In February 2012, a company called A&L Poultry near Turlock, CA abandoned 50,000 battery-caged hens to starve to death. Most of the birds died
in their cages or were “euthanized” – “killed by state authorities using carbon dioxide gas chambers.”*
Animal Place Sanctuary in Grass Valley did a huge rescue. They saved 4,100 hens from starvation. They found good homes for most of the hens and
kept those who could not be adopted in their Vacaville sanctuary.
Today I (Karen Davis) spoke with Animal Place’s Executive Director Kim Sturla about the felony charges. Kim is elated. She said: “That
chicken farmers in an agricultural region like Central California, where Turlock is located, would be charged with felony cruelty to chickens is
amazing, unheard of! Prosecutors saw that people cared deeply about these birds and wanted their owners to be held accountable!”
Animal Place is making a documentary film about their excruciating rescue and rehabilitation of the Turlock hens.
Last February, UPC posted an alert about Animal Place’s emergency response as their rescuers struggled to hurriedly pull thousands of
starving, terrified hens out of the filthy cages, truck them to Vacaville, and provide them with the immediate food, water, straw, medicine, and
compassionate care the hens desperately needed.
In “The Turlock rescue – a year later” in the Spring 2013 Animal Place Magazine, Kim explains that the rescue
“took its toll both emotionally and financially for Animal Place. . . . And for many of our staff and volunteers, it was incredibly difficult
watching hens who were too far gone die and knowing that so many more suffer on egg farms across the globe.”
Kim Sturla is a speaker and Animal Place (www.animalplace.org) is a cosponsor of our Conscious Eating
Conference in Berkeley, CA on Saturday, April 6. We hope you will be there to meet Kim and hear her deeply moving story about saving the Turlock
hens and what sanctuaries are learning and teaching people about the emotional world of chickens and other farmed animals. To learn more about the
conference, click on www.upc-online.org/alerts.
*Claims that carbon dioxide gassing produces a humane death conflict with evidence showing that CO2 induces severe breathing distress in birds and
mammals along with panic and pain. A poultry worker told UPC in 2011 that the CO2 gassing of “spent” hens in metal boxes and the
beating to death of birds who survived the gas, which he observed take place at a “cage-free” egg farm in Virginia, in December 2009,
was “the worst cruelty I ever saw.”