Wegmans Cruelty: An Unofficial Blog

This is an unofficial blog and informational archive related to the WEGMANSCRUELTY film and resulting campaign.

Please see that page for more information.

Sunday, August 13, 2006

When Will There Be Stories Like this about Wegmans Egg Farm?


Animal cruelty charges come home to roost

Activists’ focus on Esbenshade Farms might signal more trouble for local egg industry.

By Gil Smart, Lancaster Online

Sunday News

Published: Aug 12, 2006 11:34 PM EST

LANCASTER COUNTY, PA - The bird in the video is gray and decomposing, having been stepped on and perhaps defecated upon by the other snow-white chickens that mill about inside the wire cage.A gloved hand reaches in and pulls the carcass out, turning it slowly that the camera might see, ultimately, that the world might see.

The footage, shot by John Brothers, an animal-rights advocate with the Washington D.C.-based group Compassion Over Killing, was the key piece of evidence in the cruelty case against officials with Esbenshade Farms in Mount Joy that went before Elizabethtown Magisterial District Judge Jayne F. Duncan last week.

Esbenshade Farms chief executive officer H. Glenn Esbenshade and farm manager Jay Musser each faced 35 counts of animal cruelty; one charge against each was thrown out, and after five hours of testimony Aug. 7, attorneys for both sides appeared to be working on a settlement.

Yet whatever happens, Compassion Over Killing and the Humane Society of the United States, which helped fund the case, are likely to declare victory.

For while their immediate goal was to force Esbenshade to clean up its chicken houses, the case was also part of a broader campaign against what animal-rights activists believe are inhumane conditions in the egg industry as a whole. And on that count, last week’s case was a success. The Associated Press covered the proceedings, and traffic increased on Compassion Over Killing’s Web site, where Brothers’ video is posted.

This means that even once the case is resolved, the local egg industry’s headaches might be only beginning.

To be sure, animal-rights groups have long waged war against the egg industry. But Lancaster County has never been targeted as specifically as it has been the past few years. In part it might have been inevitable, as this is the top egg-producing county in Pennsylvania, itself one of the top egg-producing states.

All of the attention, initially, took industry leaders by surprise. But they’ve begun to push back, waging a campaign against "agricultural terrorism," and considering ways they might educate the public about standard farming practices that might seem strange to consumers who never really have thought about where their eggs come from.

"Advanced agriculture has been one of the key growth factors in Lancaster County’s agricultural economy," said Jim Adams, chief operating officer of Wenger Feed Mill.

"If we had to sprinkle corn on the ground for 200,000 birds, we’d never get the job done."

From dogs to hens

Blame it, maybe, on puppy mills.

The long-running, high-profile campaign against the dog breeding industry has borne some large fruit lately, with Gov. Ed Rendell vowing to toughen the state’s dog laws. The move was prompted, in part, by sustained pressure from animal activists, including a Philadelphia-based group that erected billboards on the Pennsylvania Turnpike urging consumers not to do business in Lancaster County, "home of 100s of puppy mills."

What works for dogs, some think, may work for chickens, too. Animal activists have long been concerned about the plight of chickens used in the egg industry. The New York Times profiled Compassion Over Killing in a lengthy 2002 article: "This is the next anti-oppression movement," one member told the Times after a "raid" on a Maryland farm during which the group entered chicken sheds and stole several sick and dying birds.

There are crucial differences between the way Pennsylvania regulates the treatment of dogs and chickens. The former have a whole series of laws specifically devoted to the manner in which dogs are bred and kept. The treatment of chickens, however, is regulated only by Pennsylvania’s cruelty statute, which states that anyone who "wantonly or cruelly illtreats" or otherwise abuses, neglects or abandons any animal is breaking the law but even this "shall not apply to activity undertaken in normal agricultural operation."

As a result, said Mike Winters, the Lancaster attorney who defended Esbenshade Farms and has defended dog breeders in the past, "everyone has a different perspective on what abuse is."

