Rescue & Adoptions
Past Featured Rescues
Pork Corporation Grants Legal Custody to Animal Sanctuaries
One
hundred and sixty-seven pigs were the winners in a dramatic showdown
between the animal rights movement and the pork industry just outside
of Washington, D.C..
The
pigs were being transported from a factory farm in North Carolina
(the country's largest pork production state) to a Pennsylvania
slaughterhouse. On route, the driver parked the triple-decker trailer
on a Washington, D.C. street and then abandoned the trailer
leaving the animals in the hot sun without water or basic care.
Fortunately, local residents notified the police and the Washington
Humane Society was contacted. The trailer, was seized by the agency,
and shortly after midnight, was towed to the Poplar Spring Animal
Sanctuary, located in rural Maryland, one hour from D.C.
Throughout
the night, animal activists worked tirelessly to remove the frightened
pigs from the trailer. Most of the pigs were too frightened to move
and many of the pigs had trouble walking and were trembling uncontrollably.
The unloading process took several hours and a ramp had to be built
to remove the pigs from the third level of the truck. The animals
were terrified when they got off the trucks, and most walked on
their knees and were dehydrated and weak. They each licked the dirt,
something they had never seen, and made their way into their temporary
pasture.
The
following day, agents from Hanor Company, a North Carolina pork
corporation, and their legal counsel arrived at Poplar Spring with
local police to retrieve the animals. Upon arrival, Hanor's representatives
were asked to provide a cash payment in excess of $10,000 to cover
the costs associated with caring for the animals. In lieu of making
this payment, Hanor agreed to sign the pigs over to Poplar Spring
Animal Sanctuary. The sanctuary and pigs' interests were represented
by Laura Nelson, an attorney from the Animal Legal Defense Fund.
Authorities
decided not to bring criminal charges against the Hanor Company
for abandoning the pigs. The largest "penalty," however,
was already assessed when the Hanor Company lost the "market
value" of the pigs, estimated at approximately $14,000.
The
surviving pigs are now living out their natural lives at sanctuaries.
Farm Sanctuary took in 40 of these magnificent animals. When the
pigs arrived, they were approximatley six to eight months old, and
those who remain have been with us here at Farm Sanctuary for over
seven years now. Due to problems with lameness, a retirement pig
area was built for anyone having trouble getting around.
Although
the pigs were terrified when they arrived, they love human attention
now, and will lay on their sides when people approach in hopes of
getting a belly rub.
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