return to GoVeg.com
 Vegetarian 101  Spacer  Recipes  Spacer  Videos  Spacer  FREE Vegetarian Starter Kit  Spacer  Donate Now 
 
Subscribe to E-News
Search
Why Vegetarian?
Cruelty to Animals Cruelty to Animals
Amazing Animals Amazing Animals
Health Issues Health Issues
The Environment The Environment
More »
Meet the Animals
Meet the Animals: Chickens Chickens
Meet the Animals: Cows Cows
Meet the Animals: Fish Fish
Meet the Animals: Pigs Pigs
Meet the Animals: Turkeys Turkeys
Meet the Animals: Ducks and Geese Ducks and Geese
More »
Resources
Resources: Get Active Get Active
Resources: Recipes Recipes
Resources: 'Meet Your Meat' 'Meet Your Meat' PETA TV
Resources: Take the 30-Day Veg Pledge Take the 30-Day Veg Pledge
Resources: Famous Vegetarians Famous Vegetarians
Resources: Books and Web Sites Books and Web Sites
Resources: Literature and Merchandise Literature and Merchandise
Resources: In the News In the News
Resources: Investigations Investigations
Resources: Photo Gallery Photo Gallery
Free Vegetarian Starter Kit
Sign Up For PETA E-News
Support Our Work
Work For PETA
peta2
PETA Kids
 
Undercover Investigations // Pigs

Rampant Abuse at a South Dakota Pig Farm

A pig farm investigation turned up gratuitous and systematic abuse, including animals beaten with shovels, cooked alive, and drowned in their own excrement, while authorities refuse to do anything about it.

Please install Flash to view this content.

Get macromedia Flash Player

  Other Viewing Options
  Download Video

A year-long investigation by the Humane Farming Association (HFA) of the Sun Prairie Rosebud Operation pig farm in Mellette County, South Dakota, found widespread and systematic abuse of roughly 100,000 pigs.

Gratuitous abuse of pigs was common. Workers would extinguish cigarettes on their bodies, beat them with rakes and shovels, kick them, stick poles in their stomach ruptures, strangle them, throw them into manure pits to drown, slit their throats to watch them bleed to death, and stick electric prods in their eyes, ears, mouth, vaginas, and anuses. These abuses were condoned by management.

The Environmental  Protection Agency  estimates that 600,000 of the children who were  born in 2000 are at risk  for developing learning  difficulties because their  pregnant or nursing  mothers became  exposed to mercury  when they ate fish.Workers killed pigs typically by smashing their heads repeatedly against the concrete floors or metal rails or by standing on their necks. Larger pigs were often beaten to death with hammers, rebar rods, and angle irons. Others had a water hose placed in their mouths until they burst. Animals thrown in the dead pile often remained alive for days.

Sick or injured animals were dragged out of their pens into the aisles and left there for weeks until they died of hunger or thirst, in many cases resorting in desperation to eating feces. Others were left in pens where, unable to reach food, they starved to death or, when trapped under heating devices, were literally cooked alive. Conditions were so bad that every day, larger pigs would eat weaker ones alive. Hernias and stomach ruptures, some the size of volleyballs, were common and generally received no treatment.

Climate control devices were not in working order. Pigs often suffered from subzero temperatures in winter and temperatures as high as 120°F in the summer. The pens were not cleaned during the entire six months of confinement, leaving floors covered with feces and urine accumulating along the backs of pens and pouring into alleyways. In many cases, clogs and nonfunctioning flush boxes would fill pens with sewage so deep that some pigs would drown in it. Conditions were so inhumane that in many barns, death rates reached 30 to 60 percent.

Investigation Photo Gallery
Statements From Sun Prairie Workers

What You Can Do

“I saw the barns backed up so far … the pigs were up to their shoulders in shit water with their heads just above water.” HFA’s petition fell on deaf ears because state laws are ineffective at protecting farmed animals and the Animal Welfare Act exempts farmed animals entirely. One inspector stated, “I believe it to be a well run and managed operation and the manager and employees need to be commended for their efforts.” Whistleblowers report that these cruelties continue to this day.

Not only have authorities allowed the cruelty perpetrated at Sun Prairie to continue, but sadly, investigations of farms across the country have turned up similar abuses. The best thing that you can do to help spare animals from such torture is to stop supporting the industry that allows this cruelty to occur by no longer eating meat. Order a free vegetarian starter kit full of delicious recipes to get started today and join millions of other people who have made the same life-saving choice.



In This Section
Bullet Rampant Abuse at a South Dakota Pig Farm
Bullet Investigation Photo Gallery
Bullet Statements From Sun Prairie Workers
Bullet Petition to the Attorney General
Now Showing on PETA TV®
Watch the Undercover Video Watch the Undercover Video
More PETA TV®
   l    * Printer-Friendly    l    E-Mail This Site    l    Subscribe to E-News    
About PETA      Donate Now      Privacy Policy      Disclaimer      PETA Web Sites     
Click here to return to PETA.org