Animal Legal Defense Fund v. Herbert

263 F. Supp. 3d 1193
CourtDistrict Court, D. Utah
DecidedJuly 7, 2017
DocketCase No. 2:13-cv-00679-RJS
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 263 F. Supp. 3d 1193 (Animal Legal Defense Fund v. Herbert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Animal Legal Defense Fund v. Herbert, 263 F. Supp. 3d 1193 (D. Utah 2017).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER

ROBERT J. SHELBY, United States District Judge

Utah recently joined the growing number of states to enact so-called “ag-gag” laws — laws that target undercover investigations at agricultural operations. Utah’s [1196]*1196version operates, in relevant part, by criminalizing both lying to get into an agricultural operation and filming once inside. Plaintiffs contend the law violates their First Amendment rights. For the reasons below, the court agrees.

BACKGROUND

For as long as farmers have put food on American tables, the government has endeavored to support and protect the agricultural industry. In an address to Congress shortly after the Revolutionary War, George Washington, an ardent tobacco farmer, declared that “agriculture is of primary importance,” and argued that the rapid growth of the young nation rendered “the cultivation of the soil more and more an object of public patronage.”1 Congress heeded the call, and federal legislation in the ensuing decades led to the development of millions of acres of farmland across the country.2

As agriculture expanded, so too did governmental investment in it. Toward the end of the nineteenth century, President Lincoln established the Department of Agriculture — known then as “The People’s Department” — and Congress began providing cash to states to conduct agricultural research.3 In the mid-twentieth century, following the Great Depression, President Roosevelt’s administration went so far as to pay farmers to stop growing crops and to destroy existing crops and livestock in order to stabilize prices by artificially limiting supply.4 To this day, the federal government has continued to support the agricultural industry through measures like nonrecourse loans, subsidies, and price guarantees, as have the states, all of which have enacted right-to-farm laws.5 In short, governmental protection of the American agricultural industry is not new, and has taken a variety of forms over the last two hundred years.

What is new, however, is the recent spate of state laws that have assumed an altogether novel approach: restricting speech related to agricultural operations. These so-called “ag-gag” laws have their genesis in the 1990s. Around that time, animal rights advocates had begun conducting undercover investigations to expose animal abuse at various facilities.6 After these initial investigations became public, Kansas, Montana, and North Dakota all enacted ag-gag laws.7 The laws crimi[1197]*1197nalized entering an animal facility and filming without consent.8

Nobody was ever charged under these laws, and for nearly two decades no new ag-gag legislation was introduced. That changed, however, after a series of high profile undercover investigations were made public in the mid to late 2000s. To name just a few, in 2007, an undercover investigator at the Westland/Hallmark Meat Company in California filmed workers forcing sick cows, many unable to walk, into the “kill box” by repeatedly shocking them with electric prods, jabbing them in-the eye, prodding them with a forklift, and spraying water up their noses.9 A 2009 investigation at Hy-Line Hatchery in Iowa revealed hundreds of thousands of unwanted day-old male chicks being tunneled by conveyor belt into a maeerator to be ground up live.10 That same year, undercover investigators at a Vermont slaughterhouse operated by Bushway Packing obtained similarly gruesome footage of days-old calves being kicked, dragged, and skinned alive.11 A few years later, an undercover investigator at E6 Cattle Company in Texas filmed workers beating cows on the head with hammers and pickaxes and leaving them to die.12 And later that year, at Sparboe Farms in Iowa, undercover investigators documented hens with gaping, untreated wounds laying eggs in cramped conditions among decaying corpses.13

The publication of these and other undercover videos had devastating consequences for the agricultural facilities involved. The videos led to boycotts of facilities by McDonald’s, .Target, Sam’s Club, and others.14 They led to bankruptcy and closure of facilities and criminal charges against employees and owners.15 They led to statewide ballot initiatives banning certain farming practices;16 And they led to the largest meat recall in United States history, a facility’s entire two years’ worth of production.17

[1198]*1198Over-the next three years, sixteen states introduced ag-gag legislation.18 Iowa’s was the first-to go into effect. It was introduced in the wake of the Iowa Sparboe Farms video, in addition to the publication of several other undercover investigations in Iowa.19 According to its sponsors, the bill’s purpose was “to crack down on activists who deliberately cast agricultural- operations in a negative light and let cameras roll rather than reporting abuse immediately,” and to stop “subversive acts” that could “bring down the industry,” including acts committed by “extremist vegans.”20 The Iowa law prohibits obtaining access to an agricultural -production facility under false pretenses and lying'on a job application with the intent to commit an unauthorized act.21

Utah’s bill came less than a month later. Representative John Mathis, the sponsor of the House bill, declared the bill was motivated by “a trend nationally of some propaganda groups ... with a stated objective of undoing animal agriculture in the United States.”22 Another representative (a farmer by trade) stated that the bill was targeted at “a group of people that want to put us out of business,” and noted that farmers “don’t want some jack wagon coming in taking a picture of them.”23 Senator David Hinkins, the sponsor of the Senate bill, declared the bill was meant to address the “vegetarian people that [are] trying to kill the animal industry” by “hiding cameras and trying to ... modify the films and stuff like that,” explaining “[t]hat’s what we’re trying to prevent here.”24

The bill ultimately enacted in Utah consists of four provisions: a lying provision, and three recording provisions.25 The lying provision-criminalizes “obtaining] access to an agricultural operation - under false pretenses.”26 The three recording provisions criminalize: (1) bugging an agricultural operation; .(2) filming an agricultural operation after applying for a position with the intent to film; and (3) filming an agricultural operation while trespassing.27 Gov[1199]*1199ernor Herbert signed the bill into law on March 20, 2012.28

On February 8, 2013, Plaintiff Amy Meyer became the first person to be charged under the new law, and seemingly the only person in the country to ever be charged under an ag-gag law.29 Meyer was arrested while filming what appeared to be a bulldozer moving a sick cow at a slaughterhouse in Draper City, Utah.30

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Bluebook (online)
263 F. Supp. 3d 1193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/animal-legal-defense-fund-v-herbert-utd-2017.