Wednesday, May 31, 2017

#PAST BLAST "Animal Rights Activist Sentenced to Six Months of Home Confinement for Vandalizing a Farm and Releasing 2,000 Mink from Cages"

Want to hear what the Department of Justice had to say about the Mink Case ...

Department of Justice
U.S. Attorney’s Office
Northern District of Illinois

"Animal Rights Activist Sentenced to Six Months of Home Confinement for Vandalizing a Farm and Releasing 2,000 Mink from Cages"

March 23, 2016
CHICAGO — A Los Angeles man was sentenced today to six months of home confinement for vandalizing a Grundy County fur farm and releasing more than 2,000 mink from their cages.
After releasing the mink, TYLER LANG and an accomplice spray painted the barn with the words, “Liberation is Love.”  The pair also poured an acidic substance over two trucks that were parked on the farm in Morris, Ill.
Lang, 27, pleaded guilty last year to one count of conspiring to travel in interstate commerce with the purpose of damaging an animal enterprise. 
U.S. District Judge Amy J. St. Eve sentenced Lang to three months’ time already served in prison, six months of community confinement and six months of home confinement, followed by one year of supervised release.
“Lang was not engaging in lawful activism or peaceful protest, but instead was committing a crime,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Bethany K. Biesenthal argued in the government’s sentencing memorandum.  “The use of illegal methods of activism – harassment, threats, vandalism – does nothing more than taint the image of law-abiding activists who are attempting to create change through legal protest and lawful demonstration.”
The accomplice, KEVIN JOHNSON, of Los Angeles, pleaded guilty last year to the same charge as Lang.  Judge St. Eve sentenced Johnson last month to three years in prison.
The vandalism and releasing of the mink occurred on Aug. 13, 2013.  The mink farmers, with assistance from law enforcement, were able to recover 1,600 of the animals.  The remaining mink died or were never found.  Lang and Johnson also destroyed cards from the cages that identified the breed of each animal, making it impossible to determine the breed of the recovered minks.
The sentencing of Johnson was announced by Zachary T. Fardon, United States Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois; and Michael J. Anderson, Special Agent-in-Charge of the Chicago office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.  The government is represented by Ms. Biesenthal and Assistant U.S. Attorney William Ridgway.
(originally posted on https://www.justice.gov/usao-ndil/pr/animal-rights-activist-sentenced-six-months-home-confinement-vandalizing-farm-and)

Tuesday, May 30, 2017

#PASTBLAST "Animal activist who released thousands of minks gets 3 years in prison"

