Carson & Barnes Issued Official Warning for Denying Care to Ailing Llama
Hugo-Based Circus Adds to Its Long List of Animal Neglect and Abuse
For Immediate Release:
April 17, 2014
Contact:
David Perle 202-483-7382
In December 2013, a U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) inspector noted that a llama with Hugo-based Carson & Barnes Circus was squinting and that his entire right eye was discolored. The eyelashes and hair below his eye were also wet and matted with a cloudy discharge, and he appeared thin. Finally, a veterinarian was called and determined that the eye had probably been punctured. Now, the USDA has issued Carson & Barnes an official warning for denying the llama veterinary care.
“Carson & Barnes is a living hell for the animals it beats into performing and allows to languish in pain,” says PETA Foundation Deputy General Counsel Delcianna Winders. “Suffering is a way of life for this llama and other animals with Carson & Barnes, which is why PETA advises parents whose kids love animals to stay as far away from this despicable circus as possible.”
This latest enforcement action comes less than two years after Carson & Barnes paid a penalty to settle 10 violations of the Animal Welfare Act, including failure to maintain control of three elephants, one of whom fell down a steep slope onto her side, and failure to have adequate distance or barriers between the elephants and the public, allowing a member of the public to grab an elephant’s trunk. Carson & Barnes paid a fine to the USDA after undercover video footage showed veteran trainer Tim Frisco as he violently attacked elephants with a bullhook—a weapon with a sharp metal hook on one end—causing them to scream out in pain.
For more information, please visit PETA’s website listing Carson & Barnes’ history of violations.