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Charges dropped against animal rights activist in Ontario

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Published: May 9, 2019

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CTV News reported the woman is Jenny McQueen, a member of Direct Action Everywhere, which opposes animal agriculture and eating meat. | Screencap via YouTube/Direct Action Everywhere

Livestock producers in Ontario are losing faith in Canada’s justice system.

On May 1, the crown attorney’s office in London dropped charges against a woman who broke into a hog barn several times and stole piglets from the barn.

The decision shocked farmers and producer groups in the province because the activist admitted she entered the barn near Lucan, Ont., and acknowledged taking the pigs.

“It’s one thing for people to have opinions on animal husbandry and how things are being done (on farms). It’s another thing to conduct illegal activities,” said Keith Currie, president of the Ontario Federation of Agriculture.

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“Clearly this was break and enter. This was theft of animals, literally, off the farm. And yet our courts aren’t upholding the law.”

Jenny McQueen, an anti-meat campaigner, was charged with break and enter and mischief after recording video of the pigs and conditions inside the barn. She was in the video, so there’s no doubt that she broke into the weanling barn.

McQueen told the Toronto Star in November that she’s part of a group that does open rescue — trying to liberate animals from bondage.

“All we were trying to do was help the animals,” she said, explaining the repeated visits to the Lucan pig barn.

Kurtis Andrews, an Ottawa lawyer who specializes in farm and animal welfare matters, was “outraged” by the crown’s decision that there was no reasonable prospect of conviction.

“What we are witnessing is nothing short of a breakdown of law and order,” Andrews wrote in an open letter to Ontario attorney general Caroline Mulroney.

“No matter what your beliefs happen to be, it is unacceptable to provide radical activists with a free pass to break the law.”

These sort of incidents, where activists enter livestock farms without permission, are becoming commonplace in Ontario.

In March, a group of protesters showed up at a dairy and barged into the barn, even after the producer told them to stop.

“The farmer said, ‘you’re not allowed to come on my property,’ and they said, ‘yes, we are,’ ” said Kelly Daynard, executive director of Farm & Food Care Ontario.

Currie is worried because people in the farm community are furious with the court’s unwillingness to prosecute activists.

“The risk (of violence) just got more real after this decision,” he said.

“That’s the frustration level we’re getting to, where farmers are really being left without any other choice but to try and defend themselves and their property…. Someone is going to get badly hurt, I’m afraid.”

About the author

Robert Arnason

Robert Arnason

Reporter

Robert Arnason is a reporter with The Western Producer and Glacier Farm Media. Since 2008, he has authored nearly 5,000 articles on anything and everything related to Canadian agriculture. He didn’t grow up on a farm, but Robert spent hundreds of days on his uncle’s cattle and grain farm in Manitoba. Robert started his journalism career in Winnipeg as a freelancer, then worked as a reporter and editor at newspapers in Nipawin, Saskatchewan and Fernie, BC. Robert has a degree in civil engineering from the University of Manitoba and a diploma in LSJF – Long Suffering Jets’ Fan.

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