U.S. court ruling | Halt brought to inspections as appeal court considers permanent ban
(Reuters) — A U.S. federal appeals court has granted an emergency request by animal protection groups to temporarily block the U.S. government from conducting inspections of horses destined for slaughter.
The 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver issued a temporary injunction barring the U.S. Department of Agriculture from providing horse meat inspection services to the Valley Meat Co. in New Mexico, Responsible Transportation in Iowa and Rains Natural Meats in Missouri.
The order comes after a U.S. district judge in New Mexico threw out a lawsuit, that the Humane Society of the United States and other animal protection groups had filed in July, which sought to permanently halt the slaughter of horses.
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The suit alleged that the USDA failed to carry out environmental reviews before it gave approval to the three companies to slaughter horses for human consumption.
The district judge had found that the grants of inspection were properly issued and dismissed the lawsuit, clearing the way for the equine slaughter to resume.
However, in an emergency request to the 10th Circuit Nov. 4, the animal protection groups argued that an emergency injunction was necessary to prevent environmental harm and the violation of federal environmental laws while their appeal is pending.
A two-judge panel of the 10th Circuit granted the request.
Horse meat cannot be sold as food in the United States, but it can be exported. It is sold for human consumption in many countries and is sometimes used as feed for zoo animals.
Congress effectively banned horse slaughter in 2006 by saying the USDA could not spend money to inspect the plants.
Without USDA inspectors, slaughterhouses cannot operate. The ban had been extended a year at a time as part of USDA funding bills, but the language was omitted in 2011.
Groups have argued for years about whether a ban on slaughter would save horses from an inhumane death or cause owners to abandon animals they no longer want or cannot afford to feed and treat for illness.