Ruling blocks PETA activists from SeaWorld
Trio’s three-year ban stems from park’s request after summer protest at orca show.
Three animal rights activists who staged a protest this summer during SeaWorld’s Orca Encounter have been barred from entering the San Diego marine park and its sister Aquatica park for the next three years.
SeaWorld’s request for a restraining order was granted this week by San Diego Superior Court Judge Timothy Taylor, whose ruling targeted three members of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals — Lisa Marie Lange, PETA’s senior vice president for communications; Ricky Chavez Rodriguez; and Lyanne Fernandez.
The trio is also prohibited from harassing, threatening or committing violence against SeaWorld employees.
The ruling and requested injunction stemmed from a protest July 24 when actor James Cromwell and six PETA activists disrupted SeaWorld’s revamped orca presentation, which replaced the long-running theatrical Shamu show. SeaWorld said the group behaved aggressively and had refused to leave the park.
SeaWorld President Marilyn Hannes said the park decided to take the unprece- dented action of seeking a restraining order because of a “dangerous and volatile situation the activists created that easily could have escalated and put them, our employees and even the animals at risk.”
The three protesters were removed from the park during the July protest and later charged with criminal trespass, which is the subject of a separate case that is still pending.
The court ruling will not keep PETA from continuing to hold peaceful protests over what it says is SeaWorld’s inhumane treatment of marine mammals, the organization said in a statement.
“We ask decent people to come together to protest such cruelty by all lawful means available,” said PETA President Ingrid Newkirk.
SeaWorld as a company has been struggling to rebuild its brand amid a continued backlash from the 2013 “Blackfish” documentary that was critical of SeaWorld’s treatment of killer whales.
Although the company has ended the captive breeding of its orcas and is phasing out its Shamu shows, SeaWorld still faces lagging revenues and attendance. In a recent cost-cutting move, it laid off 350 employees across the company.