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Imagine this
baby who is one day old being slaughtered
alive
This
is insane!!
Here's the
status.
Bill
Number:
S. 1915 & H.R. 503
Bill
Sponsors - Senators John Ensign (R-NV) and
Mary Landrieu (D-LA) Reps. John Sweeney
(R-NY), John Spratt (D-SC), and Ed Whitfield
(R-KY)
HSUS Position::
Support
Purpose of the American
Horse Slaughter Protection
Act:
To prohibit the slaughter
of horses for human consumption and the trade
and transport of horseflesh and live horses
intended for human
consumption.
On
June
8, 2005,
the U.S. House passed an
amendment to the House Agriculture
Appropriations bill that defunded the U.S.
Department of Agriculture's horse
slaughter-related activities. The U.S.
Senate approved an
identical amendment on September 20,
2005. Together, these amendments (which were
approved by Congress as part of the 2006
Agriculture Appropriations bill) will
effectively stop horse slaughter during 2006.
The American Horse Slaughter Prevention Act is
still needed to ensure a permanent ban on
slaughter is enacted. |
January 20, 2007, from The
Humane Society of the U.S.
Federal Appeals Court Declares Horse
Slaughter in Texas Illegal
Two of the
Nation’s Three Horse Slaughter Plants Face
Closure, Criminal
Charges
WASHINGTON
(Jan. 20, 2007) – The Humane Society of
the United States, which has been campaigning to
ban the slaughter of American horses for export
for human consumption, hailed a decision yesterday
by the United States Court of Appeals for the
Fifth Circuit overturning a lower court decision
that invalidated a Texas state law banning the
sale of horsemeat for human consumption. The HSUS
filed an amicus brief in the case in March 2006,
arguing in defense of Texas’ state law barring the
slaughter of American horses for human consumption
overseas.
"This is the most important court
action ever on the issue of horse slaughter. A
federal appeals court has ruled that America’s
horses can no longer be slaughtered in Texas and
shipped to foreign countries for food,” said Wayne
Pacelle, president and CEO for The Humane Society
of the United States. “When this ruling is
enforced, a single plant in Illinois will stand
alone in conducting this grisly business.”
The criminal code of Texas has long
prohibited the sale or possession of horse meat,
but the law has never been enforced. In 2002,
responding to citizen and local government
concerns about the two foreign-owned horse
slaughter plants in the state – Dallas Crown in
Kaufman and Beltex in Fort Worth – then-Texas
Attorney General John Cornyn issued a written
opinion that the 1949 Texas law applies and may be
enforced.
In response, the Tarrant County
District Attorney attempted to enforce the law,
but last year a federal district court in Texas
ruled that the law was repealed by another statute
and preempted by federal law. The District
Attorney appealed that decision last year, and was
supported by The HSUS in briefing before the Court
of Appeals.
In its decision, the court
flatly rejected the slaughterhouses’ arguments
that the ban on the sale of horsemeat does not
protect horses from theft and abuse, and that
regulating horse slaughter can achieve those same
purposes, noting instead that “it is a matter of
commonsense that…alternatives…do not preserve
horses as well as completely prohibiting the sale
and transfer of horsemeat for human consumption.”
The court noted that the horse on the Texas trail
is a cinematic icon, but “not once in memory did
the cowboy eat his horse.”
The Court of
Appeals also quickly brushed aside the slaughter
plants’ arguments that the Texas law at issue was
invalid under state and federal law, noting that
the Texas law “has not been repealed or preempted
by federal law,” and that “several states have
already banned its commercial use for human
consumption.”
“The Texas law prohibiting
the sale of horse meat for human food could hardly
be any more explicit," said Jonathan Lovvorn, vice
president of animal protection litigation for The
HSUS. "The court’s decision means that any
individual employee or corporation involved in the
horse slaughter business in Texas now stares
straight ahead at criminal
prosecution."
According to the U.S.
Department of Agriculture, 100,800 American horses
were slaughtered in three foreign-owned slaughter
houses in 2006. Opponents of the slaughter ban
argue the practice constitutes a humane way to
kill old animals*, but investigations by The HSUS
show cruelty and abuse throughout the process.
USDA statistics show that more than 92 percent of
horses slaughtered in the U.S. are not old and
infirm but in good condition.
Legislation
to ban the slaughter of American horses nationwide
was introduced this week in the 110th Congress,
and this court ruling will give further momentum
to the federal legislative effort. In the U.S.
Senate, the American Horse Slaughter Prevention
Act, S. 311, was launched Jan. 17 by Sens. Mary
Landrieu (D-La.) and John Ensign (R-Nev.), with 12
original cosponsors. In the U.S. House, Reps.
Janice Schakowsky (D-Ill.) Ed Whitfield (R-Ky.),
John Spratt (D-S.C.), and Nick Rahall (D-W.V.)
introduced a companion bill, H.R. 503, the same
day with 62 original cosponsors.
The
measure received tremendous bipartisan support in
the 109th Congress, winning a vote of 263 to 146
in the House. It stalled in the Senate in late
2006, however, and was not brought up for a vote
before Congress adjourned, even though a similar
effort had been overwhelmingly approved by the
Senate in 2005.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In
case you didn't know...
*According to D.R.E.R.C.
studies,
The horses that go to
slaughter are of different ages, young and
old. For the most part, they were healthy
animals in bad luck situations. We know this
because D.R.E.R.C. has had several
rescue missions preventing horses from going to
slaughter. Not one of the horses we rescued
were too old or too ill to be viable
animals. As a matter of fact they were all
pretty young, healthy horses.
Be aware, some people are pro slaughter
because they feel it to be humane to
euthanize an animal that is ill. Some people
who bring their horses to auction may unknowingly
send their horse to slaughter. Killer buyers often
shop the
auction blocks. Slaughtering
horses is cruel and inhumane. They suffer a great
deal thru shipment and the actual act of
slaughter. Please give us a call before you send a
horse off to auction. OR- If you
have a horse or know of a horse that needs to
be euthanized, call a vet. Don't put an
animal thought this much suffering. KNOW THE
DIFFERENCE!!
We are
not out of the woods yet!! What You
Can Do…
Take the
initiative.
Please
contact your legislators
today to say you're glad
Congress approved the horse slaughter ban
amendment, and to urge them to make sure horse
slaughterhouses never open again! Ask that they
co-sponsor the American Horse Slaughter Prevention
Act -- H.R. 503 in the House and S. 1915 in the
Senate.
1- Write letters
and more letters
2- Also, create
awareness by passing this on to your friends, who
can pass it on to
their friends &
etc. The more people know, the more effective we
can be in banning
slaughter.
3-
Please make a donation by sending a
check to;
Dude’s
Ranch
Equine
Rescue
Center.
23679
Calabasas Rd.
#616
Calabasas,
Ca .
91302
Dude's Ranch
Equine
Rescue Center
818-497-7468 |
661-269-2473
info@dudesranch.com
“Dude’s Ranch is a
no-kill rescue organization for wayward horses who
have been saved from abuse, slaughter and adverse
conditions.”

WE NEED YOUR
HELP!!
Make a pledge.
http://www.dudesranch.com/FosterCareSponsorshipDonationInfo.html |