Todd Acquits Perdue Of All Charges In Cruelty Case
By Benjamin L. Mook
Maryland Coast Dispatch
February 4, 2005
OCEAN CITY - A Washington, D.C.-based animal rights group this week questioned
a move by Worcester County State's Attorney Joel Todd this week to override
a court employee's decision to charge Perdue Farms with animal cruelty charges
stemming from a hidden camera expose last year.
A professional dispute between the county's top law enforcement official and
a District Court commissioner over the merits of pursuing criminal charges against
Perdue was settled on Monday. On that day, in Ocean City District Court, Deputy
State's Attorney Daniel Mumford said on the record that the state wished to
"confess a verdict of not guilty," in the criminal case against Perdue
Farms. The tactic is rarely used and essentially pre-empts a trial and is the
equivalent of an acquittal of the defendant.
"This ends the case," Todd said on Wednesday. "And, on these
facts, jeopardy has been attached and [Perdue Farms] can't be retried."
The move caught Compassion Over Killing (COK), the organization that filed
the charges, flat-footed. Representatives expressed concern that they now would
not have their day in court to challenge Perdue on its practices.
"In essence, the state intervened and prevented Perdue from ever having
to go to court and be put in the spotlight to face these charges," COK
General Counsel Carter Dillard said. "We are very disappointed that Mr.
Todd chose this very unusual procedure."
Todd's decision came after he and Worcester County Sheriff Chuck Martin met
with Dillard and Joshua Balk, the COK outreach coordinator, who worked on the
processing line at Perdue's now defunct Showell plant earlier this month. Todd
said after reviewing the evidence he did not feel criminal charges were called
for.
"We all met and reviewed the tapes together," Todd said. "I
felt the evidence lacked merit, and there was no probable cause that Perdue
Farms was guilty of any crime based on the information provided to me. They
committed no crime."
That did not prove to be the end of the case though as Balk and Dillard next
met with Worcester County District Court Commissioner Earline Loomis. After
speaking with Todd, the commissioner found that there was probable cause to
issue a criminal summons to Perdue.
In Maryland's judiciary system, individuals can apply for charges and a commissioner
decides if there is cause for the case to proceed to the next step, a preliminary
inquiry.
"The state's attorneys do not direct the commissioners, they can decide
if something needs to be issued," Mary E. Kinnamon, administrative clerk
said. "A commissioner is not bound by the state's attorney's opinion whether
or not to issue charges."
Based on a statement of charges, Balk worked the early morning crew at the
plant for a two-week period in September 2004. According to court records, Balk
highlighted some of the more egregious instances of cruelty he witnessed including
one worker who spiked a live chicken like a football and another who spent his
break slapping a chicken in the face. Additionally, he said there were times
when workers threw chickens around the conveyor belt and saw multiple times
where the animals missed the throat-cutting blades and were dumped live into
the scalding tanks.
COK alleged that Perdue was guilty of animal cruelty because it provided no
training to its workers for proper handling of the birds and the company's focus
on processing speed above all. Dillard noted in a letter to Todd that Maryland
law allows for criminal charges to be brought against a corporation, the same
as an individual.
Todd said when he learned that the charges went through, he acted on his belief
that criminal charges were unwarranted in the case. He said he asked Mumford
to enter the acquittal prior to a preliminary inquiry.
Dillard said when he and COK learned of the move this week, their first response
was that Perdue got off without having to face any of the accusations, even
if the case was dropped later.
"It is odd that you can get an acquittal, without the defendant even having
to appear in court," Dillard said. "This cut out the availability
of public input, by moving the case to Ocean City and moving it up so it could
be heard by the first available judge."
COK Campaign Director Erica Neier said this week that Todd's decision set a
bad precedent about the accountability of agri-businesses when it came to farm
animals.
"The bottom line is that this sends a message that in Worcester County,
corporations, especially Perdue Farms, don't have to abide by Maryland's animal
cruelty laws," Neier said. "So, companies can handle animals in any
manner they see fit."
Dillard added that COK was not done with the case entirely. He said that while
the criminal charges route is now closed, the organization is reviewing how
the situation was handled.
"We are looking at the procedure that was used," Dillard said.
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