top of page

Welcome to the Animal & Wildlife Welfare, Abuse & Crime Report brought to you by the Sustainable Action Network (SAN)!

Coronavirus Update: Your Pets are Not in Danger

While your pets are not in danger of getting infected from the coronavirus, you should still take precautions to make sure your pets are being taken care of should you fall ill.


The American Veterinary Medical Association said that domestic and international health organizations have confirmed that pets are not able to contract or spread the coronavirus.


Sheila McClelland, the founder of Hong Kong-based Lifelong Animal Protection Charity (LAP), in a letter to the Hong Kong authorities, said, “Present evidence suggests that dogs are no more of a risk of spreading (coronavirus) than inanimate objects such as door handles.” The CDC reports that the disease is spreading person to person when through respiratory droplets or close contact.


The Cleveland Animal Protection League, APL, is recommending that pet owners prepare for pets’ needs alongside their own. Sharon Harvey, President & CEO of the Cleveland Animal Protective League, said, “We don’t want people to panic, now’s the time to stay calm. This is emergency preparedness, we need to have back up plans for our pets so they get the care they need too, because they’re part of the family.”


Precautions like identifying a pet sitter that’s available if you are not, having excess crates, food and supplies ready, making sure pets’ vaccinations are up to date, checking pets identification tags, and having a list of pets’ medications ready are always a good idea.


Harvey said, “The best thing pet parents can do is not panic and stay healthy for your pets by practicing good preventive measures, such as hand washing and avoiding close contact with other people. Every single day of the year it is crucial that you have a back-up plan in place for your pets in the event you become ill and cannot care for them for a period of time – even when there’s not a looming threat of pandemic.”


Scientists believe the coronavirus started in Wuhan, China when it was passed from an animal to a human at an exotic animal market.


Billboard reports that songstress Cher is doing her part for the animals. She is a known animal rights activist who’s most recent involvement is part of an art display in London.

Cher has collaborated with artist Zoobs Ansari to sell 11 original portraits. All proceeds from the portraits will go to Cher’s animal non-profit Free the Wild. The portraits are multimedia works inspired by Cher’s recent tours, including the O2 Arena London concerts and Here We Go Again tour.


See examples of the art on Instagram, below:

In a comment released to the news media, Cher said, “I co-founded Free The Wild with my friends Mark and Gina (Nelthorpe-Cowne) because of our common goal to help better the lives of animals in captivity. When Zoobs learned about FTW, he jumped in with an idea to raise funds. I am so touched by his very generous donation of original artwork.”

Advertisement


The artwork will be displayed at “Insanity Fair,” a London exhibition housed at Elephant West. The show will run from March 13 to April 9. Cher’s portraits will be available for purchase and prices range from $10,000 to $13,000. All proceeds will be donated to Free the Wild.

According to an investigation by the Sun Online, the hot new platform TikTok is becoming a platform for sharing animal abuse.

Because the app doesn’t require age verification, the social media site is open to all ages.


Footage found by the Sun reveals users shouting at animals, hitting them on the head and other cruel treatment. Many TikTok users participated in the #PutItInABun challenge, where pet owners tie scrunchies or rubber bands around their pet’s ears. This challenge’s hashtag received 120-million views. It’s a move that PETA and animal rights activists call cruel and unnecessary because pets are visibly uncomfortable in those situations.


PETA has spoken out against animal treatment on TikTok and other social media platforms. Speaking to the Sun about TikTok in particular, PETA spokesperson and director Elisa Allen said, ” They normalise treating animals disrespectfully, even physically abusing them, and there’s a risk of ‘copycat’ behaviour by people who are desperate for publicity and attention – even the negative kind. We call on digital platforms to ensure abusers are permanently banned.”


PETA wrote open letters in 2019 to social media platforms including TikTok urging them to ban animal abusers from sites. “Videos like these are extremely dangerous, because they may “normalize” treating animals disrespectfully or even physically abusing them—particularly for impressionable viewers, including your platform’s younger users. They also increase the risk of “copycat” behavior by people who are desperate for publicity and attention—even the negative kind.”


See examples of animal abuse on TikTok, below:

Leg-hold traps snatch creatures by the leg, and force them to endure a long, suffering death.

The best they can hope for is to chew through their own flesh and escape.

Add your name if you want to ban these vicious traps once and for all! Imagine what it would be like to have your foot caught in a pair of steel jaws. They're too strong to pull apart. Your leg is broken, so you lay there in agony. As time passes, you hope someone will help you. But rescue never comes. It dawns on you that you're going to die here. That's the reality for many animals whose legs are caught in one of these wicked traps. "No tool in Wildlife Services' arsenal kills more nonselectively – or slowly – than the leg-hold trap. "Since 2000, more than 90 species of wildlife have died by mistake in agency traps, including pronghorn antelope, mule deer, river otters, swift foxes, badgers, porcupines and federally protected bald eagles, government records show. "But whether animals are caught accidentally or not, they often struggle for days and die of exposure, injuries and other causes long before a trapper returns to the site," reported the Sacramento Bee. "They suggest traps be checked once a week, but that's all it is, a suggestion. "There are traps that are not checked for literally months at a time," said Gary Strader, a former Wildlife Services trapper in Nevada from 2006 to 2009. Add your name if you want to ban these vicious traps once and for all!

2020 Tangier Shrine Circus, exhibitor David Donnert

At the 2020 Tangier Shrine Circus, exhibitor David Donnert tried over and over to force a visibly distressed horse to lie down by striking him on the legs and hauling on the reins, which undoubtedly caused severe pain as the bit was pulled through his mouth.


Trying to force a horse into a highly vulnerable position in front of rowdy crowds is unquestionably inhumane.


Donnert also whipped a camel in the face, and notorious exhibitor Vicenta Pages hit lions and tigers with a prod as the animals flinched in fear and frantically searched for a way escape the ring.


This is animal abuse, and PETA is calling on the Tangier Shrine Circus to make this the last year it uses animals. Please, never attend a circus that uses animals.

The Iditarod

These are the LIES the Iditarod tells teachers: “Mushers take good care of their dogs… they love their dogs…if they were abused or misused they would not want to run”.

The dogs DON’T want to run, they’re forced to until their bodies break down.


They’re kept chained up year-round in the freezing snow, pouring rain, and sweltering heat. Don’t be fooled by the Iditarod’s deception.


The Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race: 21st century Sled Dog Slavery.


We should end this falsely glamorized cruelty to sled dogs NOW!

The Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race is a grueling expedition from Anchorage to Nome, Alaska, which takes place every March. It is like racing your dog from Orlando to New York, depriving him of sleep to complete the course as quickly possible,  mushing through waist-deep water and ice, with the dog losing about 10 pounds through the ordeal.


About 1,500 dogs start the Iditarod, but more than one-third are flown out every year because they become sick, injured, or exhausted from being forced to run for hours  through jagged mountain ranges, frozen rivers, dense forests, and desolate tundra in biting winds, blinding snowstorms, and temperature fluctuations from 40 degrees above to 60 degrees below zero. The dogs - usually husky mixes weighing only 40 to 45 pounds - are usually tethered to 400 pound sleds in teams of 15. 


They must run about 125 miles per day, often racing as many as six hours at a time, with just a few hours' sleep  each day.


Please sign and share a new petition to U.S. Congress asking to ban trophy hunting imports!

Elephant hunting season in Botswana starts in April and will go through September.  272 elephants have been slated for this hunting season.  The time is now to tell the U.S. government to protect elephants and other precious wildlife.  Please click on the link below to sign the petition to the U.S. Congress asking members to support the Cecil and Protect Acts.  Both of these bills will restrict the import of trophies of species listed under the Endangered Species Act which includes elephants.  Please sign and share this petition: https://www.change.org/p/u-s-house-of-representatives-u-s-congress-ban-trophy-hunting-imports-and-end-elephant-slaughter Imagine 272 elephants gone in just five months who are already critically endangered.  Then compound this loss with poaching and wildlife trafficking of other elephants and wildlife.  We do not have time to waste and we cannot give up on this fight.

