{"id":52457,"date":"2016-09-30T11:27:00","date_gmt":"2016-09-30T16:27:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/content.findlaw-admin.com\/ability-legal\/supreme\/legal-commentary\/lessons-from-an-animal-cruelty-case-in-the-us-supreme-court.html"},"modified":"2016-09-30T11:27:00","modified_gmt":"2016-09-30T16:27:00","slug":"lessons-from-an-animal-cruelty-case-in-the-us-supreme-court","status":"publish","type":"supreme","link":"https:\/\/supreme.findlaw.com\/legal-commentary\/lessons-from-an-animal-cruelty-case-in-the-us-supreme-court.html","title":{"rendered":"Lessons From an Animal Cruelty Case In the U.S. Supreme Court"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<div class=\"wp-container-core-columns-is-layout-9d6595d7  fl-block-columns fl-sectionWithSidebar fl-container fl-flex fl-flex-wrap fl-gap30\">\n    \n    <div class=\"fl-page-articles   fl-block-column fl-section-main fl-section-main-full-width\">\n        <div class=\"yui-g\" id=\"leftcol-module\">\n      <!-- Right Line of Links Section -->\n      <!-- BEGIN PICTURE INSERTION -->\n      <!-- BEGIN TITLE AND AUTHOR INSERTION -->\n      <table>\n        <tr>\n\n          <td width=\"100\" rowspan=\"3\" class=\"wauthor\"><a href=\"\/legal-commentary\/sherry-colb-archive\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https://supreme.findlaw.com/static/f/images\/writ\/sherry.colb.jpg\" border=\"0\" alt=\"Sherry F. Colb\"><\/a><\/td>\n\n          <td class=\"wititle\"><h1>Lessons From an Animal Cruelty Case In the U.S. Supreme Court<\/h1><\/td>\n        <\/tr>\n\n        <tr>\n          <td class=\"wauthor\"><a href=\"\/legal-commentary\/sherry-colb-archive\" class=\"graybold\"><h2>By SHERRY F. COLB <\/h2><br><\/a><\/td>\n        <\/tr>\n        <tr>\n          <td class=\"widate\">Monday, August 3, 2009<\/td>\n\n        <\/tr>\n      <\/table>\n\n<p>Late in the Supreme Court&#8217;s recent term, it agreed to review  the ruling in <em><a href=\"http:\/\/www.ca3.uscourts.gov\/opinarch\/052497p.pdf\" rel=\"noopener\">United States v.  Stevens<\/a><\/em>, a case in which the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third  Circuit invalidated a federal statute, <a href=\"http:\/\/www.law.cornell.edu\/uscode\/html\/uscode18\/usc_sec_18_00000048----000-.html\" rel=\"noopener\">Section  48 of Title 18 of the U.S. Code<\/a>. The  statute, with some exceptions, bans the possession, creation, and distribution  of depictions of unlawful animal torture when there is an intent to place the  depiction in interstate commerce. <\/p>\n\n  <p>The court of appeals reversed the conviction of Robert  J. Stevens under this law and held that the statute violates the First  Amendment right of Free Speech. In this  column, I will consider the conduct that originally gave rise to the statute  and the broader implications of the economic and social arguments for its First  Amendment validity.<\/p>\n    <!-- 300x250 AD -->\n    \n  <p><strong>Crush Videos and  Congress<\/strong><\/p>\n  <p>In 1999, Congress passed the statute at issue in response to  a phenomenon, known as the &#8220;crush video,&#8221; which was brought to Congress&#8217;s  attention. In a crush video, a woman  inflicts torture and a slow death on animals by crushing them with her  feet. The animals include mice, guinea  pigs, rats, squirrels, chickens, hamsters, cats, dogs, and monkeys, who are  taped or tied to the floor so they cannot escape. The woman reportedly talks like a sexual  dominatrix to the animals, while the animals cry and scream in agony until they  finally die, reduced to a &#8220;bloody mass of fur.&#8221;  Crush videos evidently appeal to people with a sexual fetish for the  torture and killing of animals.<\/p>\n  <p>The defendant in the particular case coming before the Court  did not take part in the crush video trade.  Instead, he distributed videos showing pit bulls engaged in bloody dog  fights and viciously attacking other animals, both illegal activities in all 50  states. He was found guilty of three  counts of knowingly selling the depictions of animal cruelty, with the  intention of placing them in interstate commerce for commercial gain.<br>\n  <br>\n    In convicting Stevens of the charged offense, the jury had  to find that the materials he distributed did not qualify under the statutory  exception for &#8220;any depiction that has serious religious, political, scientific,  educational, journalistic, historical, or artistic value,&#8221; a list that  resembles \u2013 but includes more items than \u2013 the test that takes speech out of  the category of unprotected &#8220;obscenity&#8221; under <em><a href=\"https:\/\/caselaw.findlaw.com\/court\/us-supreme-court\/413\/15.html\" rel=\"noopener\">Miller  v. California<\/a><\/em>. Remarking on the  obscenity analogy, the district court observed:  &#8220;if the government has a sufficiently compelling interest in prohibiting  the sale of depictions of sexual activity between consenting adults, it has an  equal, if not greater, interest in preventing the torture, maiming, mutilation  and wanton killing of animals who have no ability to consent to such treatment.