Animal Abuse at Circus While in Old Bridge Prompts PETA Federal Complaint

Eyewitness Reports Whipping of Zebras, Tiger Smacked on the Face

For Immediate Release:
June 27, 2013

Contact:
David Perle 202-483-7382

Old Bridge, N.J. — Based on sworn affidavits from numerous people who report witnessing handlers with the notoriously cruel Kelly Miller Circus whipping and striking animals during its recent tour of eastern Pennsylvania and New Jersey—including a June 19 stop in Old Bridge—PETA has submitted a formal complaint to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) for multiple and repeated apparent violations of the Animal Welfare Act (AWA). During the circus’s Old Bridge visit, an eyewitness reports seeing handlers repeatedly whipping zebras throughout a performance, striking a tiger on the face, and tethering zebras and a camel so tightly before and after the show that they could barely move.

“Circuses use violence, fear, and pain to keep animals under control—and to punish them for not obeying,” says PETA Foundation Director of Captive Animal Law Enforcement Delcianna Winders. “PETA urges families to stay far away from Kelly Miller Circus and all other circuses that use animals.”

The following is just a small sample of the abuse reported by the eyewitnesses at other venues on the tour:

  • June 14, Carteret, N.J.: A handler whipped a baby zebra twice on the back of the leg, causing the animal to limp in pain.
  • June 17, Lakehurst, N.J.: A camel and several zebras were whipped, and a handler forcefully struck a small dog on the face.
  • June 21, Weatherly, Pa.: A camel and several zebras were tethered on ropes so tightly that they could barely move. The zebras were whipped throughout an entire performance—one with such force that the animal stumbled.
  • June 23, Township of Washington, (Bergen County), N.J.: A trainer apparently whipped tigers on the face, and the zebras were whipped throughout the show.

Kelly Miller Circus has been repeatedly cited for denying adequate veterinary care to animals, public endangerment, and numerous other serious AWA violations.

PETA’s complaint to the USDA is available upon request. Some of the incidents described above were caught on tape, and the videos are also available upon request. For more information, please see PETA’s factsheet.

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