This Carriage Horse Died so Tourists Could Have a Few Minutes of Fun

The video is almost too sad to watch. On February 28th, an exhausted carriage horse that had fallen over in the middle of Central Park struggles to regain its footing. As it advances with its forelegs, its back legs drag against the concrete. It tries again, but to no avail, and finally collapses onto its side. It was yet another tragic end for such a majestic animal. The horse was euthanized shortly afterward. Enough is enough. Sign to demand New York City bans horse-drawn carriage immediately. While Care2 often shares with you the stories of horses that have collapsed while drawing carriages, this story is a little different. In some cases, the horses recover enough to keep working, a horrible reward for recovering from an avoidable injury. But in this case, the horse didn't recover and was put down. Perhaps the saddest part of the story is that his handlers didn't even try to get the animal the help it needed. Instead of calling a vet to check on the equine, the carriage driver, along with several of his colleagues, carelessly threw ropes around him and pushed and pulled him into a trailer where he was then spirited away and put down. "Out of sight, out of mind" was their apparent hope. But let's not let these carriage drivers get away with their negligence and cruelty. Not only should the Mayor immediately halt carriage rides in NYC, but the drivers should be investigated for animal cruelty, and their licenses should be revoked. Sadly, NYC is one of many American cities that still allow the wholly unnecessary and completely inhumane practice of horse carriage rides to persist despite protests. Throughout the country, from Charlotte to Cleveland, horses are forced to pull tourists — sometimes through extreme conditions like snowstorms, torrential downpours, and heatwaves — all the while unaware of the real cost to the horse. Horses are not meant to walk on concrete all day long, breathing in car exhaust, and the effects on their bodies is often disastrous. This practice needs to end today. Sign the petition and say no more carriage cruelty.


BBC Two announces Tigers: Hunting The Traffickers, an investigation into illegal tiger farms in South East Asia

I hope this film raises awareness of the complex issues that surround the trade and the threat it poses to endangered wild tigers mainly amongst those who ultimately have the power to stop the trade and protect them.


Later this year BBC Two will screen Tigers: Hunting The Traffickers, a one-hour documentary from Grain Media in which former Royal Marines Commando Aldo Kane exposes the shocking secrets of the illegal tiger trade in South East Asia and those who profit.

It’s estimated 96% of the world’s wild tigers have disappeared since the turn of the 20th century. With fewer than 4,000 tigers left in the wild, Tigers: Hunting The Traffickers also highlights the plight of a majestic species on the brink of extinction. It explores how tiger farms continue to drive consumer demand for tiger products perpetuating the illegal trade and fuelling poaching.


There are up to 8,000 tigers held in captive facilities across China, Laos, Thailand and Vietnam. Captive tigers are often bred and trafficked to meet demand for illegal products like tiger-bone wine and tiger bone glue, which are believed to have medicinal values in parts of Asia, mainly in China and Vietnam.


Working alongside fearless wildlife crime investigators and covertly filming tiger traffickers, Aldo embarks on a perilous journey along key trafficking routes connecting Malaysia, China, Thailand, Laos and Vietnam. From tiger wine breweries in China, to small backyard holdings in Vietnam, the programme uncovers shocking evidence of demand for tiger parts that threatens to wipe out wild tigers entirely. Evidence includes footage of frozen tiger cubs in freezers at a breeding facility in Laos; tigers held in high security holding pens in Thai zoos; a trader openly selling tiger products in Laos with a street value higher than cocaine; and caged tigers fattened in a dark basement in Vietnam to be killed and cooked to order.


Armed with the secret filmed evidence from the investigation Aldo travels to Geneva where it is presented to international decision-makers at the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) to act on.


Aldo’s fascination for wild tigers and conservation started during his military training in the South East Asia jungles, home to a declining number of wild tigers. In recent years he has also used his specialist military skills to train anti-poaching units in Africa.


Aldo Kane says: “I have spent years in the fight against wildlife poachers and this has given me an unique insight into a criminal underworld, where wild animals are worth more dead than alive. Nothing could have prepared me for what I uncovered about the illegal tiger trade in South East Asia. Here tiger trafficking is big business, often controlled by organised crime units, and yields huge profits. It’s ruthless and cruel and wild tigers pay the ultimate price. The growth of illegal tiger farms across South East Asia is threatening the survival of one of nature’s most beautiful creatures, where a premium is paid for its wild provenance. I hope this film raises awareness of the complex issues that surround the trade and the threat it poses to endangered wild tigers mainly amongst those who ultimately have the power to stop the trade and protect them.”


Patrick Holland, Controller, BBC Two, says: “This is a powerful and urgent film revealing the shocking scale and devastating consequences of the trade in captive tigers. Aldo and the team have shown remarkable bravery and tenacity to reveal the depths of the issue. It is an imperative part of BBC Two’s mission to bring such compelling filmmaking about the changing planet to the broadest audience.”


Tigers: Hunting the Traffickers, a 1x60’ for BBC Two, is made by Grain Media. The executive producer at Grain Media is Monica Garnsey and the executive producer at the BBC is Roger Webb. Laura Warner is the director. It was commissioned by Patrick Holland, Controller, BBC Two, and the Commissioning Editor is Tom Coveney.

More than 330,000 customers have signed our petition to urge Aldi to eliminate gestation crates in their pork supply chain within a specific timeframe.

Yet Aldi is still refusing to address our campaign and commit to going 100% crate-free.

Consumer demand helped convince major grocery stores, like Target, Costco, and Kroger, to commit to phasing out this inhumane practice. Let’s make sure Aldi is the next chain to announce a public timeline to eliminate gestation crates.


Federal investigators found over 160 dogs riddled with scars and broken bones while investigating 11 Georgia properties suspected of participating in a state-wide dogfighting operation.

Injured, malnourished, and distressed, some of the dogs seized by authorities are in desperate need of serious medical care. One overbred female pitbull was starving and chained up with broken legs, according to ABC4.


For their safety, all the canines were taken to undisclosed, out-of-state locations.

“Illegal dogfighting is a barbaric activity,” said U.S. Attorney Charlie Peeler. “Those who choose to violate the Animal Welfare Act face serious consequences, including federal prison time, where there is no parole.”


It is imperative that justice is served for the dogs subjected to such a torturous criminal operation, showing that dogfighting will not be tolerated. Sign this petition urging Assistant U.S. Attorney Julia Bowen Mize to prosecute the perpetrators to the fullest extent of the law, including a life-long ban on having animals.

A man who beheaded a rabbit in a vile case of animal abuse has pleaded guilty to charges of animal torture and trespassing, which includes two years in prison.

In December, KCCI reported that the individual, 64-year-old Bobby Carothers from Iowa, had dismembered a bunny named Petunia at the Animal Rescue League in Des Moines.

The staff at the animal shelter escorted Carothers out of the building during closing time.

“Just minutes after he left the building, we discovered the unimaginable: our sweet bunny, Petunia, had been violently killed,” said CEO Tom Colvin. “The scene was beyond gruesome.”

Carothers admitted to barbarically cutting off the bunny’s head with a stick and leaving her to bleed to death, according to court documents. He claimed to have been hungry and said he was having rabbit stew later that night.


“Bobby Gene Carothers, who brutally murdered a rabbit named Petunia at the ARL in December, pleaded guilty to animal torture and has been sentenced to up to two years in prison … without the possibility of probation,” Colvin wrote in a Facebook post after the judgement. “He also received a $625 fine.”


“This has been an incredibly painful journey of recovery for our team,” he continued, “and while we are relieved to have a resolution in the courts for this case, our fight to improve Iowa’s animal welfare laws continues, and is now more personal than ever before.”

The things companies can hide under the guise of words like “conservation” is terrifying. Polar Bears International claims to want to protect animals, but takes money from a company that profits off the violent deaths of coyotes and geese.

The partnership that exists between Canada Goose and Polar Bears International is hypocritical and makes NO sense.

Wild Animals Shouldn't Still be Suffering in Circuses: It's Time to Ban Them in the U.S.

