How the USDA Fails to Enforce the Animal Welfare Act
For years, U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) inspectors dutifully documented extensive animal suffering at Moulton Chinchilla Ranch(MCR), a chinchilla breeding facility in Minnesota. In 2021, MCR was the only USDA-licensed supplier of chinchillas for research, according to National Geographic and Science. Meanwhile, USDA inspections of MCR reported seeing chinchillas, many destined for experimentation, with eyes swollen, weeping, and sealed shut; a thin, unresponsive chinchilla, missing part of her leg, brutally euthanized by breaking her neck; a dead chinchilla left on top of a cage for so long that her decaying body had to be peeled off of it.
After failing to confiscate a single chinchilla from MCReven as the USDAs own inspectors issued citation after citation for Animal Welfare Act (AWA) violations over a period of five years from 2013 to 2018the department finally filed a case in November 2018 against MCRs owner, dealer Daniel Moulton. Following even more incomprehensible delays, the case finally went to court in 2021.
In October 2021, USDA Administrative Law Judge Jill Clifton ruled from the bencha highly unusual movethat Moultons dealer license must be permanently revoked, calling his 213 willful violations absolutely astounding. Nevertheless, he was fined a mere $18,000less than 1 percent of the amount allowed under the law. To make matters worse, he was permitted to keep nearly 700 chinchillas languishing on his ranch for months while he decided whether or not he would file an appeal (and was even granted multiple extensions to do so).
https://www.counterpunch.org/2022/08/30/253775/