Beyond that, animal-rights groups targeting the egg industry, or other animal-intensive agricultural industries, actually have a potent weapon that puppy mill opponents don’t. While foes of dog breeders must rely on the state’s Bureau of Dog Law to police kennels, those targeting the egg industry can bring alleged violations to the attention of local Humane Society police officers, who have the authority to bring charges in court.

That’s exactly what happened in the Esbenshade case, after Brothers showed his footage to Humane Society police Officer Johnna Seeton. Seeton told the Philadelphia Inquirer in January that the conditions shown in Brothers’ video were "very, very bad"; Dr. Ian Duncan, a Canadian professor and renowned expert on animal welfare, said he’d never seen conditions as bad as those shown in the Esbenshade video.

The Humane Society of the United States has called the case groundbreaking, the first time that an American egg producer has been charged with cruelty over hens’ normal living conditions.

Winters said the involvement of the Humane Society itself is unique, in that the group "has essentially bankrolled the prosecution," retaining the attorney who is prosecuting the case because the Lancaster County District Attorney’s office does not handle animal cruelty cases.

When the Humane Society and other national organizations sitting on millions start coming after egg producers, he said, the game is on.

And not just at Esbenshade Farms. Last year, Philadelphia-based Hugs for Puppies began targeting Kreider Farms, a Manheim egg production company that also operates a dairy farm and several restaurants. The group decided to go after Kreider Farms not because conditions for hens were any worse than is normal in the industry, but simply because Kreider Farms is one of Pennsylvania’s largest egg producers and the group considers those industry norms to be repulsive.

People "have this image in their mind of Farmer Brown raising chickens in his backyard, and that’s just not the case anymore," said Nick Cooney, director of Hugs for Puppies. But this is factory farming, he said, complete with hundreds of thousands of birds jammed into small chicken houses, housed in wire "battery" cages that often don’t even provide enough room for the fowl to turn around.

The European Union has begun to phase out "battery" cages; activists want U.S. producers to do the same.

In November 2004 and September 2005, members of Hugs for Puppies shot videotape inside several Kreider Farms chicken houses; felony charges were brought against two members of the group, but in April, Christopher Price, 25, of Philadelphia pleaded guilty to one misdemeanor count of criminal trespass, agreeing to pay $582 in fines and court costs.

At the conclusion of his case, Price referenced the Esbenshade case, noting that there is more than one way to skin a cat, or a chicken: "As proven by the Esbenshade case, there are other ways to get the word out without breaking the law," he said.

The clear implication being that there will be more "investigations" to come.

"The industry tries hard to keep hidden what happens inside those facilities," said Erica Meier, Compassion Over Killing’s executive director. The "undercover" video and high-profile court cases ultimately "encourage people to make more humane choices."

What next?

The industry suspects animal-rights groups are more interested in shutting them down entirely.

"Short of getting out of business, we’re never going to be able to satisfy them," said Chris Herr, vice president of PennAg Industries, an agricultural trade association in Harrisburg.

And so the pushback has begun. In April, the Lancaster County Chamber of Commerce & Industry hosted a forum on "agricultural terrorism," to warn the industry of "those who engage in criminal acts in the name of animal rights," said FBI agent Joseph Metzinger.

But the egg industry is also beginning to reach out to the public and public officials, in order to explain the normal business practices utilized by large egg producers.

There is, said Wenger Feed Mill’s Jim Adams, a reason for the measures. "They make the food process wholesome, and the eggs can be gathered with a reasonable amount of labor," he said.

"For a lot of people, efficiency and profit are dirty words. But that’s what makes the world go 'round."

At the same time, though, the industry is willing to review its standard practices, tweak them where possible or necessary.

"No responsible people in agriculture will defend animal abuse," said Gary Willier, agriculture services manager for The Lancaster Chamber of Commerce & Industry. "And there’s probably no one more concerned with animal welfare than the farmers who make their living" from animals.

"But at the same time, everyone has a right to choose whatever food they want. ... Our society is at a point where we have the time and money to look at alternative sources of raising food. And if people are willing to pay more for food they know has been raised in a manner they consider humane, that’s an evolution of the food chain.