While countries around the world have acted to stop circus suffering by closing their doors to circuses and exhibitions using wild animals performers, there's now renewed hope the U.S. could be one of the next to join them with the reintroduction of federal legislation that would ban them across the country. This week Representatives Raúl M. Grijalva and David Schweikert have introduced the Traveling Exotic Animal and Public Safety Protection Act (TEAPSPA), which would amend the Animal Welfare Act (AWA) to prohibit traveling circuses and exhibitions from keeping a number of wild animals, including lions, tigers, and elephants. While wild animals have been used in circuses for decades, we now know so much more about what they need to be physically and psychologically healthy and the evidence shows that traveling circuses can never meet these needs. Sadly, numerous species continue to be subjected to lives of confinement, where they're denied everything they need to thrive, and forced to perform unnatural and uncomfortable tricks – all for nothing more than our fleeting amusement. Despite defenses of their continued use, research, multiple undercover investigations and media reports have all exposed not only the problems inherent with using wild animals as performers in circuses, but also the heartbreaking abuses they're subjected to both behind the scenes, and right out in the open. Worryingly, not only does their use raise serious concerns about their welfare, it also puts our safety at risk. There have been numerous serious incidents involving the deaths of animals and trainers, and injuries to members of the public. Thankfully people have continued to turn against this type of exploitation, and cities and states across the country have passed a number of bans and restrictions on animal performances. While those victories are something to celebrate, supporters of this bill argue that this issue needs to be addressed on the federal level because the mobile nature of circuses makes it difficult for law enforcement and inspectors to follow up on troubling incidents and violations of the AWA. This leaves them virtually incapable of doing anything meaningful to ensure the well-being of animals, or our safety. Please sign and share this petition urging Congress to protect wild animals and us by passing this historic piece of legislation.

Animal Trainer Replaced on Reported Jimmy Kimmel Line-Up after PETA Reaches Out

Great news! After hearing from PETA, Jimmy Kimmel Live nixed reported plans to bring an animal trainer on the show. The animals in this video look terrified. Animals forced to be on talk shows are often stolen from their mothers as infants & forced to endure noisy crowds & bright lights. PETA thanks Jimmy Kimmel for learning from past mistakes and putting animal welfare before ratings.

Let us get straight to the point of this URGENT appeal: your help is needed now! We have nowhere else to turn.


In Israel, a haven for abused horses and donkeys is being forced to close. Innocent lives are in danger because they are being evicted from their sanctuary. The animals have been safe and loved at the Starting Over shelter in Kefar Yona, an area north of Tel Aviv. Almost all the animals were rescued from trouble spots – many from areas on the turbulent West Bank.

In certain areas, donkey abuse is routine. Donkeys and horses are used as transport but given only the most rudimentary care. They are semi-starved, whipped, beaten and forced to work until they drop. When they get sick or old, they are often abandoned.


Sharon Cohen, who founded Starting Over, gets pleas for help from all over Israel and rescues every donkey and horse she can. They arrive at the sanctuary terrified and near-death. It takes time and love, but they recover. Now, they face an uncertain future again.

She explained that the landlord has ended the lease and all the animals must be transported to a new home. If that does not happen, they could be returned to a horrible fate. These creatures have already known lives of horror. We can’t let it happen again! Please help Now

The thought of them being tormented again is so bitterly unjust that we have promised that, with your support, we will help pay for transport to a new sanctuary.



Animals like Princess, an adorable little donkey…


Princess was only a few days old when she was separated from her mother, brutally tied up with ropes around her legs and neck and left to starve.

Don, these next few words are hard to write because they are so ghastly: cruel children did this for a “joke” and then left the baby to die. Starting Over rescued her. Princess was found shivering from the cold, injured and crying for her mother’s milk.I am sure that must make you feel so sad, but the good is that we helped rescue Princess and have promised to do our best to raise the money to move the donkeys to a new home. We need your help to do it. If you possibly can, do what you can today and know that in a small way you have made lives better for creatures that, without you, have very little hope.

Story of Sheep Raised for Wool Will Bring You to Tears

Workers cared so little about her pain that they dropped her on her bloody wound after cutting off her tail. Australian actor Arianwen Parkes-Lockwood presents the heartbreaking story of one sheep who was repeatedly mutilated, stomped on, and finally killed for wool.

Stores That Sell Live Animals Are Complicit in Their Suffering

Workers packed rats into plastic bags and froze them ALIVE as they squirmed to get out. Another employee callously dumped out a cooler of dead guinea pigs into a trash bag. There’s always suffering involved when you see an animal for sale. NEVER shop at stores like Petco or PetSmart that sell animals like products.

Court Win: Use of M-44 'Cyanide Bombs' Halted in Idaho

We're celebrating a key victory for wildlife this week. The Center for Biological Diversity and allies finalized an agreement setting strict limits on how and where federal agents can kill wolves in Idaho. It also bans the use of M-44 "cyanide bombs" statewide and outlaws using snares to kill wolves on public lands. The new restrictions on wolf snares and the M-44 ban will remain in place until the federal Wildlife Services program finishes a detailed study of the environmental impacts of killing wolves. "Cyanide bombs and traps are vicious and indiscriminate. Often they bring tremendous suffering to wildlife and pets they're not meant for," said the Center's Andrea Santarsiere. "This victory is a step forward in reducing the suffering of animals at the hands of our federal government." Learn more and consider supporting this work with a donation to our Stop Wildlife Services Fund.

During the 12 years from 2001 to 2013, more than 90 of these loyal canines died in Afghanistan and Iraq — mostly from gunshot wounds, explosions, and heat-related stress.

While the U.S. military maintains a trauma registry that keeps track of their injured two-legged service members, there is no trauma registry for the military working dogs (MWDs) who put their lives on the line to save these troops.


By tracking MWD injuries and deaths, a registry tracking trauma for military working dogs could save the lives of our four-legged heroes. In addition to providing veterinarians and handlers with vital information to help these pups heal, it could also help us advocate for them to have better protective gear. These dogs are risking their lives for us — the least we can do is help them make it through their deployments alive.


Take Action, Responsibility & Wildlife...
"Corporations Are People My Friends."
Our companies are known for creating products that enhance people's lives.  Through Sunset Corporation of America and its companies, we’re equally dedicated to improving lives.  Our commitment extends to helping local communities, fostering better educational systems, supporting the arts and culture, helping disadvantaged youth, protecting and improving the environment, animal welfare, wildlife issues and encouraging employee volunteerism.

The Sustainable Action Network (SAN), A Don Lichterman non-profit organization dedicated to building a global community raising awareness of corruption, injustice and the need for action across a full range of issues impacting people and animal/wildlife welfare around the world, such as conservation, climate change, campaign law, lobbying, government action and rescue work. SAN’s vision is to create safer world, free from political, environmental, and social oppression, where all the inhabitants of Earth can live in harmony within their own natural environments. Our commitment extends to helping local communities, fostering better educational systems, supporting the arts and culture, helping disadvantaged youth, protecting and improving the environment, animal welfare, wildlife issues and encouraging employee volunteerism.


Activism and Sustainability:

  • Gun Safety & Gun Laws

  • Cruelty Free

  • Death Penalty

  • Demand Action

  • Sustainable Action Network

Fairness and Equality:

  • Grammy District Advocacy

  • Privatization

  • Voters Issues & Gerrymandering

  • Private Prisons & the War on Drugs

  • Finance, Housing & the Economy Corporate Responsibility:

  • Candidates, Bills, Laws & Protections

  • Wildlife & Oceania

  • Labeling & Transparency

  • Comprehensive Captivity & Hunting Results Databases

Purchase gifts that help animals! The Animal Legal Defense Fund’s holiday shop is now open – for a limited time. Find past favorites and new designs in options including totes, shirts, hoodies, and even options for dogs!

These items make the perfect holiday gift for friends and family who care about animals. Spread the message of compassion and support the Animal Legal Defense Fund. 100% of the profits go to our work to protect the lives and advance the interests of animals through the legal system.



