Business & Tech
Michigan-Based Domino's Asked to Help End 'Horrific Abuse' Videotaped at Dairy Farm
On Wednesday, the pizza chain's cheese supplier severed its ties with the dairy after Mercy for Animals released secret videotape.

Secret video shot by a Mercy for Animals activist working undercover at a New Mexico dairy shows farm workers kicking, punching and dragging cows, among other practices the animal-rights group said inflict βhorrific abuse.β (Screenshot: Mercy for Animals video)
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The worldβs largest mozzarella cheese maker severed ties with a New Mexico dairy
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Wednesday, hours after activists with Mercy for Animals released undercover video showing farm workers kicking, punching and dragging cows, stabbing them with screwdrivers, and inflicting other βhorrific abuse.β
The group asked Denver-based Leprino Foods β the primary supplier for the nationβs largest pizza chains, including Ann Arbor-based Dominoβs, Pizza Hut and Papa Johnβs β to take a zero-tolerance for abusive practices, and to install video monitoring monitoring systems that live stream to the Internet as a deterrent to abuse. The pizza chains were asked to join the activist group in pressuring the supplier to implement more rigid animal protection standards.
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In a statement released to KMGH-TV in Denver, Leprino Foods said it βcares deeply about the health and welfare of the animals on the farms that supply our milkβ and that the company terminated shipments from Winchester Dairy after learning of the abuse.
An activist with the California-based animal welfare group began working at the farm outside Roswell, NM, last month and shot the video from Aug. 6-Sept. 5. The hidden-camera video also shows βdownerβ cows β animals that are too sick or injured to stand β being dragged with a tractor while workers shock them in the genitals with electric prods.
Β» Warning: the video at SliceOfCruelty.com contains graphic content.
In a statement Mercy For Animalsβ President, Nathan Runkle said that the pizza chains have βthe power and ethical responsibility to ensure that the cows used for its cheese are spared from vicious beatings, painful mutilations, intensive confinement, and neglect.β
In an email to the Detroit Free Press, Dominoβs spokesman Tim McIntyre said the video, shot from Aug. 6-Sept. 5, shows isolated βsadistic acts.β
βNo act of cruelty can ever be condoned. Ever. What we do know is that this is not an issue with our cheese supplier β it was an isolated case of sadistic acts by employees at a single dairy farm in southern New Mexico,β McIntyre wrote. βThat farmer, who is very likely reeling from this, has terminated the employees, turned their information over to law enforcement and has closed his operations after moving his cows to other farms (according to the Associated Press).β
In a statement to the AP, the dairy said it remains βcommitted to the ethical and responsible treatment of the animals and have learned from this incident.β
McIntyre said Dominoβs is grateful to Mercy for Animals for making the video public and raising awareness of animal cruelty issues.
βThere is no room for this anywhere in the food industry,β he said, emphasizing again practices revealed in the video are the rare exception to normal dairy husbandry practices.
βAmericaβs individual family dairy farms β 47,000 of them β are being painted in a horrible light due to the horrendous acts of a small group of individuals. Thatβs not fair to the hard working farmers across America,β McIntyre said.
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