"It doesn’t mean it's wrong to keep [chickens] in battery cages. It just means it’s wrong for you."

© 2004-2006 Lancaster Newspapers

Tuesday, August 08, 2006

When will Wegmans be criminally charged for its egg farm? Other farms get charged, so why not them?

In December 2005, a COK investigator worked undercover at Esbenshade Farms, one of Pennsylvania's largest egg factory farms. While there, he documented appalling conditions for hundreds of thousands of hens confined inside decrepit cages. The documentation led to the filing of 35 counts of criminal animal cruelty against both the owner and the manager of the factory farm.
The trial started in April and continued yesterday. Below are several of today's news reports about this case, including two Associated Press articles and local television news coverage. For more information about the investigation, visit http://www.cok.net/feat/paefi.php. To see more of the media coverage, visit http://tinyurl.com/flr6o. The case is still pending.

Professor: Egg farm had deteriorating cages, neglected birds

By MARTHA RAFFAELE
The Associated Press
08/07/2006
ELIZABETHTOWN, Pa. - A secretly shot videotape showed evidence of deteriorating cages and neglected birds at a Lancaster County egg farm, a prosecution expert testified Monday at the animal-cruelty trial of the farm's manager and chief executive.
There were many birds, "both live and dead, that were trapped on parts of the cages" at Esbenshade Farms last year, said Ian Duncan, a poultry science professor who recently retired from the University of Guelph in Ontario.
Duncan took the stand Monday at the start of a trial for the chief executive and the manager of Esbenshade Farms in Mount Joy, one of Pennsylvania's largest egg producers.
His testimony was entirely based on the 19-minute videotape that was shot by an animal-rights activist who worked undercover at the farm last year. Duncan said the tape showed too many birds trapped in dangerous conditions for it to have been fabricated.

A humane society police officer charged the executive, H. Glenn Esbenshade, and the manager, Jay Musser, with summary offenses after she obtained the video. The defendants' lawyer has said the state's animal-cruelty law cannot be enforced against what he described as a "normal agricultural operation."
John Brothers, who made the video, said he saw as many as nine chickens in a single cage, and that broken cage wires impaled both dead and living birds.
Brothers testified that he reported the conditions to Musser. "His response was that the cages were 25 years old," Brothers said.
The tape reportedly shows chickens impaled by cage wires, unable to reach food or water, kept in areas so small they could not spread their wings and penned along with decomposing dead chickens.

1 charge dropped in egg-farm cruelty case
Summary trial begins on 34 other charges against Esbenshade Farms
By By Robyn Meadows And Tim Mekeel
Lancaster New Era

Aug 07, 2006

LANCASTER COUNTY, PA - One animal-cruelty charge against a pair of Mount Joy egg-farm operators was thrown out this morning, because the charge lacked the date of the alleged offense.

Magisterial District Court Judge Jayne Duncan agreed to dismiss the charge against the Esbenshade Farms operators as their summary trial began.

Esbenshade Farms chief executive officer H. Glenn Esbenshade and farm manager Jay Musser still face 34 summary counts of animal cruelty.

If convicted, the defendants face a potential penalty of $50 to $750 in fines and up to 90 days in jail on each count.

The charges were brought by the Humane Society’s police officer for Lancaster County, Johnna Seeton.

Duncan’s small courtroom on South Spruce Street in Elizabethtown was filled with about 35 people, including supporters of each side. The trial was continuing at press time.

At issue are the living conditions faced by the tens of thousands of caged layer hens on the Mount Joy farm.

The allegedly cruel circumstances were captured on a videotape shot by an undercover investigator with Compassion Over Killing, an animal-rights organization based in Washington, D.C.

The prosecution opened its case by calling Ian Duncan, chairman of the animal welfare department at the University of Guelph in Ontario, Canada, to describe what he saw in the 19-minute video.

Duncan said “there’s absolutely no doubt in my mind” that the video showed trapped hens, including many that were dead for a long time, signifying that the bird cages “were not examined regularly.”