Welcome to the Animal & Wildlife Welfare, Abuse & Crime Report brought to you by the Sustainable Action Network (SAN)!

Animal Law Symposium: Oklahoma City

Join the Animal Legal Defense Fund for our Animal Law Symposium! This day-long symposium will provide attendees with the opportunity to hear from the top voices within the animal law community, including local experts. Register now.

Amid the coronavirus scare, two innocent poodles — one a disabled senior dog — suffered unimaginably when a community officer reportedly bludgeoned them to death in broad daylight, according to the Daily Mail.

Disturbing footage shows the officer beating one of the dogs while their caretaker desperately tries to shield his other beloved pet.


The dogs and their guardian were stopped just before they stepped outside for a walk. A forceful argument erupted as the officer, out of misguided fear of disease, attempted to prevent the man from taking his dogs outside; shortly thereafter, the officer fatally clubbed the helpless animals.


“The officer threatened to beat the owner to death if he didn’t give away the dogs,” claimed the social media user who posted the appalling video.


The notion that household pets are contributing to the spread of coronavirus is baseless.


There is no evidence to suggest that these animals carry the disease, according to the World Health Organization. Despite this, some residential complexes and neighborhoods in China have banned people from walking their dogs, and public officials openly participate in killing these defenseless creatures.


These two poodles, and thousands of animals throughout China, deserve justice. Sign this petition urging Ambassador Cui Tiankai to push for full prosecution of the culprit and the promotion of educational resources to show that pets are not a coronavirus threat, and massacring them is unacceptable.

$1M worth of shark fins seized in Miami

Nearly $1 million worth of shark fins were recently seized in Miami's port. Remove the U.S. from the fin trade by demanding a #FinBanNow: http://bit.ly/2PNaUK7

Serena Williams Launches Cruelty-Free Vegan Leather Collection!

Serena Williams, and her sister Venus, are well-known in the vegan world for being top athletes who advocate plant-based nutrition. Serena is also a fashion designer having studied design at school, and recently launched her new line spring collection – S by Serena – at New York Fashion Week.


Ms Williams, who adopted a vegan diet in 2012, has the second-most Grand Slam titles for a woman (23 and counting) and is a working mother of her young daughter. Inspired by her travels around the world, in particular by Africa, Ms Williams was extremely motivated to include vegan leather in this collection.


The tennis athlete launched her premier collection last autumn at NYFW followed by a second intimate presentation earlier this month. This new collection features on-point dresses, jumpsuits and pantsuits, in vegan leather and bold prints. Williams refers to the new collection is a “fashion passport.”


She told Essence: “I feel like a lot of things are being killed and we’re not saving the earth. We can all just do one small thing and help out so that was also a lot of inspiration.”

People Glued MAGA Hats on Pigeons to Support Trump!

Harming animals to make a point is fundamentally wrong, and we must demand the people behind this stunt are stopped!



A group of people glued little red Make America Great Again (MAGA) hats onto pigeons and set them free in Las Vegas before the presidential debate that was hosted there. Not only did they abuse pigeons, they did it on behalf of 45!



The group calls itself PUTIN (which stands for Pigeons United to Interfere Now). The group's leader, who calls himself Coo Hand Luke, said "The release date was coordinated to serve as a gesture of support and loyalty to President Trump." But honestly, his punny name is nothing but disrespectful to the actual live birds that he harmed to pull what is essentially a childish prank.Apparently, the group had been capturing and holding pigeons captive for months in advance.


The group said they used eyelash adhesive to glue the hats to the birds and claimed it wasn't harmful, but a local group committed to rescuing and rehabilitating pigeons disagreed.


The caps impaired the birds' vision and undoubtedly caused them severe distress. SHARE

Westminster Dog Show Breeder Admits to Deadly Breeding Practices

An eyewitness recorded this alarming conversation with a breeder at the Westminster Dog Show—a show that glorifies breeding and contributes to the animal homelessness crisis. The breeder even talks about a puppy she delivered and how "his little intestines ran outside his body" before he died. This short clip demonstrates everything wrong with breeding.


After a two-year investigation by officials in Victoria, Australia, a shearer has pleaded guilty to cruelty to animals.


In late 2017, an investigator went inside 16 shearing sheds in South Australia and Victoria and documented the same sickening cruelty that PETA has repeatedly exposed. Workers still struck petrified sheep in the face with sharp metal clippers. They still cut them and stitched up their gaping wounds without any pain relief. And they still threw them out of the sheds.


Two sheep died from conditions that workers called "heart attacks," likely resulting from stress during shearing.

A Scottish sheep farmer also pleaded guilty this week to cruelty to animals after he was caught on video viciously punching sheep in the face on a farm in Scotland during a separate PETA investigation. His actions can be seen here. Our investigator also documented that shearers in Scotland struck terrified sheep in the face with electric clippers, slammed their heads into the floor, beat and kicked them, and threw them off shearing trailers across 24 sheep farms in the region. One of the sheep was suffering from mastitis and couldn't stand up, and a worker explained that she was going to be shot.


PETA and our international affiliates have now released 13 investigations of the global wool industry since 2014, when our first exposé resulted in the world's first-ever cruelty-to-animals convictions of sheep shearers. Everywhere that investigators go—from Australia to the U.S. and from South America to the U.K.—they see the same disturbing behavior. The production of all wool—no matter where it originated or what "ethical" or "responsibly sourced" claims are made on its label—spells extreme suffering and death for millions of gentle sheep and lambs.


Please share PETA's exposés with your friends and family members who might still wear wool and help prevent thousands of sheep from being beaten, cut open, kicked, and thrown down chutes.

Ground up. Hidden in coffee. Disguised. There is no limit to the tactics wildlife traffickers will use when they are attempting to sneak through wildlife contraband. But there is no fooling a dog’s nose. No matter how hard smugglers try to hide their contraband, African Wildlife Foundation’s highly trained canine detection dogs will sniff out wildlife products. In fact, it takes only 10-12 seconds for one dog to inspect a vehicle and signal to their handler where the contraband is concealed.


“If you don’t have a dog, you’re going to have to get out your toolbox,” jokes Will Powell, AWF Director of Canines for Conservation. He runs an intensive canine and handler training program in Usa River, Tanzania, pairing wildlife authority officers with a canine counterpart and training the teams to detect wildlife contraband. With the support of the Bureau of U.S. International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs, African Wildlife Foundation has helped train wildlife rangers from Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Cameroon, and Botswana. The fully equipped canine units are deployed strategically at exit and entry points to intercept traffickers smuggling illegal wildlife products — elephant ivory, rhino horn, pangolin scales, and hippo teeth are commonly seized.


For Powell, the 43 sniffer dogs his team has trained as wildlife detection dogs are just as much wildlife officers as the rangers who handle them. Speaking at the graduation ceremony of Uganda Wildlife Authority rangers who completed their course at the Canine Training Facility in February 2020, he explains that the program is designed for teams to “understand how we can connect with our four-legged colleagues.”


Some of the newly trained handlers will return to Entebbe International Airport, where they have already been assisting the canine unit that graduated from AWF’s program in 2016. A separate group of detection dogs and handlers will be deployed to western Uganda, where, with support from the Giorgi Foundation, AWF has constructed a canine facility at Karuma station in the wider Murchison Falls National Park. According to Uganda Wildlife Authority’s Deputy Director of Field Operations, Charles Tumwesigye, the north-western region harbors trafficking routes for wildlife contraband smuggled across the Democratic Republic of Congo border and, increasingly, from South Sudan. “The converging point is Karuma,” he says, so the Karuma canine unit must sniff out culprits in this trafficking zone before they proceed.

Canines for Conservation break the trafficking transport chain


With the addition of the new detection dogs and handler team, Uganda’s canine unit is the largest group trained by AWF. When the first team was deployed in November 2016, they initially intercepted illegal wildlife products just twice in the ensuing weeks, but the number of finds soared to 101 in the next year. The busts have been steadily declining since the initial surge, which is to be expected — traffickers avoid exit points where they are likely to be caught. This is why governments are eager to work with AWF to deploy these trained canine detection teams to their trafficking hotspots. Just the presence of the Uganda Wildlife Authority canine unit in Entebbe is enough to scare off criminals, says Powell. “They’ve learned: the dogs are there.”