"Animal activist who released thousands of minks gets 3 years in prison"
By Jason Meisner, February 2016
On a summer morning nearly three years ago, residents of downstate Morris awoke to a peculiar sight. Minks were everywhere. Running through yards, darting under parked cars, scurrying across farm roads on the way into town. Dozens of the animals lay dead in the road, killed by traffic. Others splashed in lawn sprinklers to escape the heat.
In the middle of the night, two California animal rights activists had broken into a local mink farm wearing balaclavas and armed with bolt cutters and released more than 2,000 of the furry creatures, federal prosecutors say. The owners found cages emptied and their business ruined. Spray-painted on the side of their barn were the words "LIBERATION IS LOVE."
In federal court Monday, one of the activists, Kevin Johnson, was sentenced to three years in prison and ordered to pay $200,000 in restitution to the victims of the sabotage.
In handing down the sentence, U.S. District Judge Amy St. Eve said she was troubled by the "escalation" of Johnson's activism over the years and that previous stints behind bars have not seemed to deter him. She also noted that his actions on the mink farm that night caused suffering for many of the animals he professed to want to save. In all, more than 550 of the minks died, many painfully, the judge said.
Johnson, 29, pleaded guilty last year to one count of conspiring to travel across state lines to interfere with the operations of an animal enterprise. Before he was sentenced, Johnson choked back tears as he apologized for the attack, saying he has finally realized after nearly a decade of arrests that committing criminal acts was not an acceptable form of protest.
"I'm tired of it. I don't want it for my life," Johnson said, leaning forward into the microphone as the farm's owners looked on from the courtroom gallery. "I see these old guys in jail, all their best days are behind them and they're still going back. I'm not going to be that guy."
With time already served, Johnson could be released in as little as three months, according to his lawyer, Michael Deutsch. When he is released, Johnson will spend up to a year at an inpatient center near his home in California, where he will get treatment for mental health issues and receive job placement assistance, Deutsch said.
Johnson and his longtime friend, Tyler Lang, were in the midst of a cross-country journey to sabotage animal farms when they were arrested in August 2013. According to Johnson's plea agreement with prosecutors, after he and Lang freed the minks from the Morris farm, they poured caustic substances over two farm vehicles, causing significant damage, and destroyed cards from the minks' cages that identified their breed and are required for their sale.
When police stopped them two days later, they were just a few miles from a fox farm in Woodford County that they planned to sabotage as well, authorities said. Among the items seized from Johnson's vehicle were five bottles of muriatic acid, two bottles of bleach and a container of hydrogen peroxide, all ingredients for a homemade incendiary device.
Also found were books titled "Thinking Like a Terrorist" and "Unconventional Warfare Devices and Techniques," prosecutors said.
Lang, 27, has pleaded guilty and is scheduled to be sentenced next month.
The owner of the farm, Robert Rodeghero, told the judge during the hearing that he'd started raising minks as a hobby in 1979 and eventually built a business he hoped would supplement his factory worker's pension. After the attack, Rodeghero and his employees were able to corral about 1,600 of the freed minks, but the damage to the skittish and "high-strung" animals was done, he said. About 150 died in their cages in the days after their recapture.
He and his wife also suffered psychologically, Rodeghero said. For two weeks after the incident, he slept outside by the minks' cages with a loaded gun at the ready.
In asking for at least three years in prison, prosecutors said that while Johnson's ideas about animal rights "are noble," the tactics he has chosen have become increasingly violent and undermine law-abiding activists who try to make change through legal protest.
"(Johnson) has stalked, stolen, harassed, and threatened to make his point," Assistant U.S. Attorney Bethany Biesenthal wrote in a court filing. "... His past shows an escalating dangerousness."
Records show Johnson has a long criminal record in California. He first came to the attention of law enforcement during a protest against juice company executives in Santa Monica in 2006. Video from the protests showed Johnson screaming on a bullhorn outside the executives' homes, threatening to harm them and their families, according to prosecutors. He was convicted of burglary and served time in prison.
Three years later, Johnson was arrested after threatening some UCLA professors over their use of animals in research. He later pleaded guilty to criminal stalking and served about 1 1/2 years in prison, prosecutors said.
In May 2012, five months after his release on parole, Johnson was arrested for shoplifting and inciting a riot, prosecutors said. Later that year he was arrested for attempting to burglarize a pharmacy, and when authorities searched a laptop computer found in Johnson's car, they found personal information on scientific researchers and their families, according to prosecutors.
His mother, Tracy Rich, told the judge her son is highly intelligent and loving but has long battled depression and mental illness.
(originally posted by Chicago Tribune http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/ct-animal-activist-mink-sentencing-met-20160229-story.html)


Monday, May 15, 2017

#PASTBLAST "Fox Breeders Condemn Cruel ALF Attack on Illinois Farm"

Continuing on with our mini-series with articles from past actions in Illinois and other Midwestern states which involve animal rights and liberation issues . . . If you were not aware of the following taking place a decade ago, well, time to be enlightened!!

NORTH CENTRAL FOX PRODUCERS’ ASSOCIATION PRESS RELEASE, APRIL 2, 2005

Contact: Lou Baumel 218-245-2127
Bovey, Minnesota: Early in the morning of April 1, 2005, trespassers entered the Littig Fox Ranch in Bluffs, Illinois and opened 58 pens of foxes, all females nursing litters of young pups or about to deliver within the next 10 days.
An “anonymous communique” purporting to come from the Animal Liberation Front claimed guilt for this crime and threatened to attack the farm again.
Kerry Littig, owner of the farm explained, “Many of the nursing females stayed with their pups but others, frightened, abandoned their young and several aborted or delivered early. We’ve recovered them all and got them all back into their pens but one of the females has died from stress and we’re now hand-feeding her young. The rest, of course, are traumatized.”
Littig went on to explain that it is a challenge for the farmer to match up foxes with the correct pups. A mistake can result in death of all the pups.
While property damage to the farm is minor, the extent of the damage done to the livestock will not be known for several weeks.
“Right now it is all dependent on the skill of the farmer,” added Lou Baumel of the North Central Fox Producers’ Association, which represents fox farmers throughout the region. “Kerry Littig has earned a solid reputation for the quality of his foxes, raising award-winning animals for over 23 years so I am confident he’s doing his best.”
The communiquŽ from the Animal Liberation Front stated that the crime was done in “solidarity” for recently-captured fugitive Peter Young. Young, a fugitive for seven years, was arrested while shoplifting in California and is implicated in a multi-state crime spree relating to attacks on farms ten years ago.
“Farmers and researchers in the Midwest should double check their security and Neighborhood Watch programs and report suspicious activity to local law enforcement and the FBI,” recommended Lou Baumel.

