Articles PETA

Another Grisly Year at PETA

In 2017, PETA continued to act as the functional equivalent of a slaughterhouse, with more than a thousand defenseless animals dying at the hands of their employees. Just released records submitted to the Virginia Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (VDACS) by PETA add 1,842 companion animals to the 32,744 documented killings we know have occurred so far at the hands of PETA employees. Tragically, for yet another year, officials at that agency who are tasked with oversight of the Virginia shelters continued to look the other way while PETA killed the vast majority of animals it took in and sought out, including 1,213 cats out of 1,487 cats, 596 out of 956 dogs, almost all the chickens, and more than half of all wild animals it took in.

Why? Operating on the belief that life is suffering and animals want to die, the PETA employees who work in PETA’s Community Animal Project have, according to former employees, one overriding goal: to acquire as many animals as possible in order to put them immediately to death, and they are told to lie and even steal people’s companion animals in order to do so.

For those who are inclined to believe PETA’s lies that they need to kill animals because they are a “shelter of last resort,” consider the following:

The open-admission Humane Society of Fremont County, which runs the animal control shelter for seven cities under contract, is a “shelter of last resort.” But its Executive Director makes no excuses: “We don’t have enough money, we’re getting twice the national average for intakes and we’re still saving 99 percent of the animals.” They finished 2017 with a 100% live release rate for rabbits and other small animals, 99.8% for dogs, and 97% for cats.

The Muncie, IN, municipal shelter is a “shelter of last resort.” Its Executive Director not only succeeded in passing a law making Muncie the first city in the U.S. to ban the pound killing of healthy and treatable animals, they finished the year with a 100% live release rate for rabbits and other animals, 99% for dogs, and 97% for cats.

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) also calls itself a “shelter of last resort.” But unlike Fremont’s humane society or the Muncie municipal facility, it does not have any animal control functions. And, in fact, it is in a city that does have a municipal shelter which is the true “shelter of last resort.” Indeed, it is surrounded by communities with municipal or municipal-contracted “shelters of last resort.”

And yet, despite taking in fewer animals overall and fewer animals per capita and, unlike Fremont, Muncie, or any of the facilities on the saving90.org website, also taking in $60,000,000+ in donations last year, they killed 1,213 out of 1,487 cats, an 82% death rate. Since PETA refuses to work with No Kill shelters, it sent another 255 cats mostly to pounds. If they were killed or they displaced other cats who were killed, that puts the overall death rate as high as 99% for cats.

PETA also killed 596 out of 956 dogs, a 62% rate of killing. Since PETA refuses to work with No Kill shelters, it sent another 330 mostly to various pounds. If they were killed or they displaced other dogs who were killed, that puts the overall death rate as high as 97% for dogs. That’s actually an improvement for PETA.

They also killed 22 of 24 chickens and other “farmed” animals, a 92% death rate. And they killed 31 out of 52 wild animals, a 60% rate of killing.

Why so high? Because it chose to kill them. Because they sent teams to round up and kill animals. Because that is what PETA does and why they exist. They are not a “shelter of last resort.” They are not even a shelter. They are also not an “animal rights organization” as PETA itself admitted they “do not advocate right to life for animals.”

How else does one explain rounding up and killing kittens within minutes.

Killing healthy animals.

Lying to acquire animals for the express purpose of killing them.

Racist policies to demonize and kill pit bulls.

Defending abusive pounds.

And more. Tragically for the animals, much, much more.

The 2017 statistics are available on the VDACS website by clicking here.

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