court will order Ringling Bros. to immediately unchain
these incredibly intelligent and, social animals and spare them from suffering
a lifetime of misery," says Tracy Silverman, General Counsel for Animal
Welfare Institute. "No animal should be chained for days at a time, week after
week, month after month and year after year."
The request for an immediate halt to prolonged chaining and confinement of
elephants is part of a groundbreaking lawsuit by the ASPCA, the Animal Welfare
Institute, The Fund for Animals, Born Free USA united with Animal Protection
Institute (Born Free USA), and former Ringling Bros. employee Tom Rider
against Ringling Bros. Circus. The suit alleges that the circus is violating
the Endangered Species Act by abusively training and disciplining elephants
with sharp implements such as bullhooks, and by intensively confining and
chaining the animals for prolonged periods of time.
"Shackling elephants for days on end without the ability to walk or even
turn around is inherently cruel," said Michael Markarian, President of The
Fund for Animals. "Endangered species deserve something better than a
lifetime of suffering."
Although Ringling Bros. has denied that the elephants spend most of their
lives in chains, former circus employees and other witnesses have given sworn
testimony to the U.S. Department of Agriculture that the elephants are kept
tightly chained by one front and hind leg - unable to move freely or even turn
around - for hours on end.
"The overwhelming evidence we have obtained confirms what former Ringling
Bros. employees have said for years about the unimaginable cruelty that goes
on under - and behind - the Big Top," says Nicole G. Paquette, Senior Vice
President for Born Free USA. "These new revelations of prolonged chaining of
elephants should not only have significant implications for this case, but
also assist in our national efforts to pass legislation prohibiting cruel
training practices commonly used on captive elephants."
The plaintiffs are represented by the public interest law firm Meyer
Glitzenstein & Crystal.
Facts:
-- Ringling Bros.' own internal train records show that the elephants are
chained in boxcars for an average of more than 26 hours, and often 60-
70 hours at a time, when the circus travels from city to city.
-- The records also show that in some cases, the elephants have been kept
chained on trains for 90-100 hours.
-- Elephants at Ringling Bros.' "Center for Elephant Conservation" (CEC)
are also kept in chains (details about this cannot yet be made public
because of a protective order that has been entered in the case). The
CEC is where elephants are bred to produce more elephants for the
circus.
-- In the wild, elephants travel many miles each day.
-- Research shows that chaining and confining animals for days at a time
leads to psychological and severe physical problems such as arthritis,
crippling foot problems, and behavior that is indicative of high levels
of stress.
Copies of these documents are available upon request.
Timeline of Case:
-- May 21, 2008 - Plaintiffs file Motion for Preliminary Injunction on
chaining claim until the Court has a trial and issues a final decision
about all of plaintiffs' claims.
-- January 30, 2008 - Fact Discovery closes.
-- August 23, 2007 - U.S. District Court Judge Emmet G. Sullivan issues a
ruling rejecting Ringling Bros.' attempts to have the case dismissed,
and permitting the plaintiffs' case to proceed to trial.
-- October 2006 - After being ordered to do so by the court, Ringling
Bros. discloses the internal veterinary records for the elephants,
which show elephants with severe foot, leg, and other injuries.
-- August 2006 - Baby elephant Bertha dies at the CEC - the details of her
death have never been revealed.
-- September 2005 - The federal district judge assigned to the case
announces that he will "incarcerat[e]" Ringling Bros.' lawyers and
executives if they do not turn over critical veterinary documents that
were required to be produced much earlier in the litigation.
-- August 2004 - 2-year-old Riccardo mysteriously dies at the CEC after
falling while "climbing on a tub."
-- February 2003 - A unanimous panel of the federal appeals court in the
District of Columbia finds that the plaintiffs have standing to sue
Ringling Bros. for its mistreatment of Asian elephants.
-- June 2000 - Animal welfare groups file suit against Ringling Bros. in
federal court in the District of Columbia under the Endangered Species
Act to stop Ringling Bros.' inhumane and unlawful mistreatment of
highly endangered Asian elephants.
-- July 1999 - Baby elephant Benjamin drowns in a pond when traveling
between Ringling Bros. shows; witnesses state that he was evading his
Ringling Bros. handler who had chased him with a bullhook.
-- February 1999 - USDA cites Ringling Bros. after inspectors observe
large rope burn "lesions" on two baby elephants - Doc and Angelica -
caused by forcibly separating the babies from their mothers well before
the end of their natural weaning period.
-- January 1998 - USDA concludes that baby elephant Kenny dies after being
made to perform by Ringling despite the fact that he is extremely ill.
SOURCE ASPCA
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