Utah's 'Ag-Gag' Law May Have Found First Legal Targets
Published on Wednesday, January 07, 2015
by Common Dreams
Utah's 'Ag-Gag' Law May Have Found First Legal Targets
Animal rights group vows to challenge 'shameful,' 'unconstitutional' law barring factory farm investigations
by Nadia Prupis, staff writer
Four animal rights activists from California are likely to be the first ever defendants charged under Utah's so-called "ag gag" law, which prohibits undercover investigations and recordings of animals in factory farms.
Robert Penney, Sarah Jane Hardt, Harold Weiss, and Bryan Monell were charged in late September 2014 in Utah's Iron County court for agricultural operation interferencethe "ag gag" lawand criminal trespassing on agricultural land.
The activists, who are associated with the Farm Animals Rights Movement, told the Salt Lake Tribune Tuesday that they had planned to document the journey of a truckload of pigs from Utah's Circle Four farm in Milford to a slaughterhouse in Los Angeleswhich is legal even under the agricultural operation interference law.
"The purpose of our trip was to photograph the farm legally," Sarah Jane Hardt said, "and to follow and track the pigs on their journey back. Its about a nine-hour journey."
Attorney T. Matthew Phillips, who is representing all four defendants, reiterated that the plan was to document the "trail of tears" between the farm and the slaughterhouse. The activists did not trespass onto the farm, but rather took photographs from the side of the road outside of the property, Phillips said.
Local authorities detained the group without arrest. After five hours, they were given citations, Hardt said. "We didnt violate the law in any way," she told the Tribune.
More:
http://www.commondreams.org/news/2015/01/07/utahs-ag-gag-law-may-have-found-first-legal-targets