Apart from acting as a deterrent where they are deployed, the canine units must collaborate with other authorities to reduce the trade of illegal wildlife products across the East African region. Tumwesigye lauds the state-of-the-art canine facilities at Entebbe International Airport: “It has made a very big difference in the way we work.” He notes that stopping traffickers is crucial, but it is equally important to ensure that the investigation and prosecution of these offenders are streamlined.


The complex network of illegal wildlife trade crosses international borders, linking criminal syndicates overseas with local actors — some might be tempted to kill wildlife while others might aid traffickers to slip through the cracks. Without coordinated action to counter this dynamic and dangerous industry, the future of Africa’s iconic species is uncertain. As a wildlife-rich country, Uganda might be a source of the illicit items, but many of the products are intercepted en route from neighboring countries and destined for overseas markets.


Combatting illegal wildlife trade by enhancing regional collaboration


Being a transit country and regional trafficking hotspot, sealing its borders and strengthening wildlife crime frameworks is a priority. In February 2020, Uganda launched the National Wildlife Crime Coordination Taskforce to improve information-sharing and interagency operations in the fight against illegal wildlife trade.


According to Tanzania Wildlife Authority’s John Kaaya, who oversees the national agency’s canine units, it is important for Kenya, Tanzania, and Uganda to combine forces and protect their shared ecosystems. He underscores the value of the high-quality certification that all AWF-trained canine units receive at Usa River before they are deployed to different trafficking zones across the continent: “With similar training, they will all have the same understanding of how to combat illegal wildlife trade.” AWF is committed to embedding canine units within wildlife agencies and has worked with governments to develop 5-year strategies for the canine units in Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, and Botswana.


The intensive hands-on training at Usa River is only the beginning. Now that the rangers are equipped with the skills and knowledge to look after their dogs and advance the detection capacity of their anti-trafficking teams, AWF will continue to integrate their crucial role into wildlife law enforcement. A newly trained Uganda Wildlife Authority handler recognizes the gravity of this responsibility. Speaking on behalf of his graduating class, he thanked AWF for introducing them to their four-legged companions and providing international canine training that they can apply in different countries across the region to safeguard species targeted by illegal wildlife trade. “You have given us friends,” he says proudly. “Our dogs are an important tool in our work, but we can communicate and enjoy together as we fight against wildlife trafficking.”


AWF Enhances KWS Wildlife Cybercrime Investigations

African Wildlife Foundation (AWF), cybersecurity firm Irdeto, and the Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) have partnered to train cybercrime investigators in mobile technologies at AWF headquarters from February 17-23, 2020. The seven-day Mobile Forensic Certification Course targets investigators from KWS and is the first step in setting up the wildlife authority's digital forensic unit to fight illegal wildlife trade.


Illegal wildlife trade and trafficking is a threat to regional, national, and international security. Poachers and other actors in the illicit trade of wildlife and their parts are getting smarter. They are devising new ways to sustain their activities. As a result, they have shifted from traditional platforms and are taking the trade to the internet. To combat this menace, investigators and law enforcers have to develop new tactics to ensure the survival of African wildlife and ultimately stop the trade. Since digital platforms are the means for the trade, then the same platforms can be used to counter the trade.


“Wildlife related crime is advanced, and times are changing. Tools required for the conservation of wildlife and wildlands in Africa are also changing. As the criminals are advancing there is a need to upgrade for the successful conservation of wildlife,” said AWF Vice President, Conservation Science and Planning Dr. Philip Muruthi.


The expected outcome of the training is the development of the trainees’ skills and core competencies associated with the examination of mobile devices using the latest equipment and methodology.  These tools lead to enhanced enforcement to stop the trafficking of illegal wildlife products using digital devices and platforms.


Mr. Joseph Sarara, Head of Investigation at KWS, noted the importance of natural resources to both conservation and development. He said that the illicit trade of wildlife has serious implications not only on the ecosystem but also the species that are critically endangered. Communities around the wildlife-copious regions are equally affected.


“Illegal wildlife trade degrades our ecosystem and hinders the attainment of Sustainable Development Goals. It is a major obstacle to indigenous communities. Combatting the crime is essential for achieving peace in troubled regions,” said Mr. Sarara.


AWF and Irdeto joined forces in 2018 to investigate, identify, and disrupt the sale of animal parts on the internet. The partnership aims to work with local law enforcement agencies, providing key forensic data and intelligence to help locate and arrest the criminals responsible for this illegal trading.

Sir Edwin's Shooter Is Going to Prison

Over 25,000 of you signed Lady Freethinker's petition, and now we have an important update. Justice has been served for Sir Edwin, a 3-year-old Dalmatian slain in his own home when Joshua Marcantonio of Glen Falls, N.Y. fired a shotgun through the front door, killing the innocent dog.


This week, Judge Kelly McKeighan sentenced Marcantonio to 15 years in prison after the jury found him guilty on felony charges of attempted burglary, criminal possession of a weapon, reckless endangerment, criminal mischief, and animal cruelty.


This is the maximum sentence for attempted burglary.Thank you to everyone who signed the petition or spoke out for justice, the prosecutors, the jury, and the judge for taking a strong stand against violence against animals.


While no sentence can bring Sir Edwin back to his family who loved him, the court has sent a clear message that shooting a dog will not be tolerated.

Captive Primate Repeatedly Choked by Metal Ring

Your heart will break as you look into his eyes while he’s struggling to breathe and choked by a metal chain Ning Nong is treated like a money-making toy — forced to perform meaningless tricks for tourists and then left isolated in a wire cage when he’s not being used. This will only end when you STOP supporting experiences that use animals!

Hundreds of Yellowstone bison will be slaughtered, hunted or quarantined. Here’s why

Hundreds of bison from one of the last wild bison populations will be captured or slaughtered as they migrate out of Yellowstone National Park.


Between 600 and 900 Yellowstone bison will be culled from the population, according to a Yellowstone National Park news release. Most of those bison will be slaughtered or hunted, but others will be quarantined in corrals.


Bison migrate out of the park into areas of Montana in winter because there is less snow, making it easier to find food. But outside of the park, there isn’t enough room for bison to roam, officials said.


Five government agencies and three tribal groups came up with the Interagency Bison Management Plan to help control the bison population.


“In December 2019, the IBMP partners agreed to a 2020 winter operations plan that recommends removing 600 to 900 animals from Yellowstone’s estimated population of 4,900 bison,” a park news release said.


Last year, 460 bison were removed from the population through hunting or slaughter, according to Yellowstone. Ninety-three bison were transferred to the Fort Peck Reservation in 2019, the park said.


“Our goal is to build a better future for our national mammal,” the park said in a video.


WHY ARE THE BISON BEING KILLED?

Officials say the goal of the plan is to make sure the bison population isn’t growing indefinitely, which could cause overgrazing and mass starvation of animals in Yellowstone. The bison population increases by between 10 and 17% each year, the park said.

Another concern is that bison also often carry brucellosis, a bacterial disease that can cause abortions or stillbirths in infected animals. It does not kill the animals, but they could infect nearby cattle if they migrate out of the park.


“For ranchers, brucellosis has an economic impact because it affects the reproductive rate and marketability of their animals,” the park said. “Brucellosis has been eradicated in cattle herds across most of the United States. Bison and elk in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem persist as one of the last reservoirs of infection.”


ARE THERE ALTERNATIVES?

Bison need greater access to land to be able to leave the park’s boundaries, officials said. The area where the animals can be hunted is small, and hunting has been ineffective at limiting the number of bison, the park said.


It’s against state and federal laws to move wild bison exposed to brucellosis, which removes relocation of bison as an option, according to the park. Additionally, fertility control methods are currently not affordable or effective for bison populations, the park said.


