California Law Increases Penalties for Cockfighters

Outgoing California Gov. Gray Davis recently signed into law a bill that will significantly increase fines against those convicted of cockfighting, but likely not have much real impact because it does not increase possible jail time nor elevate cockfighting to a felony.

Under current California law, cockfighting is a misdemeanor with a maximum $1,000 fine and up to a year in jail. Effective January 1, 2004, however, the fine for a first offense is raised to a maximum of $5,000 and a second offense to $25,000.

The impetus for the bill was the 2002 outbreak of Newcastle disease in California which some blamed on the large number of illegal cockfighting operations in California. An expert on poultry from the University of California extension testified against that notion, however, and language to that effect was removed from the bill by its sponsor.

Originally the bill was written to elevate cockfighting to a felony, but legislators balked at that because of the implications it might have for California’s three strikes law. Without felony status backed up with longer terms in jail, however, police are unlikely to devote limited resources to cracking down on cockfighting in California./

The full text of the bill can be read here.

Barbecuing Under the Billboard to Protest PETA

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals recently paid for a billboard in Idaho Falls, Idaho, picturing a child eating a hamburger with the copy “Feeding kids meat is child abuse.”

An Idaho radio station decided to protest the billboard by holding a barbecue beneath it. According to KIDK 3, several dozen people gathered under the billboard for a “meat fest barbecue to protest PETA.”

Sources:

People gather to protest a PETA billboard. Joly Thomas, KIDK 3, September 17, 2003.

Idaho falls radio station plans PETA protest. Associated Press, September 15, 2003.

Judge Dismisses Activist's Lawsuit Over Makah Injuries

In April 2000, Erin Abbott was one of a number of activists who used watercraft to dart in and out of an exclusion zone set up by the Coast Guard during the Makah whale hunt. Abbott’s watercraft collided with a Coast Guard boat that attempted to shield a Makah canoe in the exclusion zone.

Activists at the time likened the collision to attempted murder on the part of the Coast Guard and, incredibly, Abbott sued the Coast Guard over the injuries.

Not surprisingly, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer reports that a judge has dismissed Abbott’s lawsuit saying that she was “wholly responsible” for the injuries she sustained.

According to the Post-Intelligencer, Judge Franklin Burgess said in his ruling that,

Ms. Abbott thus not only intentionally violated the MEZ (exclusionary zone), which she knew was in effect, and pled guilty to negligent endangerment of life at sea, and violated the rules of the road, but she violated safe operating practices, good seamanship, federal regulation and common sense in making high-speed passes with a personal watercraft in the vicinity of a canoe, a vessel engaged in a completely lawful activity in the open ocean with little freeboard.

Abbott was sentenced to just 120 hours of community service on the negligent endangerment charge.

Source:

Judge throws out whaling protester’s lawsuit against Coast Guard Seattle Post-Intelligencer, September 6, 2003.

Individual Wanted for Questioning in Chiron Bombing

In September, the Federal Bureau of Investigation identified an individual it wants to question in connection with the explosion of bombs at Chiron Corp. in Emeryville, California.

Bjorn Einertsen, 26 was being sought for questioning after witnesses reported that a 1986 Dodge van with license plates registered to Einertsen was seen leaving the scene after the bombing. Einertsen is only wanted for questioning at the moment, and is not necessarily a suspect in the bombing.

In 2001 Einertsen was arrested and charged with assaulting a police officer at a house party in Portland, Oregon.

The FBI initially also sought Sweet Mensoff, 28 and Joni Ruppel, 22. Mensoff contacted the FBI and told the that she had been at a nightclub at the time of the bombing. She apparently was sought for questioning because she had previously allowed Einertsen to use her residence as a mailing address.

Ruppel lives in New York and told ABC New she hadn’t left New York since April of 2003. Like Wesoff, she had in the past allowed Einertsen to use her residence in Oregon as a mailing address last year.

Sources:

Possible Emeryville Bombing Suspect? ABC-7, September 4, 2003.

Bomb suspects still at large Guy Ashley, Contra Costa Times, September 4, 2003.

Portland man wanted in bio-tech bombings. KOIN.Com, September 3, 2003.

Alibi about Chiron said to satisfy FBI. Guy Ashley, Contra Costa Times, September 6, 2003.

Paula Kislak Elected As President of Association of Veterinarians for Animal Rights

In a September 9 press release, the Association of Veterinarians for Animal Rights announced they that Paula Kislak, DVM, was elected as the next president of the animal rights group. He succeeds AVAR co-founder Nedim Buyukmihci.

According to the press release,

Dr. Kislak, a vegan, has been an AVAR board member since 1998 and was on its advisory board prior to that. She is considered by many as an “activist’s [sic] activist” because of her involvement with many animal rights issues. For example, Dr. Kislak has been an anti-greyhound racing activist since 1992, she was instrumental in passing California’s sweeping animal shelter reform law of 1998, and she continues to assist with efforts to help animals both locally and in Sacramento. She is a consultant and on boards of several groups, including Santa Barbara Animal Rescue, Animalkind and Neva Foundation.

In September 2000 Kislak wrote an op-ed for the Northern Virginia Journal complaining that animal issues were left out of the presidential election debates,

Nonhumans are, and always have been, systematically left out of election debates and platforms. We wonder how it is that life can only revolve around one species and the interests of the millions of other species aren’t even worthy of notice by a presidential candidate.

We call this “speciesism,” which is a prejudice against other species. This assumes that we humans are the pinnacle of the evolutionary scale. Nonhumans don’t vote, but our children don’t either. Yet, when it comes to all the rhetoric about protecting the downtrodden, the vulnerable and those whose interests are often overlooked, those that are the most vulnerable aren’t even in the discussion.

Sources:

Santa Barbara veterinarian to lead national veterinary group focusing on animal rights. Press Release, Association of Veterinarians for Animal Rights, September 9, 2003.

Animal protection should have higher campaign profile. Paula Kislak, Northern Virginia Journal, September 2000.

A Very Scary Solstice

Okay, everybody loves Christmas, and what goes better with Christmas than H.P. Lovecraft? Nothing, of course, which is why the A Very Scary Solstice is a must have for the coming holiday season.

This contains classics like “I Saw Mommy Kissing Yog-Shothoth” and Awake Ye Scary Great Old Ones (MP3).

Yeah, it’s $20 but they throw in a Singalong Songbook that includes tidbits on the stories behind these classic Holiday hits.

I think I’m going to buy this to play at my office to see if anyone notices.