Video Shows Distressed Elephants, Safety Issues at Clinton-Bound Garden Bros. Circus

PETA Calls for Public to Steer Clear of Event After Disturbing Footage Reveals Lame Elephants Forced to Perform, Elephant Left Unattended

For Immediate Release:
April 20, 2017

Contact:
David Perle 202-483-7382

Clinton, N.Y.

PETA has obtained video footage, available here, taken at a Garden Bros. Circus performance earlier this month that shows lame elephants being forced to perform tricks and give rides—as well as an elephant swaying continuously in apparent distress while confined to the corner of a loud, congested gymnasium with nothing but a flimsy rope to contain her and apparently no staff there to monitor her, posing a serious danger to the public. PETA provided the Clinton Arena with information about Garden Bros.’ and Carson & Barnes Circus’ (the outfit that provides the elephant acts) deplorable histories before Garden Bros.’ upcoming performances on April 22 and 23 and is urging the public not to attend until only animal-free acts are featured.

In the video, an elephant named Libby can be seen swinging her trunk near the crowd as handler Habib Omar yells at her repeatedly. A second elephant, Bunny, was forced to give rides and perform tricks, even though the joints of her right front leg were stiff and unable to bend. Carson & Barnes was cited by the U.S. Department of Agriculture for failing to notice Bunny’s condition and provide her with veterinary care last summer.

“Garden Bros. drags chained and caged animals across the country, denies them everything that’s natural and important to them, and forces them to perform tricks that are pointless, dangerous, and painful,” says PETA Foundation Associate Director of Captive Animal Law Enforcement Rachel Mathews. “PETA is calling on people to steer clear of this circus until it agrees to feature exclusively willing, human performers.”

PETA—whose motto reads, in part, that “animals are not ours to use for entertainment”—notes that Garden Bros.’ history of animal-welfare violations includes failing to notice and treat bloody wounds on a camel’s legs, among other incidents. In 2013, an eyewitness reported seeing circus manager Zachary Garden viciously strike a zebra with a 3-foot-long stick. Omar was also filmed at a performance venue using a bullhook—a sharp weapon resembling a fireplace poker that’s used to jab, strike, and intimidate elephants—to yank Libby’s ear as he screamed at her using vulgar language. In 2016, Carson & Barnes was ordered to pay a $16,000 penalty after elephants escaped from a circus venue when they became stressed by audience noise—endangering themselves and the public.

For more information, please visit PETA.org.

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