Dirty secrets under the big top
Lawsuits charge Ringling Bros. with abusing animals, endangering public health, and sabotaging its critics using CIA spooks. Could this be the end of the circus as we know it?


Why is this elephant smiling?

steve@sfbg.com

The circus has come to town. Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus, the largest and most profitable show of its kind in history, is in Oakland this week, and will be headed to San Jose next week. Spectators will see trapeze acts, clowns — and animals, particularly elephants, performing the trademark stunts that are considered the highlight of the event.

But the show may soon be over.

Ringling Bros. has been battling with animal welfare advocates for a generation or more, and a landmark federal lawsuit headed to trial in October could finally answer the question of whether rough, regular treatment of endangered Asian elephants by circus handlers constitutes illegal animal abuse.

At stake is the future of performing animals in circuses, particularly this 138-year-old global institution. Circus officials say that if the court prohibits the use of tools like leg chains and the ankus (an elephant training tool that activists call a bull hook and handlers call a guide), they'll stop touring with elephants — a feature that they admit is their biggest draw.

A D V E R T I S E M E N T


The case, originally filed eight years ago by three national animal welfare groups and former Ringling Bros. elephant handler Tom Rider, has unearthed a treasure trove of damning inside documents from both Ringling Bros. and the US Department of Agriculture, the agency that regulates circuses and ensures their compliance with the Endangered Species and Animal Welfare acts.

Among the allegations are claims of repeated injuries to elephants by ankus-wielding handlers, efforts to conceal animal abuse from the public and government regulators, the preventable deaths of three baby elephants, prevalence of tuberculosis (the same strain contracted by humans) in elephants and handlers, and a pattern of high USDA officials overriding the enforcement recommendations of agency investigators and ignoring evidence of abuse.

"Ringling Bros. engages in these unlawful activities by routinely beating elephants to 'train' them, 'discipline' them, and keep them under control; chaining them for long periods of time; hitting them with sharp bull hooks; 'breaking' baby elephants with force to make them submissive; and forcibly removing nursing baby elephants from their mothers before they are weaned, with the use of ropes and chains," reads the federal lawsuit filed by American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, Animal Welfare Institute, the Fund for Animals, and Rider. It will be heard in US District Court in Washington, DC, starting Oct. 7.

Despite its major implications, the case has drawn surprisingly little media attention. But it's a remarkable story, full of juicy documents, an abundance of YouTube video footage that appears to show Ringling Bros. animal abuse — along with Ringling Bros.' role in derailing the career of a prominent Bay Area television news anchor and the intriguing involvement of shadowy CIA operatives.

Critics say Ringling Bros.' extensive advertising makes media outlets pull punches, but another reason the circus has avoided bad press may lie with other Ringling lawsuits that contain ...

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( 6 comments | Comment on this article )
mikejaynes on Wednesday, August 13, 2008 at 08:55 AM
Oh my...is Ringling soon coming to an end? This article is quite a few rays of burning Hope! Elephant activists can only hope that with the various lawsuits against Feld combined with waning animal circus attendance spurred by growing awareness of performing animal abuse that simple economics will force Ringling and other animal circuses to shut down. This is a great article; the Feld trial should be in the public's consciousness. After 8 years and millions of dollars of diversions/postponements/motions-for-this-and that, Ringling finally (hopefully) may have to face up to its crimes. Supporters of animal circuses seem to fail to recognize the fact they are anachronistic. Feld believes a circus isn't a circus without elephants. The Canadian Cirque du Soleil has disproven this statement while posting profits far larger than Ringling draws from its half empty arenas to which it frequently performs. At one ignorant time in American history, Ringling was seen as a great family tradition. At other similar times, GM used animals in their auto crash tests, civil rights were seen as a liberal phase of college students, and accepted racism was the mantra of America. These were not the good old days. Ringling must go. Kudos to Steven T. Jones for an important article!

One last thing: Perhaps the only way Ringling could save its family business would be to vow to no longer use animals and become a human only circus. I am a very active and vocal opponent to animal circuses, and the day Ringling becomes strictly all human I will be first in line at the red wagon to buy a ticket.

-M. Jaynes
pcuvie on Wednesday, August 13, 2008 at 10:08 AM
Great article Steven. I have been video monitoring Ringling for twenty years and a good percentage of my footage has been submitted as evidence in the lawsuit. Ringling routinely hits, hooks and jabs the elephants with the Bullhook, (a 1 and1/2 to 3 foot rod resembling a fireplace poker), and routinely lies about it. Ringling also forces tigers to live in cages about the size of a parking space, where they have to defecate and urinate where they sleep and eat. Anyone who doesn't like cruelty to animals should not attend circuses that use animals.
momacat on Wednesday, August 13, 2008 at 10:44 AM
Thanks for the wonderful article and well written facts. Seeing a light at the end of the tunnel for the elephants brings me the tears of joy. Many thanks also to a group of activist who never give up their hope to help the circus animal.
shearerbug on Wednesday, August 13, 2008 at 01:07 PM
I am so thrilled to see such an informative,article about the sad, sad lives of the Ringling Bros. elephants. Education is key and the more the public are made aware of the behind the scenes abuses these animals endure for the sake of entertainment, the less inclined they will be to spend their hard earned money to line the pockets of the abusers. We can only hope and pray the court case in October will bring an end to a life in chains for all the elephants involved. I can't thank you enough for bringing the real truth out in the open. Also 'pcuvie' needs to be commended for his relentless efforts to document Ringling's abuses and the thousands of hours spent passing out leaflets to circus attendees. A true hero!
DMSC24 on Thursday, August 14, 2008 at 01:50 PM
Thank you for this great article. I knew that circus elephants are atrociously abused and exploited, but I didn't realize the great and corrupt lengths Ringling officials have gone to persist in their cruelty.
claudine on Wednesday, August 27, 2008 at 04:42 PM
Thank you Mr. Jones for your great article. The elephants would certainly thank you if they could. While in the circus,it is a life of suffering and misery for them.

For years we demonstrated in Seattle against Ringling Bros. circus and they no longer come! Now, their show is in Everett, WA (about an hour from Seattle) and we'll be there too, protesting and chasing them away also, telling people the truth, their "dirty secrets" as you did. Bravo! I'll take your article with me! Thank you again!

Claudine Erlandson

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