Agents Find Dead Ram, Waste-Covered Cages, and Visitor Petting a Coyote
For Immediate Release:
November 17, 2022
Contact:
David Perle 202-483-7382
Mount Hope, Ohio – After PETA submitted a complaint urging the U.S. Department of Agriculture to inspect the Mid-Ohio Alternative Animal and Bird Sale at the Mt. Hope Auction stockyard, the federal agency recently issued 12 citations to the auction for failing to meet the minimum standards required by the federal Animal Welfare Act (AWA). According to an inspection report just obtained by PETA, inspectors who visited the latest auction in September found the following, among other horrors:
- A small, dead hornless ram in the main sale barn (Staff were unaware of this death until inspectors notified them about it.)
- An entrapped deer who “started thrashing, pulling, and twisting her body, trying to free her leg” (An inspector helped free the deer, because no staff members were nearby.)
- Members of the public touching wild animals—including a coyote and a fox—with no staff present
- A feces-covered enclosure housing three chinchillas and offering “very little space for the animals to move without having to walk through their own excrement”
- Dozens of animals lacking adequate ventilation
- Sharp, broken wires found in three rabbit enclosures
“Mt. Hope Auction is a hellhole for stressed animals, and since unsupervised visitors are able to touch wild animals there, it’s only a matter of time before it turns hellish for humans, too,” says PETA Foundation Director of Captive Animal Welfare Debbie Metzler. “PETA is calling on everyone to stay away from this auction, in which animals are left for dead or made to suffer in unsafe and filthy enclosures.”
PETA notes that Mt. Hope Auction has previously allowed unlicensed dealers to sell animals unlawfully, and the auction has been cited for AWA violations related to handling concerns and unsafe enclosures. Mt. Hope Auction’s sellers have included Pymatuning Deer Park, which relinquished eight animals in its custody following litigation by PETA and the Animal Legal Defense Fund; Hovatter’s Wildlife Zoo, which is included on PETA’s blacklist of highway hellholes; and Jerry Holly, an exotic-animal breeder who has been cited for more than 100 violations of the AWA.
PETA—whose motto reads, in part, that “animals are not ours to use for entertainment”—opposes speciesism, a human-supremacist worldview. For more information on PETA’s investigative newsgathering and reporting, please visit PETA.org or follow the group on Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram.