Farms seen at increased risk from animal activism

A legal expert warns that an increase in animal rights activism is creating complex challenges for Canadian farms

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A screenshot from a video posted on YouTube shows animal activists entering a turkey barn at the Jumbo Valley Hutterite Colony in Alberta in 2019.

Glacier FarmMedia – Canadian farms are facing increasing legal and financial risks from animal rights activists using tactics that range from undercover surveillance to mass trespassing, a Vancouver-based lawyer says.

Activism targeting agribusiness has intensified significantly in recent years, said Mélanie Power, a partner in the litigation and dispute resolution group at global law firm Dentons.

“There’s been a growing trend in animal rights activism to engage in direct action against agribusiness. Increasingly, animal rights activists are committing illegal acts, including trespass and animal theft,” she said.

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The number of animal cruelty investigations has nearly doubled over the past 15 years, based on Society for the Prevention of Animal Cruelty (SPCA) data. Investigations rose from 4,780 in 2008 to 7,881 in 2023, Powers said at a virtual event hosted by the Canadian Agricultural Safety Association in June.

She said calls to provincial animal cruelty call centres nearly tripled between 2015 and 2022 to 72,000 from about 25,000.

Robin Anderson, director of programs and communications at the Canadian Agricultural Safety Association, said the forum was prompted by concerns about the safety of farmers, farm families, workers and even the trespassers.

“We’re very concerned about the safety and health of everybody that might be on the farm,” she said.

“This also includes people that might end up on a farm.”

Powers said several concerning trends include the use of undercover videos captured by drones, hidden cameras or activists posing as employees.

In 2021, Elite Farm Services and Safeway were charged with animal cruelty after an activist employed by Mercy for Animals secretly recorded chicken handling operations in British Columbia’s Fraser Valley while working as a chicken catcher.

Despite concerns about the reliability of the footage, which had been self-selected and edited by the employee to only show the most controversial moments, Power said courts allowed the evidence to be admitted.

A more dramatic case occurred in 2019 when about 200 protesters organized by Meat the Victims broke into a hog barn in Abbotsford, B.C. About 50 protesters entered the barn and refused to leave until media were allowed to record conditions inside.

“The incident lasted about six hours,” Power said, adding that two protest leaders were ultimately convicted of mischief and breaking and entering, receiving conditional sentences, including house arrest.

In another 2019 incident, four people were charged after activists broke into an Alberta free-range turkey barn. They demanded media be allowed into the barns, which the farm allowed, and to “liberate” five turkeys.

At the time, a representative from Alberta Farm Animal Care said there were no animal welfare concerns that their organization was aware of and that neither it nor the SPCA had been involved with the farm.

“The birds were taken care of according to the fairly strict standards that Alberta Turkey has in place for their producers,” the representative told Glacier FarmMedia at the time.

“(The protesters) are not in there about animal welfare. They’re in there to get meat off the table.”

Power also cited a recent case from March 2024 when Animal Justice released footage from a British Columbia fish farm.

“Video footage was taken in what the activists referred to as the first undercover investigation of a fish farm in Canada,” she said.

The B.C. SPCA claimed it received hundreds of hours of video footage, and the SPCA and federal Department of Fisheries and Oceans began a joint investigation.

Technology adds another layer of risk. Video evidence may be presented as a gold standard for hard evidence that something happened, but there is now more potential for false video generated by artificial intelligence or altered footage, Power said.

“AI is continuing to be improved upon and refined, and there’s obviously growing risk that AI-generated or AI-altered images will be used to misrepresent the conditions at agribusiness sites,” Power said.

The legal risks extend beyond the immediate targets of activism, she said, adding that processors and other companies can face prosecution for the actions of their subcontractors if proper safeguards aren’t in place.

In the United States, a “right to rescue” movement has emerged, with activists successfully arguing in court that they should be acquitted of theft charges when taking sick animals from farms, Power said. There have been cases in California and Utah where activists were acquitted after taking chickens and piglets they claimed were sick.

“Given the acquittal, what we might see here is that it could actually embolden activists into more of this type of activity,” Power said.

Farm risks from activist campaigns include costly regulatory investigations that can drag on for years, negative publicity on social media and boycotts or protests that can impact revenues, the lawyer said.

“Even if your business is cleared of wrongdoing, it’s a costly process, it’s a time consuming process,” she said.

As well, unless businesses spend considerable effort spreading the news that they have been cleared of charges, “it’s not something that gets published and doesn’t get doesn’t make the media cycle.”

About the author

Miranda Leybourne

Miranda Leybourne

Reporter

Miranda Leybourne is a Glacier FarmMedia reporter based in Neepawa, Manitoba with eight years of journalism experience, specializing in agricultural reporting. Born in northern Ontario and raised in northern Manitoba, she brings a deep, personal understanding of rural life to her storytelling.

A graduate of Assiniboine College’s media production program, Miranda began her journalism career in 2007 as the agriculture reporter at 730 CKDM in Dauphin. After taking time off to raise her two children, she returned to the newsroom once they were in full-time elementary school. From June 2022 to May 2024, she covered the ag sector for the Brandon Sun before joining Glacier FarmMedia. Miranda has a strong interest in organic and regenerative agriculture and is passionate about reporting on sustainable farming practices. You can reach Miranda at mleybourne@farmmedia.com.

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