“Many people don’t like the fact that animals from a national park are sent to slaughter,” the park said in a video. “We don’t like it either. That’s why we’re working with our federal, state and tribal partners to expand the quarantine program.”

Webinar Recording Available: Rankings in Review: State Anti Cruelty Laws

In case you missed the live webinar earlier this month on our annual rankings report, you can watch a recording of it at your convenience. In this webinar, Animal Legal Defense Fund Staff Attorney Kathleen Wood discusses the annual Animal Protection Laws Ranking Report, including what goes into creating our Compendium and Rankings Report, as well as the highlights from 2019.

Take Action, Responsibility & Wildlife...
"Corporations Are People My Friends."
Our companies are known for creating products that enhance people's lives.  Through Sunset Corporation of America and its companies, we’re equally dedicated to improving lives.  Our commitment extends to helping local communities, fostering better educational systems, supporting the arts and culture, helping disadvantaged youth, protecting and improving the environment, animal welfare, wildlife issues and encouraging employee volunteerism.

The Sustainable Action Network (SAN), A Don Lichterman non-profit organization dedicated to building a global community raising awareness of corruption, injustice and the need for action across a full range of issues impacting people and animal/wildlife welfare around the world, such as conservation, climate change, campaign law, lobbying, government action and rescue work. SAN’s vision is to create safer world, free from political, environmental, and social oppression, where all the inhabitants of Earth can live in harmony within their own natural environments. Our commitment extends to helping local communities, fostering better educational systems, supporting the arts and culture, helping disadvantaged youth, protecting and improving the environment, animal welfare, wildlife issues and encouraging employee volunteerism.


Activism and Sustainability:

  • Gun Safety & Gun Laws

  • Cruelty Free

  • Death Penalty

  • Demand Action

  • Sustainable Action Network

Fairness and Equality:

  • Grammy District Advocacy

  • Privatization

  • Voters Issues & Gerrymandering

  • Private Prisons & the War on Drugs

  • Finance, Housing & the Economy Corporate Responsibility:

  • Candidates, Bills, Laws & Protections

  • Wildlife & Oceania

  • Labeling & Transparency

  • Comprehensive Captivity & Hunting Results Databases

Purchase gifts that help animals! The Animal Legal Defense Fund’s holiday shop is now open – for a limited time. Find past favorites and new designs in options including totes, shirts, hoodies, and even options for dogs!

These items make the perfect holiday gift for friends and family who care about animals. Spread the message of compassion and support the Animal Legal Defense Fund. 100% of the profits go to our work to protect the lives and advance the interests of animals through the legal system.



Welcome to the Animal & Wildlife Welfare, Abuse & Crime Report brought to you by the Sustainable Action Network (SAN)!

Join the Animal Legal Defense Fund for National Justice for Animals Week February 23 to 29!

This week is an annual event dedicated to raising public awareness about animal abuse, how to report it, and how to work within your community to create stronger laws and ensure tough enforcement. And you can also grab a limited edition shirt to show you support justice for animals throughout the year.

Animal Law Symposium: Oklahoma City

Join the Animal Legal Defense Fund for our Animal Law Symposium! This day-long symposium will provide attendees with the opportunity to hear from the top voices within the animal law community, including local experts. Register now.

Webinar Recording Available: Rankings in Review: State Anti Cruelty Laws

In case you missed the live webinar earlier this month on our annual rankings report, you can watch a recording of it at your convenience. In this webinar, Animal Legal Defense Fund Staff Attorney Kathleen Wood discusses the annual Animal Protection Laws Ranking Report, including what goes into creating our Compendium and Rankings Report, as well as the highlights from 2019.

In its 2021 federal budget proposal, the Administration is seeking catastrophic cuts to programs that protect wildlife.

We need Congress to fight back and restore support for programs that help tigers, elephants, rhinos, and countless other endangered species.



Among many programs on the chopping block are vital efforts at USAID and the Department of State that fight international wildlife trafficking, one of the largest transnational criminal enterprises in the world. Also redlined are the USAID Biodiversity Program, the Multinational Species Conservation Fund, and other key programs that conserve vulnerable species in the wild and protect the landscapes and seascapes that represent the last remaining wild places on the earth. Make your voice heard.


The Administration’s proposals represent a devastating threat to the future of elephants, tigers, and many other endangered species. But together we can fight back.

Congressional support is vital to the future of international conservation programs. That’s why we need to tell Congress to step up and speak out for elephants, tigers, gorillas, and many more species that cannot speak for themselves.



Please help send a message to Congress that you care about the future of wildlife. Programs that protect tigers, gorillas, turtles, and many others are not optional - they’re essential.

Donald Trump Jr. Gets Permit to Hunt Grizzly Bears

Trophy Hunting is a type of hunting in which an individual kills innocent animals for recreational purposes. The hunters usually kill selected animals – frequently big game such as rhinos, elephants, lions, pumas, and bears – under official government license. The trophy is the animal (or its head, skin or any other body part) that the hunter keeps as a souvenir.


It is a booming industry and is legal, albeit with restrictions on the species that can be hunted, where and when the hunting can take place, and the weapons that can be used. Allowing endangered species to be killed for sport is counterintuitive. It is part of a trend called "evolution in reverse" or "survival of the weak," and scientists have pointed out that sport-hunted populations of species like bighorn sheep now have smaller horns than those of 30 years ago, and after decades of poaching and trophy hunting giant-tusked elephants are a rarity in the wild.


Additionally, there can be deadly impacts from a trophy hunts beyond just the individual killed. Research has shown that when a dominant male lion in a pride is killed, the social group is disrupted and a cascade of deaths can result within the pride: young males killed fighting for the dominant position, cubs killed when a new dominant male takes over, and females killed protecting their cubs. And finally the idea that trophy hunting brings a conservation incentive to local people to save a species is not only counter-intuitive, it is a logical fallacy.


When a species' greatest value is as a dead trophy, its days will inevitably be numbered, just as they are when the value of their parts -- like ivory tusks, tiger skins, or rhino horn -- make protection from poachers nearly impossible.


We should not be harassing the wildlife for we would not like it if the roles were reversed.

#ProtectMillions: Silk island, known more formally as Koh Dach, is an island untouched by time.

#ProtectMillions: Silk island, known more formally as Koh Dach, is an island untouched by time. The island is undeveloped, consisting of small villages, rice fields, and Buddhist temples. Up to 1000 cats and dogs call the island home. Most are free-roaming, with many living either on the streets or at temples where the monks provide them with food.


Sadly, there is no veterinarian on the island or other animal care services. This means that every animal on the island is unvaccinated, unsterilised, and many suffer from chronic, untreated illnesses. But there is hope. Please support our mission and make a donation to help the animals on Silk Island: http://bit.ly/help-silk-island

SeaQuest Is No Place for Animals

Hundreds of animals have died at SeaQuest and other aquariums owned by Vince Covino. Do the right thing and NEVER visit shopping mall animal attractions like SeaQuest.

Every inch of rainforest in Madagascar could be gone in the next 50 years. We have to act right now to stop deforestation.

Sometimes, the numbers and statistics around environmental destruction are so gargantuan and complex that it's hard to wrap your head around what they actually mean.


But this one couldn't be clearer: Madagascar could lose 100% of its rainforests in our lifetimes.

Climate change is ravishing Madagascar, as it is ecosystems around the world.



These aren't just any rainforests. Madagascar is home to an astonishing array of wildlife that isn't found anywhere else on earth. That includes its 101 different lemur species. These cute creatures all live in the rainforest and are already endangered. Losing Madagascar's rainforests wouldn't just change the face of the land, it would lead to a massive, irreversible loss of biodiversity.



Wiping out Madagascar's rainforest is an imminent threat. It's scary, but it's also mobilizing. Nobody wants to allow their home to be ruined. We need the people in power to do something now to prevent the destruction of their homeland forever. We just need to make sure they know the stakes and that the world supports action.


A “serious substance that has the potential to slow a greyhound down” has been found in a greyhound who finished last in a race at Tralee stadium.

