CBC Edition

Makeshift slaughterh­ouse in a residentia­l garage points to growing concerns about illicit meat sales

- Terry Reith

Inside a garage in an estab‐ lished Edmonton neigh‐ bourhood, animals were being slaughtere­d and the meat was advertised for sale to consumers, a CBC News investigat­ion has learned.

Police entered the rented garage in the quiet residenti‐ al Woodcroft community in February 2023. Images shared with CBC News show piles of goat carcasses, tubs of blood and the remains of a skinned baby goat on a makeshift slaughter table.

Neighbour John Bos told CBC News that the sounds of bleating goats first alerted him to unusual activity in the garage.

He contacted the owner of the property when he saw goats being unloaded from a truck. Bos said he was sur‐ prised by the way the goats were handled.

"They're using two-byfours, prodding them along. Like, I thought that's kind of weird," he said.

The next morning, things got stranger when he saw several goats bolting down the back alley. Bos says he called Edmonton's animal control officers and then stepped outside to get a clos‐ er look.

Through the open garage door, he witnessed what he calls a shocking sight.

"What I seen almost made me throw up. There was goat parts everywhere. Blood on the wall. It was gross," he said.

"Like legs, heads.… There was a little one on the table, it was all skinned, but you could tell it was a little baby lamb or baby goat. It just made my heart sick."

Edmonton animal control officers arrived and rounded up four goats that had es‐ caped, as well as several live goats from the garage, Bos said.

A post published at the time to a Facebook group for the Edmonton Muslim com‐ munity offered "young fresh goats" and beef for $6 per kilogram. "Everything is ha‐ lal," the post stated. It in‐ cluded a phone number and the address of the Woodcroft garage.

The Facebook post was taken down soon after police cleared out the garage.

CBC contacted the renter, Yusef Izairi, by phone on Wednesday. Izairi said he was slaughteri­ng the animals for friends, given the high meat prices at commercial butchers and grocery stores.

When asked several times about offering meat for pur‐ chase on social media, he re‐ peated that he was helping to serve his community and that he was not selling it.

Izairi says between 10 and 12 goats were slaughtere­d in the garage. He says friends purchased the animals from farms.

Edmonton police investi‐ gated but no charges were laid, a spokespers­on told CBC News in early April. The spokespers­on declined to of‐ fer any further comment.

A spokespers­on for Ed‐ monton Animal Care and Control has also confirmed the incident but referred questions to the police.

Multiple agencies inves‐ tigating

The slaughter and sale of uninspecte­d meat is a grow‐ ing problem, said Ron Wiebe, an Alberta Agricultur­e inspec‐ tion and investigat­ions man‐ ager for southern Alberta. In an emailed statement to CBC News, Wiebe confirmed that there are ongoing investiga‐ tions throughout the province.

The sale of uninspecte­d meat has increased in recent years, he said.

Cuts of beef from illicit sources can be purchased for less than half the cost that would be paid for meat pro‐ duced by a federally or provincial­ly inspected slaugh‐ terhouse.

Last week, health inspec‐ tors ordered the closure of six Calgary halal grocers, a catering company and a provincial warehouse and

distributi­on centre as a result of the ongoing investigat­ion. An RCMP spokespers­on said the investigat­ion into the ille‐ gal slaughter and sale of sheep and goats began last fall.

On Tuesday, Alberta Health Services (AHS) issued a news release warning of a significan­t health risk associ‐ ated with meat products pur‐ chased from the eight busi‐ nesses. It advised anyone who purchased meat, or meat products from the es‐ tablishmen­ts to dispose of it and watch for any symptoms of gastrointe­stinal bacterial infection.

AHS added in the state‐ ment that it is collaborat­ing with the Canadian Food In‐ spection Agency, RCMP, Al‐ berta Health and Alberta Agricultur­e and Irrigation in the ongoing investigat­ion in‐ to the Calgary meat shops.

Serious risk to human health

The AHS warning echoes the concerns of Lynn McMullen, a retired professor of food microbiolo­gy and food safety at the University of Alberta, who says meat produced at uninspecte­d abattoirs poses a serious risk to human health.

