logo
RSPCA investigates piggery after activist group footage shows pigs eating carcasses

RSPCA investigates piggery after activist group footage shows pigs eating carcasses

Warning: This article contains distressing content about the alleged mistreatment of animals. It also includes graphic images of injuries and animal living conditions that may cause distress.
The ABC has chosen to exclude or pixelate some of the more confronting images provided.
The RSPCA is investigating alleged animal welfare breaches at a South Australian abattoir, after footage emerged showing pigs feeding on carcasses, and living alongside dead and decomposed animals.
Victorian activist group Farm Transparency Project (FTP) said it captured the images in June during separate visits to the site on Long Plains Road, Dublin.
On June 26, the group supplied an edited 16-minute clip to the RSPCA, which carried out an inspection the following day, according to correspondence between the organisations.
In a statement, an RSPCA spokesperson said a report had been received "in relation to concerns regarding the welfare of animals at a property north of Adelaide".
"Our inspectorate are currently investigating the complaint and as such, no further comments will be provided at this time," they said.
The ABC reviewed the vision, which was taken on June 14 and 20, according to FTP executive director Chris Delforce, and has been published on the group's website.
Mr Delforce said it depicted conditions inside four sheds where livestock were housed, but the ABC could not independently verify the filming location.
Initially, the clip shows several live pigs having difficulty wading through a pool of mud, along with masses of living and immobile pigs huddled together.
In at least two instances, pigs are seen cannibalising carcasses belonging to other pigs, and on a further two occasions can be seen eating other unidentified animals.
One close-up shows a pig with a bone-deep, open wound on its back, roughly 10 centimetres across.
Another, which the ABC chose not to publish, showed a live pig attempting to walk with a tennis ball-sized growth protruding from its anus.
In another segment, more than a dozen dead pigs have been piled into a pen, but at least three appear to be alive and trapped in the gaps of the gate.
When one of them is pulled free, it appears unable to walk on its hind legs.
Drone footage showed 13 enclosures on the property altogether, but Mr Delforce said the others were in "normal conditions" and animals appeared "healthy and relatively bright".
The initial batch of video was taken by a group Mr Delforce described as "Adelaide-based investigators", while he and a colleague captured follow-up vision to verify the conditions.
Piggery owner Andgar Proprietors declined to comment on the footage, including whether the company was aware of the conditions and if it took any steps to rectify them.
In a statement, Australian Pork chief executive Margo Andrae said the industry group was carrying out its own investigation and would support the RSPCA's enquiries.
"Any breaches of animal welfare have no place in Australian pig farming and are fundamentally at odds with the values and practices our farmers expect of their peers.
"The Australian pork industry remains firmly committed to upholding the highest standards of animal welfare."
Mr Delforce, who co-founded FTP in 2014 with the aim of forcing the closure of the Australian meat-processing industry, said "it was some of the worst conditions [he'd] ever seen" in investigating more than 40 abattoirs.
This year, the SA government introduced new maximum penalties for animal cruelty of 10 years' imprisonment or a $250,000 fine, but Mr Delforce said he had "very little faith in SA authorities".
He cited another SA abattoir which had been granted an exemption for stunning goats before slaughter, but in 2023, the group captured footage of workers failing to do so immediately after cutting their throats, as recommended by best practice guidelines.
The Department of Environment and Water advised him it identified no animal cruelty offences, but did conduct an on-site education visit.
"There's all sorts of things you can do to pigs that you couldn't do to a dog or cat, and that's just because there's money to be made," Mr Delforce said.
"We need the public to show them that they have to grow a spine and stand up to these industries, otherwise nothing is going to change.
"We want this place to shut down, and nothing short of that is going to be acceptable to us."
The department, which was also sent the footage, said it did not provide comments during ongoing investigations.
South Australia's Environment Minister Susan Close defended the state's animal welfare regime.
"South Australians have little tolerance for acts of animal cruelty and the government is overhauling a number of pieces of legislation pertaining to the management and care of animals to bring them into line with community expectations," she said.
"There are also numerous codes, including the Model Code of Practice for the Welfare of Animals, Livestock and Poultry at Slaughtering Establishments (Abattoirs, Slaughterhouses and Knackeries), to ensure animals are treated humanely.
"The government also had input into a national review of livestock processing standards and guidelines."
It is unknown when the RSPCA will hand down findings.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Broken Hill man jailed for 'very distressing' animal abuse in social media videos
Broken Hill man jailed for 'very distressing' animal abuse in social media videos