As revealed in the Irish Greyhound Board’s February 2020 “Adverse Analytical Findings” report, “Propranolol returned from a urine sample obtained from the greyhound Yesterdays News at Tralee Greyhound Stadium on the 22nd September, 2019”.


The IGB report states: “Mr John Gleeson [Muckenaugh, Lixnaw, Co. Kerry], registered owner of the greyhound Yesterdays News, was not in attendance. Mr. Kevin Gleeson appeared before the Control Committee representing his son, Mr. John Gleeson. Mr. Pat Herbert, Head of Regulation, Bord na gCon [Irish Greyhound Board], represented Bord na gCon in this matter.


The Control Committee, having considered all of the evidence in this matter was satisfied the case presented by Bord na gCon was proven. The Control Committee noted the explanation tendered by Mr. Kevin Gleeson that a family member may have inadvertently administered medication to the greyhound Yesterdays News on the day of the race in question.


The Committee noted that the substance Propranolol is a serious substance that has the potential to slow a greyhound down. The Committee further noted that no absolute explanation was tendered for the detection of the substance in the urine sample obtained from the greyhound in question.”

As demonstrated by this petition, we are all a voice for the elephants. 

If you live in the U.S., our voices can get louder by asking our members of Congress to support two bills that are moving against trophy hunting: 1.    CECIL Act H.R. 2245; Conserving Ecosystems by Ceasing the Importation of Large Animal Trophies. This will restrict the import and export of trophies of any species listed under the Endangered Species Act (ESA). 2.   Protect Act, H.R. 4804; Prohibiting Threatened and Endangered Creature Trophies. This will prohibit trophy hunting of ESA species in the US and import of any trophy of a species listed under the ESA. 3.   Lastly there is an Appropriations Bill For Fiscal Year 2021. The appropriations bill is a spending bill that authorizes the expenditure of government funds.  You can tell your member of Congress you would like to see language for the Appropriations Bill for Fiscal Year 2021 to defund U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s trophy import permits of elephants from Botswana. Please call your member of Congress and for his/her support on these bills.  To find your legislator, go to House.gov and type in your zip code.  It will provide your legislator’s contact number.  Please call and state you would like your legislator to support the CECIL Act and Protect Act and language in the Appropriations Bill FY21 to defund trophy hunting permits of elephants from Botswana.  I am currently working through the details of meeting with the Embassy of Botswana.  Please continue sharing this petition.  I want to keep building momentum up to the moment I meet with the Embassy.

Yummy...Sharks Fins...
Congress Failed to Pass this Shark Saving Bill Last Year: Demand They Do So in 2020

Shark finning is the practice of catching sharks solely to cut off their fins to make shark fin soup, an expensive delicacy in many Asian cultures. Fisherman, encouraged by high market prices, catch hundreds of thousands of sharks a day, then slice off their fins while they are still alive. They often don't even bother with the rest of the fish. Instead, they toss it back into the water — suffering and in pain — to sink to the bottom and drown.



According to the Animal Welfare Institute (AWI), over 73 million sharks a year are killed for their fins alone. The high death toll is devastating their population. Some species are now on the brink of extinction. This is nothing short of a wake-up call to do something now. Without sharks, the seas will die.


Sharks have evolved to be the ocean's apex predator. They keep prey fish "populations healthier by going after the old, sick, and very young...and keep the population numbers of other species in proper balance." And contrary to what you might think, a healthy shark population actually improves fishermen's harvest.


Last year, U.S. lawmakers introduced a bill to try to ban this practice by making it illegal to "possess, buy, or sell shark fins or any product containing" shark fins federally. Those in breach of the law would face serious criminal consequences. Unfortunately, the Shark Fin Sales Elimination Act of 2019 was never passed.


That is unacceptable. This is a problem we must tackle to save this vital species. Time is running out, and Congress must act.


An illegal shipment of 1,400 pounds of dried shark fins, estimated to be worth around $1 million, has been discovered at a port in Miami.


The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service reported that officials found the fins packed into 18 boxes, which were believed to have originated in South America. The body parts were likely en route to Asia, where they’re primarily used in “luxury” shark fin soup.


This falsely declared shipment violated the Lacey Act, which bans illegal wildlife trade, and also contravened the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES). No criminal charges have been announced, but an investigation is ongoing.


The vile shark fin trade is responsible for the gruesome deaths of up to 73 million sharks annually through “finning,” or the act of severing the fins from a shark and simply dumping the body back into the sea. Unable to swim without their fins, the sharks are left to sink and suffocate, bleed to death, or be eaten alive. This disgraceful practice is illegal in U.S. waters, but importing the fins is not.


“The seizure in Miami of 1,400 pounds of shark fins being shipped from Latin America to Asia speaks to the worldwide crisis facing sharks,” Sara Amundson, President of the Humane Society Legislative Fund, told CBS News. “The United States plays a key role as an international transit hub for shark fins … Sharks are worth more alive than in a bowl of soup.”

Lady Freethinker’s petition to ban the cruel shark fin trade in the U.S. has reached over 22,440 signatures. Thank you to all who have signed. If you haven’t added your name yet, please do to urge the U.S. Senate to pass the Shark Fin Sales Elimination Act, saving millions of sharks who are being inhumanely slaughtered for their fins.

Breaking! Exotic Animals No Longer Allowed to Be Used as Entertainment at Los Angeles House Parties

By putting an end to exotic animal trade many animals will be spared the miserable existence of being forced to live in a tiny cage and live out their lives in depression. Exotic animals are not and never were meant to be kept as a pet, hence the name exotic. By keeping these animals out of unfit and incapable owners hands, we can help secure a brighter future for the wildlife of our planet.

Trapped Behind Fences, Sheep Burn to Death in Climate Fueled Fires

Surrounded by charred corpses, this severely burned sheep stands alone after being trapped behind fences during the Australian Fires. The wool industry mutilates sheep and, through methane production, fuels disastrous fires that burn millions to death.

Colt Killed Training at Santa Anita – 8th Dead Horse There in 2020.

The California Horse Racing Board has disclosed the training death (“shoulder”) of 4-year-old Unveiled this morning at Santa Anita. The colt was being prepped for his first race. He is the 8th horse killed at Santa Anita in 2020 – for, mind you, gambling and entertainment. This alone renders their (specious) “safety rate” utterly meaningless.

Newest LFT Billboard Strengthens the Message: Horseracing Kills.

Lady Freethinker (LFT), in collaboration with Horseracing Wrongs, continues to fight against the cruelty and senseless deaths involved in the barbaric, profit-driven horseracing industry with a second billboard in the Los Angeles area.The billboard, again made possible by the generous support of Mark Matyazic, drives home a persistent and clear message: horseracing kills.


This billboard is now in two locations in the LA area. The death toll at the nearby Santa Anita Racetrack is rising. From broken legs and fractured ankles to head-on collisions and mysterious sudden deaths, the injuries and fatalities keep piling up.As the numbers continue to grow, the individuality of each horse gets a little more lost, but Tikkun Olam isn't simply one of the 44 horses that died this year due to this torturous industry. He has a story.


Every horse has a story, and far too many of them dismally end in a bodybag.Don, will you help to change the way their stories end?


If you haven't yet, sign our petition to save these innocent animals from an early grave.

This petition acts as a show of support for the maximum sentence allowed under law in the case of US v. Gordon. The sentencing hearing regarding this case will be held on February 28, 2020.

Last year (2019) in Kaktovik, an Arctic village in Alaska, a whaling captain and Alaskan Native named Christopher L. Gordon shot and killed a polar bear that had wandered into his front yard to eat a butchered whale carcass he had left outside. In Alaska, killing a polar bear is a violation of the Marine Protection Act, unless for reasons of self-defense or subsistence purposes (applies to Alaskan Natives only).