Charges against the two officials were filed in January, on the basis of the videotape shot the month before.

Animal rights groups said the case marked the first time animal cruelty charges had been lodged against an egg farm in Pennsylvania.

The case is the first in the nation in which cruelty is alleged to be part of the normal living conditions for hens, an animal rights official has said.

The central piece of evidence is the video made from Dec. 3 to 8.

The tape allegedly shows hens impaled on wires from cages, hens tangled in the wires and unable to reach food or water, and hens caged with decomposing carcasses of other birds.

Defense attorneys failed in April to get the footage excluded from the trial.

They maintained that undercover activist John Brothers, who shot the video while briefly working at the egg farm, violated constitutional search-and-seizure provisions.

Brothers, defense attorneys said, shot the video without permission and lied on his job application.

But the prosecution showed that Brothers took the video on his own, not as a government investigator, so the constitutionality issue was moot.

Brothers, a member of animal rights group Compassion Over Killing, showed the video to Humane Society officer Seeton. Seeton then used her county-sanctioned authority to file the charges.


Egg-farm cruelty case ends with lawyers seeking deal
By MARTHA RAFFAELE,
Associated Press
08/07/2006
A hearing into animal cruelty charges at one of the state's largest egg farms ended inconclusively Monday, as lawyers for both sides said they were trying to reach a settlement.
Elizabethtown District Judge Jayne F. Duncan heard about 5 1/2 hours of testimony from two of the four witnesses the prosecution planned to present, and then attorneys for both sides spent more than an hour in private conference with their clients. After the hearing, neither side's lawyers would say why they chose to negotiate a settlement instead of continuing with the trial.
"All attorneys are willing to negotiate," said Chris Patterson, a lawyer for the defense.
Any agreement would have to be approved by Duncan.
Testimony during the trial of Esbenshade Farms' manager and chief executive focused on claims that birds were housed in cruel conditions, with the key evidence being a secretly shot video that prosecutors say shows deteriorating cages and neglected birds at the Mount Joy farm.
A prosecution expert testified that there were many birds, "both live and dead, that were trapped on parts of the cages" at Esbenshade Farms last year.
Ian Duncan, a poultry science professor who recently retired from the University of Guelph in Ontario, described the contents of a 19-minute video that was shot by an animal-rights activist who worked undercover at the farm last year.
Ian Duncan, no relation to the judge, said the video showed too many birds trapped in dangerous conditions for it to have been fabricated.
A humane society police officer charged the executive, H. Glenn Esbenshade, and the manager, Jay Musser, with summary offenses after she obtained the video. The defense said the state's animal-cruelty law cannot be enforced against what it maintains is a "normal agricultural operation."
John Brothers, who made the video, testified he saw as many as nine chickens in a single cage, and that broken cage wires impaled both dead and living birds. Attorneys for the prosecution played the video for the judge and the defense, but the television was turned so that members of the public were unable to see the screen.
Brothers testified that he reported the conditions to Musser. "His response was that the cages were 25 years old," Brothers said.
The video reportedly shows chickens impaled by cage wires, unable to reach food or water, kept in areas so small they could not spread their wings and penned along with decomposing dead chickens.
On cross-examination, defense attorney Michael T. Winters asked Brothers on several occasions if caring for chickens that were injured or stuck on broken parts of the cages was among his responsibilities at the egg farm.
"Did you believe that part of your duties appears to be attending to birds that appeared to be stuck?" Winters asked.
"That was never conveyed to me ... that I was in charge of the health of the birds," Brothers responded.
Asked to comment after the hearing on the testimony presented by the prosecution, Esbenshade read a written statement.
"We always have been and will continue to be dedicated to food quality, safety, animal welfare and environmental standards based on industry science standards," he said.

Animal Cruelty Trial

WHP CBS-21 in Harrisburg
August 7, 2006
(see video)


Chicken Farm Owner, Manager Face Cruelty Charges
WGAL - Channel 8 in Harrisburg
August 7, 2006
(see video)