Beatings Under the Big Top
UPDATE:
On October 18, 2002, a judge found Sterling & Reid's elephant
handler, David Creech, guilty on three misdemeanor counts of animal
cruelty. A fourth count was dismissed because it was not clear from
eyewitness testimony which handler struck the elephant, named Joy,
on the head. Joy was hit repeatedly with a sharp metal bullhook during
elephant rides, leaving bloody wounds. Creech was fined $200 for each
count.
Caught in the Act
An animal handler with the Sterling & Reid Bros. Circus was
recently charged with four counts of cruelty to animals and jailed
for allegedly striking an elephant repeatedly with a steel bullhook,
leaving the animal suffering from bleeding wounds. The chief elephant
handler with the circus was also arrested and charged with obstruction
of justice after becoming hostile toward officers investigating
the attack. Click
here to read the Associated Press story on the abuse.
PETA has been informing the public for years that circuses beat
their animals into submission and that if it weren’t for the
whips, chains, electric prods, and bullhooks, animals would never
be a part of the circus. In fact, at the same time as the arrests
were taking place, just a few yards away members of PETA were showing
an undercover videotape revealing yet another elephant trainer viciously
attacking terrified elephants with a sharp, metal bullhook and instructing
other trainers to rip the hook through the elephants’ flesh
until they scream out in pain—as well as to conceal the beatings
from the public.
Transport Troubles
As if the training techniques weren’t bad enough, even sadder
is the fact that majestic elephants, who in the wild would walk
up to 50 miles a day, are restrained with chains often up to 22
hours a day. Big cats, who would secure 2,000 square miles in the
wild, depending on food availability, are allowed to be confined
to cages so small that they have just enough room to stand up and
turn around.
Sterling & Reid has a history riddled with violations to even
these minimal regulations. The circus pleaded guilty to cruelty
charges in San Bernardino County, California, in 1998 after humane
officials confiscated eight severely emaciated ponies from a filthy
trailer. A 9-year-old, 400-pound Syrian brown bear fell from a Sterling
& Reid trailer while the circus was driving on a freeway through
New Orleans at night. The bear had been hit by the trailer and was
dazed and bleeding from his mouth when he was found on the road
by motorists.
A Laundry List of Cruelty
From January 1999 through May 1999, USDA inspectors noted 46 violations
of the Animal Welfare Act. A USDA inspector witnessed exotic cats
being struck repeatedly with jagged sticks and a tiger escaping
from a tent.
The circus leases its elephants from the tragedy-plagued Hawthorn
Corporation, which has a long history of serious federal Animal
Welfare Act violations. Hawthorn has accumulated $72,500 in U.S.
Department of Agriculture penalties and has twice had its license
suspended. Four of Hawthorn’s elephants died of a human strain
of tuberculosis. In January 1997, Hawthorn’s herd of 18 elephants
was restricted from traveling during tuberculosis treatment. Hawthorn’s
elephants have rampaged, causing death, injury, and property damage.
Click here to view PETA’s
factsheet on Hawthorn.
You Can Help
Please write a polite letter thanking Norfolk officials for filing
cruelty charges and ask that they prosecute this sickening act of
cruelty to the fullest extent of the law. Contact:
Bernard Pishko, City Attorney
City Council’s Office
908 City Hall Blvd., 810 Union St.
Norfolk, VA 23510
Fax: 757-664-4201
You can help stop the suffering of elephants, tigers, and other animals
abused in the name of "entertainment." Click
here to support PETA's vital work.
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