In the case of Christopher L. Gordon, he shot and killed a polar bear leaving the body of one of Alaska's most iconic, threatened species to rot. The polar bear's body was covered with snow, causing a snow removal vehicle to move the body and rip off one of its legs. The polar bear's remains were later taken to the dump and set on fire. Since Christopher did not use any part of the polar bear, the killing is not considered subsistence hunting, and, therefore, he violated the Marine Mammal Protection Act.


If convicted, Gordon faces up to one year in prison and a $100,000 fine.


Polar bears are classified as marine mammals because they spend most of their lives on sea ice. As global warming takes effect, less sea ice remains, making it difficult, if not impossible, for polar bears to hunt for food. Kaktovik is located on the north shore of Barter Island on the Beaufort Sea coast, an area affected by rapid global warming which speeds up the movement of sea ice, the primary habitat of polar bears.


Because of this, polar bears are often desperate for food and will scavenge, leading to bear-human conflicts. The tourism in Kaktovik is booming because tourists want a chance to see polar bears before they go EXTINCT. The threats polar bears face are imminent. The last thing they need is to be killed for merely trying to survive.


We the undersigned support the maximum sentence allowed under law in the case of US v. Gordon.


Please also sign our IMPACT STATEMENT: https://www.oneprotest.org/polar-bear

The Fashion Industry Doesn’t Want You to Know These Facts About Cashmere

Do you know the effects cashmere has on the environment? It's estimated that 70% of Mongolia’s grasslands have degraded largely because of the demand for it. Desertification like this can cause dust storms reaching all the way to the U.S.

PETA's 5th Australian Wool Exposé—Does It Look Like the Industry Has Changed One Bit?

What more do you need to see before you stop wearing wool? How many more sheep must be beaten, cut open, kicked, thrown, and skinned alive?

Cease and Desist Letter Issued to B.C. Government for Wolf Cull

Our legal counsel has found the B.C. wolf cull program to be in direct violation of the province's own laws. Last week, Pacific Wild issued a Cease and Desist letter for the cull to Minister of Forests, Lands, Natural Resource Operations, and Rural Development, Doug Donaldson. It's time to put a stop to this cruel excuse for conservation and use taxpayer dollars for something useful. ⁣ From our Executive Director Ian McAllister: “Hundreds of wolves are being killed each year in the most horrific fashion, at tax-payer expense. Now we find out it is most likely illegal, and our organization is prepared to challenge the government’s cull in court."⁣ You can read the full release here: https://pacificwild.org/news/press-release-cease-and-desist-letter-issued-to-b-c-government-for-controversial-wolf-cull-for-contravention-of-provincial-law/

This Is How Camels Suffer at Circuses and Fairs

These camels spend their lives under the threat of violence, just so humans can have a moment of entertainment.

You can see how scared the one who falls is — he knows he’ll face extreme consequences if he doesn’t get back in line.

Bears as Far as North America Are Falling Victim to the Horrific Bear Bile Industry

You may or may not be familiar with the plight of the Asiatic black bear and the sun bears of Asia. Throughout large parts of Asia, the two species are farmed or poached to harvest their bile, which is believed to have healing properties.


Of course, their liver fluid isn't actually medicinal, but that doesn't stop this heartless industry from torturing and killing thousands of bears a year. Sign to help stop American bears from meeting the same fate.


Yet, while bear bile farms might be thousands of miles away from the shores of the United States, it doesn't mean that Americans and others aren't trying to profit from bear bile here at home. In fact, black bear poachers have been caught in Florida harvesting their game's gallbladders to sell to the Asian market.



Luckily, U.S. Senators John Kennedy and Cory Booker have introduced a new bill aimed at stopping bear poaching in the United States. The Bear Protection Act "would protect bears from poaching and torture and prohibit the import, export, possession, transport, and sale of bear organs."


American lawmakers must do everything they can to protect the nation's wildlife. And this bill is just one more step in doing so. Tell Congress you support the Bear Protection Act. Sign the petition and tell our legislators to make it law.

France Bans Shredding Chicks

France recently announced they’ll be banning the cruel practice of shredding live male chicks on egg farms. Male chicks are of no value to egg farms and are routinely discarded into shredders, suffocated, or gassed to death. France aims to stop shredding male chicks by 2021. This practice is still legal in the US. Read more.

Tiny, Frail Piglet Suffering on Floor of Filthy Farm

This year marks three decades of the iconic, world-famous "I'd Rather Go Naked Than Wear Fur" campaign, in which celebrities have taken it all off! Today—after dozens of ads, hundreds of protests, and yearly demonstrations at international fashion weeks—the majority of retailers and designers are rejecting fur, compassionate consumers everywhere are shunning it, and even Queen Elizabeth II has renounced it.


PETA's tremendous progress for animals in the fur industry couldn't have come about without the determined support of kind people like you—or megastars like Tyra Banks, Pamela Anderson, and P!nk, who've rejected animal fur by posing in the buff for this eye-catching campaign coordinated by PETA and our international affiliates. Gillian Anderson, star of television's popular The X-Files, made a powerful statement for feminism as well as animal rights when she launched her "I'd Rather Go Naked Than Wear Fur" ad on International Women's Day two years ago.


The world hasn't seen the end of PETA's effective, headline-grabbing advertisements and demonstrations featuring nude celebrities or activists. But since the fur industry is now in a downward spiral, we're marking this modern, compassionate era of fashion by retiring "I'd Rather Go Naked" anti-fur ads and expanding our focus on other areas in which animals still need a great deal of help—including the hideous leather, wool, and exotic skins trades.


PETA and our international affiliates are the only major animal rights groups with campaigns against the use of all animal skins, not just the dying fur trade, and this far-reaching activism recently led to a big win for fascinating and widely abused exotic animals. After hearing from PETA U.K. and amid growing concern over the devastating Australian bushfires, iconic British fashion label Paul Smith has announced a ban on exotic skins, including kangaroo leather, in all its future collections.


This move will protect kangaroos from being shot and decapitated in their shrinking natural habitat, alligators from being hacked open and impaled with metal rods, and young ostriches from being suspended upside down before their throats are slit. After similar exotic skins bans from household names like Chanel and Victoria Beckham, we're now pushing Hermès and Prada to be the next brands to join the growing list.

Take Action, Responsibility & Wildlife...
"Corporations Are People My Friends."
Our companies are known for creating products that enhance people's lives.  Through Sunset Corporation of America and its companies, we’re equally dedicated to improving lives.  Our commitment extends to helping local communities, fostering better educational systems, supporting the arts and culture, helping disadvantaged youth, protecting and improving the environment, animal welfare, wildlife issues and encouraging employee volunteerism.

The Sustainable Action Network (SAN), A Don Lichterman non-profit organization dedicated to building a global community raising awareness of corruption, injustice and the need for action across a full range of issues impacting people and animal/wildlife welfare around the world, such as conservation, climate change, campaign law, lobbying, government action and rescue work. SAN’s vision is to create safer world, free from political, environmental, and social oppression, where all the inhabitants of Earth can live in harmony within their own natural environments. Our commitment extends to helping local communities, fostering better educational systems, supporting the arts and culture, helping disadvantaged youth, protecting and improving the environment, animal welfare, wildlife issues and encouraging employee volunteerism.


Activism and Sustainability:

  • Gun Safety & Gun Laws

  • Cruelty Free

  • Death Penalty

  • Demand Action

  • Sustainable Action Network

Fairness and Equality:

  • Grammy District Advocacy

  • Privatization

  • Voters Issues & Gerrymandering

  • Private Prisons & the War on Drugs

  • Finance, Housing & the Economy Corporate Responsibility:

  • Candidates, Bills, Laws & Protections

  • Wildlife & Oceania

  • Labeling & Transparency

  • Comprehensive Captivity & Hunting Results Databases

Purchase gifts that help animals this holiday season! The Animal Legal Defense Fund’s holiday shop is now open – for a limited time. Find past favorites and new designs in options including totes, shirts, hoodies, and even options for dogs!

These items make the perfect holiday gift for friends and family who care about animals. Spread the message of compassion and support the Animal Legal Defense Fund. 100% of the profits go to our work to protect the lives and advance the interests of animals through the legal system.



bottom of page