&#8221;<\/p>\n  <p>Elaborating on the vulnerability of animals, as compared to  consenting adults, the district court also invoked <em><a href=\"https:\/\/caselaw.findlaw.com\/court\/us-supreme-court\/458\/747.html\" rel=\"noopener\">New  York v. Ferber<\/a><\/em>. In <em>Ferber<\/em>, the Supreme Court upheld the  criminalization of child pornography, on the ground that the availability of  such material \u2013 and the demand for it \u2013 economically motivates the  victimization itself, which is often difficult to track down and prosecute. Because of this difficulty, prohibiting the  violence alone makes for an incomplete approach to the underlying problem.<\/p>\n  <p>I suspect that most, if not all, readers find the idea of  crush videos morally troubling and disgusting.  Indeed, even supporters of Mr.  Stevens have attempted to distinguish his videos of blood sport from crush  videos, the latter of which seem more difficult to defend, in part because they  fall so readily within the existing law of obscenity and constitute a far more  &#8220;patently offensive&#8221; subcategory within that classification.<\/p>\n  <p>In this column, I will focus on three aspects of the  argument that crush videos and dog-fight videos are unprotected speech, and  examine some implications of the argument for another area of moral  inquiry: the consumption of animals and  animal products.<\/p>\n  <p><strong>Vulnerable Victims  Worthy of Consideration<\/strong><\/p>\n  <p>Consumers of animals (e.g., pigs and chickens) and animal  products (e.g., cheese and eggs) often cite their belief that an animal is not  as intelligent as a human being. They  suggest that they would never eat a gorilla or a chimpanzee, but cows,  chickens, turkeys, and fishes lack language and a cognitive system like ours  and accordingly may be killed for food.  Other people stop eating pigs and cows, because they are mammals as we  are (and therefore &#8220;superior&#8221;) but continue consuming birds and fishes (or  fishes alone), on the same intelligence-based rationale. The implicit assumption is that less  intelligent creatures are accordingly less entitled to moral consideration.<\/p>\n  <p>Assuming that people are indeed &#8220;smarter&#8221; than all other  animal species, there remains a flaw in the argument from intelligence. As animal behaviorists have shown us, the  capacity to suffer and to fear death does not require great intellect or  complex cognition. In fact, suffering in  the absence of understanding can be that much greater. Just think about how difficult it is to  console an infant in pain who cannot be made to comprehend why he suffers or  when (or that) the pain will end. <\/p>\n  <p>That said, it is unclear that it would provide much comfort  to a cow to understand the great purposes for which she is kept almost  constantly pregnant, with each of her beloved newborns taken from her every  time she gives birth, and for which she \u2013 when her milk production drops off \u2013  is ultimately taken to a bloody room filled with the screams of her fellow  animals, hoisted upside down, and cut until she bleeds and chokes to death,  frequently conscious and writhing the whole time.<\/p>\n  <p>It is rare to read a court opinion referring to animals with  the word &#8220;who,&#8221; as the district court does, rather than &#8220;that.&#8221; In acknowledging the pain of animals tortured  to produce an exciting show (whether sexual or not) \u2013 with pronouns and the  content of the opinion \u2013 the district court suggests that the vulnerability of  animals makes them especially entitled to our moral concern. Likewise, Andrew Linzey makes a powerful  moral and theological argument along these lines against our current treatment  of nonhuman animals in <em><a href=\"http:\/\/www.amazon.com\/Why-Animal-Suffering-Matters-Philosophy\/dp\/0195379772\" rel=\"noopener\">Why  Animal Suffering Matters<\/a><\/em>. This  approach suggests that animals&#8217; lesser intellect does not support our  consumption of them as food. Animals&#8217;  vulnerability, moral innocence, and inability to give &#8220;consent&#8221; to our uses of  them, instead, call for compassion and extra solicitude on our part.