Walter Olsen
The New York Post
Jan. 6, 2013
Visit the online store at ASPCA.org, and you’ll be invited to make a
symbolic donation enabling the animal-welfare charity to carry on one of
its beloved activities. Give $20, and you symbolically buy antibiotics
for an injured animal. Spend $50, and care for a rescued horse; $200,
and cover a spay or neuter operation.
There’s no checkoff for “$9.3 million to compensate opponent for litigation abuse.” But maybe there should be.
Last
month, the ASPCA agreed to hand over that impressive sum to the owners
of the Ringling Bros.-Barnum & Bailey circus after a judge ruled
that it could be sued for alleged misconduct during 10 years of
litigation against the circus.
The case began with an ex-employee’s charges that Ringling was
mistreating the Asian elephants that make up its most famous attraction.
As it happened, the courts never ruled on the merits of those charges,
finding instead that the Endangered Species Act did not give any of the
human plaintiffs adequate legal standing to sue.
But by the time
that ruling was upheld in 2011, the case had turned into a bit of a
circus itself, as the jungle denizens we call litigators began to
indulge their own tendency to stomp and bellow.
The only hope for
securing the needed legal standing, as it developed, was for a human to
testify he’d been personally traumatized by witnessing the alleged
abuse. But when the ex-Ringling employee recited such symptoms, Judge
Emmet Sullivan didn’t deem his testimony credible.
What’s more, the ASPCA and other animal-rights plaintiffs and their
lawyers turned out to have paid the man at least $190,000 over the
course of the suit.
As lawyers are supposed to know, payments to a
“fact witness” need to be handled with great ethical care, when allowed
at all. In Judge Sullivan’s view, the groups had not only intended the
regular payments to keep the witness engaged in the lawsuit, but had
also disguised them under various misleading headings such as “media and
educational outreach,” and been less than candid with the court about
this purpose.
Last July, the judge let circus owner Feld
Entertainment proceed with its countersuit alleging litigation abuse.
Now the ASPCA has opted to pay rather than fight that countersuit.
Not
so incidentally, the ASPCA (like its rival Humane Society of the United
States, which declined to settle and remains a defendant in the
countersuit) functions mainly as a national advocacy organization — not a
vehicle for supporting local shelters and rescue groups, which are
mostly on their own financially. Donors, not all of whom are necessarily
aware of that fact, collectively give the ASPCA more than $100 million a
year — which leaves the group big enough to weather this setback.
Still,
$9.3 million would buy an awful lot of flea collars, and that the group
was willing to spend so much to settle suggests it saw a significant
potential for liability.
This makes the second time in a month
that a high-profile nature “charity” has fallen on its face in the
courtroom. Last month, a Maryland federal judge tossed a much-publicized
lawsuit filed by Waterkeeper Alliance, the litigation group associated
with Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and popular with Hollywood types, against a
family chicken farm on the Eastern Shore.
After Waterkeeper’s
local agent had spotted a pile of “biosolids” — that’s a euphemism — out
in the open on the farm, the group raced to file a suit claiming Clean
Water Alliance violations for which it said Perdue should be liable,
because it had contracts with the farm to raise chickens.
Turned
out the biosolids weren’t chicken manure after all and were lawfully on
the property. The judge proceeded to lambaste Waterkeeper for pressing
forward even after the legal and factual shakinessof its case should’ve
been clear, with a suit that amounted to little more than a steaming
pile of you-know-what.
You might wonder why suing people counts as
the sort of charitable endeavor deserving of tax deductibility. Good
question. Not until 1970 did the Treasury Department, in response to a
big PR campaign, decide that “cause” litigation as an activity deserves
charitable status.
Spearheading that PR campaign was none other
than the American Bar Association: What more authentic way to express
the benevolent spirit of charity, after all, than to create more jobs
for lawyers?
Maybe it’s time to reconsider.
Tuesday, January 8, 2013
Animal-rights legal misconduct
Posted by
Wade G. Burck
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2 comments:
KING OF AQUARIA sez: "Ringling Bros. marched into Orlando today! Does anyone know who provided the big cat act for Ocean Safari Park at South Padre Islando, Texas back in the 80's?"
Greg,
That would be John Campolongo with his mixed act of leopards, lions, and tigers.
Wade
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