ABC News

time3 minutes ago

  • ABC News

Broken Hill man jailed for 'very distressing' animal abuse in social media videos

WARNING: This story contains content some readers may find distressing. A Broken Hill magistrate has sentenced a 20-year-old man to 14 months' imprisonment for animal cruelty. Jet Jai Johnson pleaded guilty to five separate acts of animal cruelty, which he filmed himself committing against native animals as well as livestock. The offences related to acts of cruelty on a kangaroo, a joey and three kid goats, which were shared widely on social media. Johnson was working on a large station in far west NSW at the time of the offences. Magistrate Jacqueline Trad described the offence against the joey as the most serious. Footage of the offence showed Johnson riding over the young animal's head and leg on a motorbike. A separate offence against an adult kangaroo, which was also filmed and shared online, showed Johnson cornering the animal against a fence and repeatedly punching it in the head, before "spearing" it into the ground by its head. "This was not a short period of time … The conduct itself would have been very distressing to the animal," Magistrate Trad said. In sentencing, Magistrate Trad cited a report from the RSPCA, noting statements made by a veterinarian that one of the kid goats Johnson kicked was only four weeks old and weighed approximately 4 kilograms. "That goat was kicked by you in circumstances where it could be seen as thrown backwards and rotating through the air and dropping to the ground on impact," she said. NSW Police prosecutor Gavin Begg asked Magistrate Trad to consider not just the acts but the comments that accompanied kicking the goats. Mr Begg told the court Johnson could be heard comparing his kick to the goal-kicking abilities of former NRL player Jonathan Thurston. "[After] kicking it like 'Johnathan Thurston', [he calls it] 'a good kick'. That is completely unacceptable." Johnson's defence applied for all the criminal charges to be dismissed on mental health or cognitive impairment grounds under Section 14 of the NSW Mental Health and Cognitive Impairment Forensic Provisions Act 2020. Johnson's lawyer asked for convictions not to be recorded against his client, pointing to his young age, lack of criminal history and "general lack of sophistication". "The sticking point is the seriousness of offending," Johnson's lawyer said. "When you couple all of that and [Johnson's] general remorse and strong community ties, it is open to the court to [consider Section 14]." Magistrate Trad declined to deal with the matter under Section 14, but took into account Johnson's remorse and psychological reports, which showed he suffered anxiety and depression and most likely had ADHD. "Ultimately, I have come to the conclusion that the objective seriousness of the offences is so significant that it overwhelms the other factors such as his mental health impairment," she said. "There was no excuse, no reason and no circumstances in my view that could adequately answer for these offences. "The farming community … they have an obligation to appropriately care for their stock, wildlife and natural environment. "That obligation means they're not for sport, they're not for amusement … they are treated as the being they are — able to feel pain, able to experience terror. "There is an aspect of general deterrence that must be part of the sentence today." In sentencing Johnson to 14 months imprisonment with a non-parole period of six months, Magistrate Trad said Johnson's offences were "offences against the community" and impacted "the safety of the community because people who saw these videos experienced fear, distress and loathing". "That is a consequence of what you did. It doesn't have to define you, but you have to pay for what you did," she said. "In my view, it's a custodial sentence. It is the only sentence, in my view, that would address community concerns and address specific deterrence." Johnson's supporters erupted in tears when the sentence was handed down. He will be eligible for parole on January 29, 2026.

Wighton cops four-game ban in a huge blow for the Rabbitohs
Wighton cops four-game ban in a huge blow for the Rabbitohs

News.com.au

time20 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Wighton cops four-game ban in a huge blow for the Rabbitohs