<\/p>\n  <p><strong>A Market in Suffering  and Who is to Blame<\/strong><\/p>\n  <p>The defendant in the Supreme Court case suggests that it is  not necessary to prohibit the commercial distribution of videos showing animal  cruelty, because there is a non-speech-related method of addressing the harm  more directly \u2013 namely, by prohibiting the cruelty itself. In fact, the statute at issue in the case  only <u>applies<\/u> to conduct that is already illegal in the place where the  commercial possession, creation, or sale takes place. What, then, does banning the commercial <u>depiction<\/u> of the cruelty add, other than a speech-specific prohibition that is  content-based (i.e., there is no ban on depictions of animal joy or peace)?<\/p>\n  <p>One answer, provided by both the district court and the  government, is that &#8220;the creation, sale, or possession of depictions of animal  cruelty for profit provides an economic incentive for such conduct.&#8221; That is, the reason (or at least one reason)  that some people spend their time, energy, and money subjecting animals to  excruciating pain and death in front of a camera is that other people are  willing to spend their money on the product created by the videotaped pain \u2013 a  crush video or a blood-sport video. <\/p>\n  <p>It is, in other words, the economic demand for the product  of the torture \u2013 the video \u2013 that motivates, or multiplies the motivation for,  conducting the torture in the first place.  To understand the role of demand in driving the underlying conduct is to  recognize that someone who purchases crush videos or dog-fight videos is in  reality an accomplice in the torture and, in some respects, as blameworthy as  the torturer herself, who acts to fulfill the desires of her customers.<\/p>\n  <p>This recognition forms the foundation of child pornography  legislation \u2013 and its validity under the First Amendment, as explained in <em><a href=\"https:\/\/caselaw.findlaw.com\/court\/us-supreme-court\/458\/747.html\" rel=\"noopener\">New  York v. Ferber<\/a><\/em>: To address the  commercialized sexual abuse of children, it is necessary to attack the market  that feeds the filmed abuse, rather than merely prohibiting the abuse itself.<\/p>\n  <p>Consumers of animals and their products, some of whom would  never themselves personally inflict violence on animals, often miss this basic  economic insight about supply and demand.  I have heard people speak in outrage about the torture of the animals  who live and die in the production of food, even as the same critics eat their  fish sandwiches, burgers, and sausages, consuming the products of the conduct  they condemn, believing consumption to be insignificant because the animals are  already dead. <\/p>\n  <p>Industries do not, however, abuse animals for fun (though  some of the people working in such industries either are sadists or eventually  become sadistic in their roles). They do  it because each individual consumer puts down her money at the cash register  and thereby communicates the message, &#8220;Kill more chickens, turkeys, cows, pigs,  and fishes; kill many of them in an efficient manner so I can affordably eat  lots of my favorite foods; do what it takes to make that possible.&#8221; <\/p>\n  <p><strong>Sex Versus Other  Pleasures in Justifying Suffering and Death<\/strong><\/p>\n  <p>Some people who hear about crush videos are especially  offended by the fact that people want to masturbate to the torture of sentient  animals. What could be more debased than  catering to the proclivities of a sexual sadist? Because the fetish to which the material  caters is so worthless and disgusting, it seems to many people, it cannot  possibly be legitimate to create crush films to satisfy it. To justify the torture and killing of animals  requires that they be necessary to serving some &#8220;higher&#8221; purpose, and the  cravings of a person aroused by animal suffering do not qualify as such.<\/p>\n  <p>The category of obscenity, unprotected by the First  Amendment, includes as one criterion that &#8220;it must be established that the  dominant theme of the material taken as a whole appeals to a prurient interest  in sex.&#8221; This criterion of obscenity  supports the notion that the involvement of sexuality may reduce the status of  what might otherwise be worthless and patently offensive but nonetheless  constitutionally-protected speech. The  category of child pornography, also unprotected by the Constitution, includes  an obvious sexual component as well \u2013 pornography consists of sexual media, by  definition. However, is the sexual  aspect of these categories truly essential to their legitimacy?