an animal rights group involved in a long legal dispute with kentucky fried chicken about the...

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  • 7/29/2019 An Animal Rights Group Involved in a Long Legal Dispute With Kentucky Fried Chicken About the Treatment of the

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    An animal rights group involved in a long legal dispute with Kentucky Fried Chicken

    about the treatment of the 750 million chickens it slaughters each year, released a

    videotape showing slaughterhouse workers jumping up and down on live chickens,

    drop-kicking them like footballs and slamming them into walls, apparently for fun.

    Animal rights groups have long complained that the sheer malicious behavior - on top

    of the typical confinement and bloodletting - goes on in slaughter plants all the time,

    but this is the first time such graphic proof has been produced. The tape was taken

    surreptitiously by an investigator for the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals

    (PETA) who worked at the plant from October 2003 to May 2004.

    Prominent veterinarians, including those on the company's animal welfare advisory

    board, called for shutting down the plant and dismissing or prosecuting its managers.

    Dr. Ian J. H. Duncan, an animal and poultry science professor at the University ofGuelph in Ontario, who is a KFC adviser, said the tape contains some of the worst

    scenes of animal cruelty that I have ever witnessed."

    The undercover investigator, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he still

    does undercover work for the group, said in a telephone interview that he saw

    "hundreds" of acts of cruelty, including workers tearing beaks off, ripping a bird's

    head off to write graffiti in blood, spitting tobacco juice into birds' mouths, plucking

    feathers to "make it snow," suffocating a chicken by tying a latex glove over its head,

    and squeezing birds like water balloons to spray feces over other birds.

    He said the behavior was "to alleviate boredom or vent frustrations," especially when

    so many birds were coming in that they would have to work late.

    On April 6, during just one day of filming, workers can be seen making a game of

    throwing chickens against a wall; 114 chickens were thrown in seven minutes. A

    supervisor walking past the pile of birds on the floor said, "Hold your fire," and, once

    out of the way, told the crew to "carry on."

    On another day, he said, the supervisor told the crew to "kill correctly because

    inspectors were visiting."

    The tape includes the screeching of the birds and the sound of each hitting the wall.

    The video can be seen on PETA's web site at: www.kentuckyfriedcruelty.com

    To document cruelty and position his tiny camera, the investigator spent eight months

    working in the "hang pen," where workers attach newly arrived chickens by their feet

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    to a conveyor that carries them upside-down through an electrified "stun bath" and

    then into the whirling blades of the throat-cutting machine.

    KFC says all its suppliers train their workers in animal welfare, but the investigator

    said Pilgrim's Pride had nothing on the topic in its orientation manual and the only

    instruction he received was after five months, and then only in how to wring achicken's neck by hand. The Web site of Pilgrim's Pride does not note any animal

    welfare policy.

    Dr. Temple Grandin, a well-known veterinary scientist who designs plants for humane

    slaughter, called the behavior shown on the videotape "absolutely atrocious."

    Dr. Grandin is also on KFC's animal welfare advisory board and said "They need to

    fire the plant manager."

    Several American and British veterinary experts to whom PETA sent the videotape

    expressed disgust.

    "I have visited many poultry slaughterhouses but I have never seen cruelty to chickens

    to the extent shown in this video," said Dr. Donald M. Broom, professor of animal

    welfare at Cambridge University and chairman of the European Union's animal

    welfare scientific committee. "It would be grounds for a successful prosecution for

    cruelty to animals in most countries."

    PETA said it planned to ask a West Virginia prosecutor to prosecute plant employeesand managers under state laws that make torture or malicious killing of animals a

    felony. The investigator said he would testify. PETA also said the best thing each of

    us can do to help spare animals from such torture is to simply stop eating them and,

    thus, stop creating the industry that allows such cruelty to occur.

    Pilgrim's Pride, the second-largest poultry producer behind Tyson Foods, won KFC's

    "Supplier of the Year" award in 1997.