ANIMAL RIGHTS WATCH
News, Information, and Knowledge Resources

DIS-MISSING IN ACTION: Ridglan Farms beagle rescue case dismissed days before trial

The public still does not know what is happening in research facilities like Ridglan, which the trial may have shed light on. The dismissal left unaddressed some incredibly important legal and moral issues, including whether people have the freedom of conscience to help animals when they’re suffering. That has to change.

BILL LUEDERS: Dane County Judge Mario White today dismissed all charges against three animal rights activists who in April 2017 broke into a dog breeding and research facility near Mount Horeb and left with three beagles, heading off what had been scheduled to be a five-day trial beginning March 18 that was certain to draw national attention.

The dismissal was requested by the Dane County District Attorney’s Office, which in 2021 charged Paul Darwin Picklesimer, Wayne Hsiung and Eva Hamer with felony burglary and theft, for which they faced up to 16 years in prison. The office’s motion, from assistant DA Alexandra Keyes, was filed late on March 7, the same day that an article on the case was published in Isthmus.

The motion states that “the victims in this case,” the dog-breeding and research facility Ridglan Farms, had “indicated a desire to no longer have this case proceed to trial.” It said the victims had expressed “concerns for their physical safety, as well as for their business.”

At what had been scheduled as a final pretrial conference early Friday, two of the three defendants opposed the motion to dismiss. Chris Carraway, staff attorney with the Colorado-based Animal Activist Legal Defense Project, representing Picklesimer, and Hsiung, representing himself, argued that the defendants had suffered significant financial and emotional harm from being charged with crimes in connection with the removal of the three dogs from Ridglan Farms…

Carraway, in his comments to the court, said the Dane County District Attorney’s Office had “a track record” of not taking animal cruelty cases seriously. He cited two instances in which the group People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) sought the appointment of a special prosecutor after the DA’s office declined to bring requested charges for animal cruelty. (Judges in both cases declined to do so, despite finding probable cause to believe that violations of the law occurred.) He said this was just another instance of the office “turning a blind eye” to credible allegations of animal cruelty.

Had the case gone to trial, Carraway argued, what would have been made clear is that what is happening inside Ridglan Farms “is unlawful animal cruelty beyond the pale” of what regulations permit. He said the dismissal shielded Ridglan Farms from this accountability so that it can “continue to harm animals and violate the law.”…

Hsiung, in his comments to the court, said he was disappointed by the motion to dismiss, after enduring an “enormous expense in time and emotional toil”… He expressed his frustration that “the public still does not know what is happening in research facilities like Ridglan,” which the trial may have shed light on. He said the dismissal left unaddressed some “incredibly important legal and moral issues,” including whether “people have the freedom of conscience to help animals when they’re suffering.”

As Hsiung stated: “We did what we did because the government is not acting to protect the most vulnerable beings on this planet. And that has to change. That has to change.” He urged Judge White to appoint a special prosecutor to look into allegations of animal cruelty at Ridglan Farms, or, alternately, “to prosecute us”…

Hsiung, in an interview, said the dismissal affirmed “what we always knew to be true — which is that if a jury of our peers heard testimony and saw the videos from inside Ridglan Farms, they would revolt against the notion that we’re the ones who have committed crimes, rather than the company”. SOURCE…

RELATED VIDEOS:

You might also like