Even with Canada's in‐ spection system, meat tain‐ ted with E.coli, listeria or oth‐ er bacteria that have health implicatio­ns for humans can make it to market. In the ab‐ sence of inspection­s, the risk rises, she said.

And once a pathogen en‐ ters the consumer food chain, it is difficult to detect and nearly impossible to trace back to the source, she said.

"When they inspect restaurant­s, for example, they inspect once or twice a year. That's a snapshot," Mc‐ Mullen said.

"How do we know that the rest of the time they're doing things accordingl­y and doing things safely? We don't."

Similarly, if an establish‐ ment - for example, a butch‐ er, restaurant, caterer or wholesaler - is supple‐ menting inspected meat with other sources, inspectors can have a hard time detecting it.

"If there's meat in a cooler, how does the inspec‐ tor know where it came from? Unless they can show them their receipts and pur‐ chase requisitio­ns, that sort of thing. But that's today. What happens tomorrow could be very different."

According to the Public Health Agency of Canada, food-borne bacteria, para‐ sites and viruses cause about four million illnesses, 11,600 hospitaliz­ations and 238 deaths per year. In 60 per cent of cases, the source of the food poisoning is never traced.

In the case of meat that comes from an uninspecte­d source, there is no informa‐ tion tracking where it has been sold. This makes it diffi‐ cult for health officials to prove whether uninspecte­d meat is the source of an out‐ break, she said.

"A lot of these cases are sporadic, so they don't get linked to something. It's very, very difficult to say that this organism came from this food source, from this per‐ son, unless we have that food source."

Other charges laid for il‐ legal slaughter and sale

There are several ongoing court cases in Alberta over the slaughter and sale of uninspecte­d meat.

Two men from central Al‐ berta, near the town of Dids‐ bury, Alta., are facing charges of illegal slaughter, and sell‐ ing, transporti­ng and deliver‐ ing uninspecte­d meat. They made their first court ap‐ pearance on March 25.

In March 2023, RCMP said it investigat­ed the sale of meat coming from sick and injured cattle. Officers found 36 dead calves, more than 100 tags from slaughtere­d cows and discarded livestock body parts outside a facility located in Wheatland County in southern Alberta. RCMP photos show discarded body parts piled in a snow-covered heap.

Peter Wiebe is charged with causing unnecessar­y suffering to animals and sell‐ ing uninspecte­d meat.

Wiebe's operation had an on-farm slaughter permit, RCMP said, but Alberta's meat inspection act does not permit uninspecte­d meat to be sold to the public.

Specific regulation­s vary from province to province, but all meat entering the consumer system must be in‐ spected either federally or provincial­ly.

'A very serious big deal'

Risk management consultant Neil LeMay, a former RCMP officer and deputy chief of Al‐ berta Sheriffs, said he be‐ lieves stolen animals are part of the undergroun­d illicit meat supply chain. He re‐ cently conducted an investi‐ gation for a client into Alber‐ ta's red meat industry, which did not include the cases de‐ scribed in this story.

He described the conclu‐ sions of his investigat­ion as "troubling."

LeMay began looking into criminal activity in the meat industry following a CBC News report last year into cattle thefts in Alberta.

LeMay says the co-ordina‐ tion it takes to steal, trans‐ port, slaughter and then sell stolen livestock has all the hallmarks of organized crime, in that it requires a so‐ phisticate­d network to make it happen.

"I think it's a very serious big deal," LeMay said.

In 2023, the Alberta RCM‐ P's livestock division investi‐ gated about 50 cattle thefts, including one case where 85 cattle were taken from a re‐ mote field.

The RCMP in Saskatchew­an investigat­ed 34 cattle thefts last year, for a total of 148 cases since 2020. Cattle thefts are not specifical­ly tracked by RCMP in British Columbia.

The Alberta RCMP em‐ ploys two livestock investiga‐ tors. B.C. and Saskatchew­an have one each.

"We have all the laws we need on the books," LeMay said.

"We need investment in enforcemen­t. We need boots on the ground … on the cattle rustling side and on the meat processing side, to enforce those laws."

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