Wayne Bennett's hopes of avoiding his first wooden spoon have taken a massive hit with veteran playmaker Jack Wighton slapped with a whopping four-match ban after he was found guilty of a grade two shoulder charge at the NRL judiciary on Tuesday night. The Rabbitohs have lost eight in a row and head into round 22 in last spot behind the Knights and Titans on points differential, but their hopes of causing a gigantic boilover against the Broncos have copped a devastating blow with their five-eighth sidelined. He joins a host of stars who are missing for the club including Cam Murray, Latrell Mitchell and Cody Walker. Wighton could have accepted a three-match ban for the grade two charge that saw him sent to the sin bin for a tackle that knocked out Cronulla's Toby Rudolf on Saturday night but rolled the dice after he pleaded not guilty. The panel of Greg McCallum and Bob Lindner listened to the 75-minute hearing and deliberated for just 15 minutes before they unanimously found him guilty. 'It was a fair hearing,' Wighton said afterwards. 'We came here thinking we had a good case. We didn't get the result we wanted. 'I'll turn my attention to preparing my teammates and really helping everyone at my club the best way I can.' It was a reunion of sorts between Wighton and judiciary counsel Patrick Knowles, with the five-eighth asking him 'how many games of rugby league have you played?' during a fiery hearing in 2023 when he was banned for three matches for biting. Wighton didn't give evidence on this occasion, a point not lost on Knowles who suggested he could have explained why there were no other options available to him to make a different type of tackle. However, judiciary chairman Geoff Bellew reminded the panel that Wighton had no obligation to justify. Knowles described the contact as a 'textbook example of a shoulder charge' and that he twisted his body, the right shoulder led the forceful contact and that his left arm raised in a bracing motion but didn't attempt to wrap. 'The amount of force generated in a tackle that used no arms carries a significant risk of injury,' he said. 'The shoulder was the first impact and carried the primary degree of force.' Prominent Sydney lawyer Nick Ghabar represented Wighton and argued it was 'quite wrong' to suggest he propped and drove with the shoulder and that he did his best to avoid a head on collision. Ghabar argued that the right arm wrapped around Rudolf's left arm before contact and that the Cronulla forward generated the force by leading with his head and arms. 'Rudolf stepped 'violently' off his left foot,' he said, arguing that it was inevitable that there'd be a more violent collision if Wighton hadn't dipped his body. 'Wighton drops his body height to avoid the risk of a head clash. He's got a split second decision to make. He's attempting to tackle with his left arm but his right arm doesn't have the ability to swing around the back of Rudolf.' The referee's report from Belinda Sharpe included a quote from Wighton that said 'I couldn't get my arm out', while the medical report said the injury was caused by a 'head clash from opponent'. Ghabar suggested that the first contact was shoulder on shoulder, but that played into the argument it was an actual shoulder charge. Knowles refuted a number of those arguments and pointed out Wighton's right fist was clenched so it couldn't have been a conventional wrapping tackle and that he could've twisted the other way and made a conventional left shoulder tackle. Ghabar sought a downgrade that would have seen Wighton miss two matches, but it was dismissed after Knowles argued the force was moderate, it was careless and the risk of injury was moderate and that the risk came to fruition. Wighton will miss matches against the Broncos, Titans, Eels and Dragons and will return in the final round against the Roosters, with Lewis Dodd likely to start in the halves.

NT government responds to landmark domestic violence inquest into killings of four Indigenous women
NT government responds to landmark domestic violence inquest into killings of four Indigenous women

ABC News

timea day ago

  • ABC News

NT government responds to landmark domestic violence inquest into killings of four Indigenous women