<\/p>\n  <p>Imagine that some people found it viscerally, but not  sexually, exciting to view children being beaten and tortured. If these people comprised a large enough  group, an industry of child torture films might develop as a result, to meet  the demand. Though <em>Ferber<\/em> is a case about child pornography, its underlying economic  logic goes further. Concern for  vulnerable victims whose victimization is a direct response to market demand by  viewers would, I suspect, place child torture videos in the same (or a related)  category of speech that may be prohibited and punished because the harm it  inflicts is so much greater than any benefit that might be derived from it.<\/p>\n  <p>If I am right about the hypothetical &#8220;child torture&#8221; genre  of film, then the Court might well see its way to classifying films of blood  sports like pit-bull fighting together with the already-obscene crush  videos. In both cases, people inflict  terrible suffering on helpless and vulnerable animals who cannot &#8220;consent&#8221;  (just as a child cannot consent to sexual use).  And in both cases, it is the audience for the &#8220;excitement&#8221; (whether  sexual or not) \u2013 aroused by watching the violence \u2013 that fuels the cruel acts  in the first place. To address the  violence and cruelty, in other words, it is necessary to do something about the <u>purpose<\/u> of the cruelty, which is to satisfy audience demand for the  videos. <\/p>\n  <p>If an audience derives pleasure from watching torture, then  \u2013 in the absence of a deterrent \u2013 someone will come along to give the audience  what it wants. And my understanding of  contemporary values suggests that most people would not view the pleasure  obtained from watching dogs tear each other apart a sufficiently weighty  objective to justify the infliction of torture on these animals (or the  horrifying way in which &#8220;used up&#8221; dogs are later killed).<\/p>\n  <p>As I discussed in connection with the moral relevance of  animal vulnerability and the role of market-demand in motivating cruelty, the  pleasure justification for crush videos and dog fights has an important lesson  for discussions of meat, dairy, and eggs as well. <\/p>\n  <p>I have had conversations with people who claim to detest  cruelty to vulnerable animals and who say they would not personally hurt an  animal unless it was absolutely necessary.  Yet they consume the products of animal agriculture. Why? Some say it is because animals are inferior  for lacking human intelligence. Some say  it is because other people torture and kill the animals who are already dead by  the time of purchase. Still others say  that one needs food to eat and therefore, that registering a demand for animal  cruelty by eating animals and the products of their suffering is qualitatively  different from registering a demand for animal cruelty by purchasing a crush  video or a dog fight video. No one <u>needs<\/u> to watch crush videos or dog fights, they say, but everyone must eat.<\/p>\n  <p>The argument distinguishing flesh, dairy, and egg  consumption from watching videos depicting animal abuse has a surface  appeal. For one thing, people who eat  animal products do not ordinarily enjoy or even dwell on the fact that they are  directly motivating others to inflict suffering and death on animals. On the contrary, a typical response to  information about this suffering is, &#8220;Don&#8217;t tell me. It&#8217;ll ruin my meal.&#8221; To the extent that one views &#8220;intentional&#8221;  harm differently from &#8220;knowing&#8221; harm, this distinction might carry some weight  in assessments of relative culpability.<\/p>\n  <p>The distinction does not, however, provide an argument that  demanding the torture and killing of animals for food is <u>justified<\/u>. Though the motivation may not be as debased  as the desire to see dogs fight, or the desire to see animals crushed to death  by a dominatrix, the reason for demanding these products is still a particular  kind of pleasure \u2013 that derived from consuming cows, chickens, turkeys, and  fishes \u2013 that is both unnecessary and easily replaced with far more benign,  comparable pleasures. <\/p>\n  <p>Eating is necessary, of course, just as the release of  sexual tension and the alleviation of boredom are necessary (or, at least, very  important). It does not follow, however,  that eating animal products is necessary \u2013 either for survival or for culinary  pleasure, any more than torturing animals is necessary to people&#8217;s experience  of sexual pleasure or to the relief of their boredom. Pleasure in the abstract is a worthy  objective, but the fact that one prefers the taste of a pig&#8217;s or a cow&#8217;s flesh  or a calf&#8217;s mother&#8217;s milk or a chicken&#8217;s egg more than the taste of the fare at  a vegan feast cannot \u2013 by dint of the &#8220;One needs to eat&#8221; point \u2013 redeem the  agony that we force on animals.