Attorney General intervenes in lawsuit to stop horse slaughter plant opening

FRONT RANGE EQUINE RESCUE PRESS RELEASE

Attorney General Gary King. Google image.
Attorney General Gary King. Google image.

(ALBUQUERQUE) July 22, 2013 — Attorney General Gary King has filed a motion to intervene in a lawsuit to stop a plant in Roswell from slaughtering horses for meat because federal authorities have not yet undertaken the required environmental review.

The AG’s motion, filed late last Friday, joins Front Range Equine Rescue, the Humane Society of the United States, and a variety of other groups and individuals that recently brought the lawsuit in federal district court.

AG King’s motion says New Mexico has a strong interest in ensuring that “commercial operations within its borders are conducted in a safe and environmentally responsible manner.” Attorney General King previously concluded in a legal analysis last month that “state law does not allow for production of meat that is chemically tainted under federal regulations.”

The lawsuit asks the district court to block Roswell’s Valley Meat Company and several plants in other states from beginning commercial horse slaughter until the United States Department of Agriculture undertakes a full and adequate environmental review of those operations.

One of Attorney General King’s primary concerns is that horses in the United States are frequently treated with drugs that the federal Food and Drug Administration has determined are unsafe for human consumption in any amount.

In an opinion letter issued last month in response to an inquiry from State Senator Richard Martinez, AG King noted a 2010 scientific study which revealed the widespread presence in horses destined for slaughter operations of an anti-inflammatory drug that the FDA determined could cause bone marrow toxicity in humans.

The FDA’s own regulations specifically ban administration of the drug, Phenylbutazone, in any horse sent to slaughter for human consumption. Nonetheless, the study found that the FDA’s ban is effectively being ignored because no mechanism has been implemented to identify and remove horses that receive Phenylbutazone from food manufacture. The study determined that this shortcoming “indicates a serious gap in food safety and constitutes a significant public health risk.”

Despite these important concerns about the widespread use on horses of Phenylbutazone and other drugs whose effects on humans are either documented to be harmful or are unknown, the USDA announced that, in its view, the planned horse slaughter operations would not have a significant environmental effect on human health or the environment. The lawsuit is a response to that determination, and it asks the court to order the USDA to conduct a thorough environmental review prior to approving commercial horse slaughter operations for human consumption.

The Attorney General’s motion to intervene raises other serious concerns, including the additional and costly regulatory burden that commercial horse slaughter operations will likely impose on the State of New Mexico to ensure that waste discharge does not threaten area water supplies and environmental quality. The imminent slaughter of horses for commercial food production in our state, following the horse meat scandal in Europe, also threatens the well-being of our local food production businesses, especially the beef industry.

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7 thoughts on “Attorney General intervenes in lawsuit to stop horse slaughter plant opening”

  1. I can exhale now !! Thank you, Front Range Horse Rescue and HSUS, for your unending hard work to preserve horses in danger. Once you break the shield of ignorance on this issue, other victories will follow.

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  2. This Attorney General looks like he is going after the slaughter plants in the other states too. You will notice that the USDA claims the same thing that was claimed in Europe about none of the horses are dangerous to the food supply or don’t have enough drugs in their system s to be dangerous to consumers. This is the same USDA that stood by and let horses be slaughtered alive, did nothing to stop the cruelty of being crammed into slaughter trucks for 30 hrs. There may be a little light at the end of the tunnel coming through on stopping horse slaughter in this country.

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  3. Thank you I can rest “a little easier” knowing that american is opening their eyes to this horrific act. They have been so much to us in the past and we owe it to them to be their voices.

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  4. Thank God ! Step by step we will get this slaughter horse operation stopped and will get any other proposed slaughter business stopped dead in its tracks. Our standing together for our love of horses is stronger than any business men’s greed

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    1. Totally agree!!! Well said!!! Stand up for the horses who cannot speak for themselves!! They need us desperately to be their voice!!

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