COK Investigation Exposes Chicken Industry Cruelty Undercover Footage of Perdue Slaughter Plant Reveals Routine Abuse
Press Coverage
Animal Rights Group Pursues Complaint Against Perdue Farms
POSTED: 4:19 pm EDT October 28, 2004
ANNAPOLIS, Md. -- An animal advocacy group is calling for prosecutors
to press animal cruelty charges against Perdue Farms Inc., after an activist
at a lower Eastern Shore plant secretly videotaped chickens flapping wildly
after their throats were slit on a processing line.
An investigator for Takoma Park-based Compassion Over Killing worked from Sept.
16 to Oct. 1 at the processing plant in Showell, a complex that Perdue is closing
next week to streamline operations. The animal rights group filed a complaint
this week with the local sheriff and state's attorney's office.
"From the very first day our investigator worked, he saw animal cruelty
on a regular basis," said Paul Shapiro, campaigns director for the nonprofit
Compassion Over Killing.
The group says it will use the seven-minute tape to press KFC to require humane
animal treatment by its suppliers, which include Salisbury-based Perdue. KFC
officials said Thursday they purchase only 2 percent of their products from
Perdue; both companies said none of Showell's chickens go to KFC.
KFC's parent company is Louisville, Ky.-based Yum Brands Inc.
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Click here to see the WJZBaltimore's CBS affiliatecoverage
of our investigation at a Perdue slaughter plant. The news story
aired on October 29, 2004.
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After watching the seven-minute video, Perdue officials say they saw no "intentional
cruelty" and that the workers on tape have since been shown how to handle
the animals with more care.
The animal rights group believes footage and daily logs kept by its investigator
show enough evidence of inhumane treatment to merit prosecution under Maryland's
animal cruelty statute. The law exempts customary agricultural practices but
requires necessary physical pain to be inflicted using "the most humane
method reasonably available," the group says in a letter to Worcester County
Sheriff Charles Martin and state's attorney Joel Todd.
The videotape shows piles of live chickens being shoved and thrown down a processing
line. The birds' ankles are roughly slid onto shackles, leaving them hanging
upside down as their throats are slit. Afterward, the cut birds flap wildly.
Birds are seen shackled incorrectly so that they miss the blade, leaving them
to go through processing without losing consciousness. Dying birds are left
lying on a conveyer belt and being piled onto each other in a bin while workers
take lunch breaks.
Outside the plant, the worker filmed dying birds left stranded and stray birds
that were left without food or water and died several hours later.
"There are some incidents in the video in which associates should have
handled birds with greater care, and we have counseled those associates,"
said Bruce Stewart-Brown, a veterinarian who serves as Perdue's vice president
of food safety and quality.
By not recording sound, the video was legal, according to Maryland law governing
taping.
Perdue officials hadn't received a copy of the complaint but watched the video
on Compassion Over Killing's Web site, Stewart-Brown said. The tape also was
seen by Perdue's poultry welfare board, a council of nine members that includes
chicken growers, university professors and poultry veterinarians. The panel
met Thursday and concluded that the birds weren't handled cruelly or maliciously,
Stewart-Brown said.
"We realize the very nature of meat processing is something some people
are not comfortable viewing," he said, adding: "There's nothing in
this video to support allegations of intentional animal cruelty."
Compassion Over Killing also alleges that its investigator received no training
in animal care or handling before he went to work in the hanging room.
Stewart-Brown says the worker was hired through a temp agency, leaving him
out of the formal training most workers receive.
The Showell plant processes 25.5 million chickens a year. Perdue, which bought
the complex in 1995, employs 180,000 people and is the third-largest poultry
producer in the United States.
West Virginia prosecutors are investigating claims of abuse at a plant owned
by Pilgrim's Pride, a major supplier of KFC. In July, People for the Ethical
Treatment of Animals released secretly recorded video of workers stomping, kicking
and slamming chickens against walls, prompting the company to fire 11 employees,
re-educate its work force at all 24 North American plants and add quality assurance
monitors on both shifts in Moorefield.
Copyright © 2004 by The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
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