<\/p>\n  <p><\/p>\n  <p><strong>What These Forms of  Deviance and &#8220;Normalcy&#8221; Share:  Unjustifiable Harm <\/strong><\/p>\n  <p>Crush videos represent an apparently deviant phenomenon that  most people see for the worthless display of violence that it is. But an honest examination of what makes such  videos wrong exposes the truth about the far-from-deviant use of animals for  food. The consumption of animals and  animal products inflicts unimaginable pain and terror on billions of  vulnerable, defenseless, and innocent beings.  It implicates every consumer of animal products, because consumption is  what drives the conduct. And it rests on  nothing more elevated than a personal preference for the flavor of flesh or  dairy. <\/p>\n  <p>If crush videos cannot be justified by the pleasure they  give their audiences, then neither can a trip to the supermarket at which we  purchase what was once a living, breathing animal who did not want to suffer  and die.<\/p>\n  <hr size=\"1\">\n  <p class=\"authorfoot\">\n<a name=\"bio\"><\/a>Sherry F. Colb, a FindLaw columnist, is Professor  of Law and Charles Evans Hughes Scholar at Cornell Law   School. Her book, <i>When Sex Counts:  Making Babies and Making Law<\/i>, is available on Amazon.<\/p>\n\n\n\n\n\n <\/div>\n<div class=\"was-this-helpful\">\n    <div\n            class=\"was-this-helpful__question-container\"\n            aria-labelledby=\"was-this-helpful__question\"\n            role=\"group\"\n    >\n        <span\n                id=\"was-this-helpful__question\"\n                class=\"was-this-helpful__question fl-text-lg-bold\"\n        >Was this helpful?<\/span>\n        <button\n                class=\"was-this-helpful__button fl-text-sm\"\n                aria-label=\"Yes\"\n                value=\"yes\"\n        >\n            <span class=\"was-this-helpful__button-text fl-text-bold\">Yes<\/span>\n            <i class=\"was-this-helpful__button-icon\">\n                <svg width=\"22\" height=\"22\" viewBox=\"0 0 22 22\" fill=\"none\" xmlns=\"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2000\/svg\">\n                    <g id=\"thumbs-up\" clip-path=\"url(#clip0_604_3418)\">\n           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     class=\"fl-radio-button-field-input\"\n                                type=\"radio\"\n                                name=\"negative-feedback\"\n                                value=\"Other\"\n                        >\n                        <label\n                                class=\"fl-radio-button-field-label fl-text-sm was-this-helpful__radio-label\"\n                                for=\"was-this-helpful__radio-button--negative-other\"\n                        >Other<\/label>\n                    <\/div>\n                <\/fieldset>\n            <\/div>\n            <div class=\"was-this-helpful__form-buttons-container\">\n                <button\n                    class=\"was-this-helpful__feedback-button was-this-helpful__feedback-button--positive at-feedback-submit fl-button secondary\"\n                    type=\"submit\"\n                >\n                    <span class=\"fl-button-content\">Submit<\/span>\n                    <i\n                        class=\"fa fa-angle-right medium\"\n                        aria-hidden=\"true\"\n                    ><\/i>\n                <\/button>\n                <button\n                    class=\"was-this-helpful__feedback-button was-this-helpful__feedback-button--cancel fl-button primary disabled\"\n                    type=\"reset\"\n                >\n                    <span class=\"fl-button-content\">Cancel<\/span>\n                    <i\n                        class=\"fa fa-times-circle medium\"\n                        aria-hidden=\"true\"\n                    ><\/i>\n                <\/button>\n            <\/div>\n        <\/form>\n    <\/div>\n    <div class=\"was-this-helpful__thank-you-message\" role=\"status\">\n        <i class=\"was-this-helpful__thank-you-message-icon fa fa-check\"><\/i>\n        <p class=\"was-this-helpful__thank-you-message-text\" aria-live=\"polite\"><\/p>\n    <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n\n    <\/div>\n    \n    <div class=\"fl-block-column fl-section-sidebar\">\n        \n    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