The Northern Territory government says more than two-thirds of recommendations from a landmark domestic violence inquest "are already in place" in the territory, with a minister saying the report has failed "dismally to hit the mark". WARNING: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are advised that this article contains the names of Indigenous people who have died, used with the permission of their families. The Country Liberal Party handed down its response to NT Coroner Elisabeth Armitage's report in NT parliament on Tuesday, more than eight months after it was handed down. Judge Armitage made 35 recommendations, after spending more than a year investigating the domestic violence killings of four Aboriginal women — Kumarn Rubuntja, Kumanjayi Haywood, Ngeygo Ragurrk and Miss Yunupiŋu. They were among more than 80 Indigenous women killed in domestic violence attacks in the NT since the year 2000. The coroner's recommendations included calls for increased funding for frontline emergency service responses, women's shelters and men's behavioural change programs. In NT parliament on Tuesday, Prevention of Domestic Violence Minister Robyn Cahill said the government would support 21 of the recommendations in full and accept 11 in principle. The government did not support three of the recommendations: In handing down the government's response, Ms Cahill said "overall" the recommendations from the coroner were "uninspiring" and the report "failed so dismally to hit the mark". She said only a "small proportion" of the recommendations made would lead to the "implementation of a new and innovative approach". She also criticised Judge Armitage's approach to the inquest, calling it "protracted" and resulting in "lengthy reports delivered in a manner seeming to lack the humility one might expect from an officer of the court". "More focused on the reveal rather than the result," she said of Judge Armitage. When handing down her recommendations, Judge Armitage said she did not believe the 35 recommendations were "radical", saying the DFSV sector had been calling for them for many years. In a statement, Ms Cahill said "extensive consultation with government, non-government agencies, advocacy groups and experts found that 24 of the 35 recommendations related to programs or processes already in place". "Some of these measures have been in place for years without delivering the results we need," she said. Ms Cahill said the government was developing a DFSV roadmap to address domestic violence in the territory, which would set "strategic priorities" for the government's $36 million a year funding for the sector. In response to Ms Cahill's comments, opposition MLA Chansey Paech said it was "absolutely appalling" for the minister to "take aim at the Northern Territory coroner". "It was a long inquest, absolutely," he said. "It was four families, four unique circumstances that absolutely deserved the right to be comprehensively reviewed." Mr Paech said all 35 recommendations could "absolutely be accepted", despite government concerns over funding limitations. "The coroner designed all of these in a way that they could absolutely be supported," he said. In a joint statement, a coalition of NT DSFV services said the government's response was "underwhelming in the face of the Northern Territory's biggest criminal issue". "This is about more than programs. It's about a system that is currently failing women and children, and the urgent need to redesign it alongside the people who know what works," the statement said. "The government's ongoing lack of genuine consultation with the specialist DFSV sector is creating missed opportunities, poor coordination and unsafe outcomes." The NT has the highest rates of family and domestic violence in Australia, with a rate of intimate partner homicide seven times the national average. Recommendation 3: Amend the DFSV workforce plan to better engage Aboriginal workers, communities and universities. Recommendation 5: Create and implement an evidence-based strategy to reduce alcohol availability. Recommendation 6: Increase investment in specialist alcohol and other drugs rehabilitation services. Recommendation 7: Implement the police and children and families department co-responder model — which has been trialled in Alice Springs — on a permanent basis NT-wide. Recommendation 8: NT police to review protocols and improve officer training on information sharing. Recommendation 9: Consider establishing a multi-agency protection service to formalise partnership between police and government departments. Recommendation 10: NT police to embed interpreters and/or Aboriginal liaison officers in the emergency call centre. Recommendation 11: Provide PARt training to all current police officers, auxiliaries and new recruits, including emergency call centre workers. Recommendation 12: NT police to expand the DFSV command in Alice Springs and Darwin. Recommendation 13: Expand NT police's family harm coordination daily auditing program. Recommendation 14: Children and families department to audit and continue its commitment to the Safe and Together framework. Recommendation 15: Fund and implement "timely and intensive" early interventions for young people engaged in violence. Recommendation 16: Extra funding for community-based approaches to child welfare. Recommendation 17: Replicate the specialist DFSV court in Alice Springs in other regions. Recommendation 23: Increase funding for men's prison-based behaviour programs and counselling. Recommendation 24: Improve access to men's prison programs. Recommendation 25: Develop and implement a prison program for men who are 'deniers' of their violence. Recommendation 26: Establish reintegration programs for men leaving prison and returning to community. Recommendation 29: Boost funding for community-based behavioural change and prevention programs. Recommendation 33: Full implementation of the DFSV Action Plan 2, which will require $180 million funding over five years. Recommendation 34: Increase baseline funding for frontline DFSV crisis services by about 10 per cent. Recommendation 1: Establish a permanent, whole-of-government unit to lead DFSV policy and practice. Recommendation 4: Boost funding for Aboriginal interpreter services. Recommendation 18: Fund culturally-appropriate, trauma-informed, mediation/peacekeeping for family and community violence. Recommendation 19: Regulate and fund mediation and peacemaker groups as recognised alternative dispute resolution providers. Recommendation 20: Develop and fund alternatives to custody for DFSV perpetrators. Recommendation 21: Make the NT victims register an opt-out system, and consider how victims can be notified of the release of inmates. Recommendation 22: Embed the charter of victims' rights in NT law. Recommendation 27: NT Health to improve its DFSV screening and assessment of patients. Recommendation 28: Better support for Aboriginal liaison officers in hospitals and clinics. Recommendation 30: Invest in culturally-appropriate prevention and education programs in schools and on social media. Recommendation 31: Fund DFSV awareness training for clubs and pubs. Recommendation 2: Establish an NT peak body to represent the sector on a national level. Recommendation 32: Mandatory 12-month trial of banned drinker register scanners in licensed venues. Recommendation 35: Ensure funding agreements for frontline DFSV services include indexation increases.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store