(originally posted at Fur Commission USA, http://furcommission.com/fox-breeders-condemn-cruel-alf-attack-on-illinois-farm/)

Friday, May 12, 2017

#PASTBLAST "Activist given home, community confinement for releasing minks"

"Activist given home, community confinement for releasing minks"
By Marwa Eltagouri, March 2016

An animal rights activist was sentenced to both home and community confinement Wednesday for breaking into a downstate Morris farm with a longtime friend and releasing more than 2,000 minks into the wild while armed with bolt cutters and with his face covered.
In handing down the sentence, U.S. District Judge Amy St. Eve called Tyler Lang's actions "counterproductive," noting that hundreds of the minks died and many others suffered.
"This is a very serious offense that caused a substantial loss to the victim. It wiped out their business and life savings," St. Eve said of the owner of the farm, Robert Rodeghero, who attended the sentencing in U.S. District Court in Chicago, and his family. "You destroyed their feelings of security and their trust of others, in addition to their business."
The family declined to talk to a Tribune reporter.



The judge sentenced Lang to six months of home confinement followed by six months in a work release center. She also imposed a three-month prison term, but Lang had already served that in a downstate jail following his arrest. He was also ordered to pay $200,000 in restitution to the victims.
Lang and his friend Kevin Johnson, both of California, were in the midst of a cross-country journey to sabotage animal farms when they were stopped by police downstate a few days after the Morris incident. They were only a few miles from a fox farm in Woodford County that they planned to sabotage as well, authorities said.
Johnson, 29, who has a more extensive criminal history, was sentenced last month to three years in prison and was also ordered to pay $200,000.
Lang, 27, did not speak in court before St. Eve imposed the sentence. Instead, he wrote a letter to the judge expressing his regret, according to his attorney, Geoffrey Meyer. The letter was not read aloud in court.



Lang had pleaded guilty to one count of conspiring to travel in interstate commerce with the purpose of damaging an animal enterprise.
Prosecutors had wanted to imprison Lang for up to 21 months, in part due to allegations of Lang's involvement in demonstrations against animal testing outside the homes of University of California-Los Angeles researchers. Assistant U.S. Attorney Bethany Biesenthal called the protests "harassment" and compared the activity to the break-in at the Rodeghero's farm.
But St. Eve dismissed those claims and referred to the protests as "lawful picketing."
While Biesenthal conceded that Johnson was likely the mastermind of the anti-fur road trip, she argued that both men played equal roles in breaking in to the Morris farm.
"It's heartbreaking to think about how hard this family worked for this small business," she said. "It was gone in an instant."
In handing down her sentence, St. Eve said she took into account that Lang has stayed out of trouble since his release from jail in November 2013.
"I take that as a positive sign," she said.
(originally poasted by Chicago Tribune http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/ct-animal-rights-activist-sentence-met-20160323-story.html)

#PASTBLAST "Second Animal Rights Activist Sentenced In Illinois Mink Farm Case"

Below is Progress Illinois' synopsis of the full article ...  in case you don't have time to read the whole thing right now!

"Second Animal Rights Activist Sentenced In Illinois Mink Farm Case"

March 23, 2016

Tyler Lang, an animal rights activist from California, was sentenced Wednesday for his involvement in freeing 2,000 minks from an Illinois fur farm in 2013.
U.S. District Judge Amy St. Eve sentenced Lang to three months time already served, six months of house arrest, six months community confinement and one year of supervised release. He is also required to make a $200,000 restitution payment to the farm operators. 
Lang and his friend Kevin Johnson, also from California, were accused of freeing the minks from a Morris fur farm and spray painting "liberation is love" on a barn there. The men's actions reportedly resulted in the deaths of hundreds of minks and the farm's closure.
"This is a very serious offense that caused a substantial loss to the victim. It wiped out their business and life savings," St. Eve said at Lang's sentencing hearing, reported the Chicago Tribune. "You destroyed their feelings of security and their trust of others, in addition to their business."
The men faced "animal enterprise terrorism" charges. According to a news release from the two men's support team, Lang and Johnson each "entered into non-cooperating plea agreements through which they pleaded guilty to violating the" Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act, a federal law pushed by the pro-corporate and conservative American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC).
Last month, Johnson received a three-year prison sentence and was ordered to make a $200,000 restitution payment. 
In a statement, Lang and Johnson's support team said "Tyler and Kevin's case should be a reminder to us all that we have to show each other love and support in the face of State oppression."
(originally posted at http://www.progressillinois.com/news/content/2016/03/23/second-animal-rights-activist-sentenced-illinois-mink-farm-case)