Houston Chronicle

Charges are dropped in Iowa hog case

- By Ryan J. Foley

IOWA CITY, Iowa — Prosecutor­s have dropped trespassin­g charges against an activist who helped secretly record Iowa’s largest pork producer using heat to kill thousands of hogs last year as the pandemic devastated the industry.

Matt Johnson, an activist with the group Direct Action Everywhere, had been scheduled to stand trial in Grundy County, Iowa, on Monday on two counts of trespassin­g at Iowa Select Farms properties in May.

County prosecutor­s moved to dismiss the charges Thursday at the request of Iowa Select, whose personnel had been subpoenaed but said they didn’t wish to testify, court documents show.

“We cannot be distracted by individual­s who choose to break the law and grandstand,” Iowa Select spokeswoma­n Jen Sorenson said Friday.

Johnson was planning a necessity defense, arguing that his actions were lawful because they were the only way to expose the inhumane treatment of animals. He was hoping to draw more attention to the company’s use of a method known as ventilatio­n shutdown to cut the size of its herd in May.

Johnson had acknowledg­ed, however, that his defense was likely to fail and that he could face fines or jail time if convicted.

Iowa Select’s animals are raised and sent to be slaughtere­d by Tyson Foods and other meatpacker­s, and they end up in grocery stores as bacon and pork under several brand names. The company is an influentia­l backer of Republican Gov. Kim Reynolds.

Last spring, some producers said they had no choice but to euthanize hogs after coronaviru­s outbreaks at meatpackin­g plants led to closures and production slowdowns.

They said they had no markets to sell them and ran out of space to house them.

One of the methods they used to trim herds was ventilatio­n shutdown, which involves stopping airflow inside a facility to raise the temperatur­e high enough to kill animals inside.

American Veterinary Medical Associatio­n guidelines say the method should be a last resort after others are ruled out, that it should be done quickly enough to kill 95% of the animals within an hour, and that all must be eventually killed.

Acting on a tip from a whistleblo­wer, a team of activists that included Johnson placed equipment inside an Iowa Select barn and recorded audio of pigs shrieking, some for hours, as the temperatur­e rose and killed many of them.

They also captured video showing workers hours later walking through the pile of animals and shooting those showing signs of life with a bolt gun. Then, they used heavy machinery to remove the carcasses.

Johnson said that his investigat­ion has found some of Iowa Select’s own employees dissented from the practice, a claim he wanted to explore at trial.

“This company knows that the public … is horrified to learn what ISF is willing to do in the name of profit,” he said. “They’re desperate to conceal their abhorrent and criminal conduct.”

Johnson said that activists sneaked in and placed a wireless home security camera in the barn that they could control remotely as well as an audio recorder that they were able to retrieve the next day.

Johnson, an Iowa native who now lives in Berkeley, California, was charged with trespassin­g after returning to the farm and confrontin­g Iowa Select chief operations officer Noel Williams about the practice. He faced a second trespassin­g charge related to an incident days later on a different property.

 ?? Direct Action Everywhere via Associated Press ?? Video shows workers using bolt guns to kill pigs that remained alive after they had been exposed to heat.
Direct Action Everywhere via Associated Press Video shows workers using bolt guns to kill pigs that remained alive after they had been exposed to heat.

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