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Berosini vs. PeTA |
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Perhaps the most egregious incidents of an AR group’s resorting to harassment, personal attack, and deceit, is found in the case of PeTA’s attack on Las Vegas entertainer and orangutan trainer Bobby Berosini. Bobby Berosini is perhaps best known as the trainer of the orangutan Clyde, who starred alongside Clint Eastwood in the movie, Every Which Way But Loose. Before and after that film, Bobby and his performing orangutans have been a fixture in the Las Vegas entertainment scene. |
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The story of Berosini vs. People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals is indeed a story of abuse; abuse on the part of PeTA, abuse of the legal system, intimidation, deceit, and personal attack, all unwarranted, all unfounded, all based on nothing more than hatred. The
case began in July of 1989, when Bobby Berosini was performing at Las
Vegas’ Stardust Hotel. One
Ottavio Gesmundo, a dancer at the Stardust, videotaped Bobby Berosini
before the show; the tape purported to show abuse of the orangs on the
part of Mr. Berosini. However,
PeTA omits several crucial details.
First, let’s look at a timeline of relevant events: 1987:
Representatives of PeTA and the Progressive Animal Welfare
Society (PAWS) met in Las Vegas to discuss the use of animals in
entertainment. A local PeTA
activist, Linda Levine, represented PETA. PAWS was represented by its
president, Pat Derby. At
this meeting, Levine and Derby allegedly solicited help from Dart
Anthony, then the president of the Humane Society of Southern Nevada.
After learning that PeTA and PAWS wished to “create problems
for entertainers who used animals in shows on the Las Vegas Strip”
(Bobby Berosini was mentioned by name, as were Siegfried and Roy.)
Anthony, to his credit, refused. Spring
1989: PeTA staffers decide
on a fund-raising campaign based on “animals in entertainment.”
Bobby Berosini was named as a possible target.
It
was no coincidence that, about this time, Bobby Berosini began to have
problems backstage at the Stardust.
Dancers, including the aforementioned Gesmundo, began to harass
the orangutans. Shouting,
imitating animal noises, and even waving torches used in their act, all
acts intended to stir up and intimidate the orangutans.
Orangutans,
while normally gentle and retiring animals, are extremely powerful –
on the order of 3-5 times as powerful as an adult male human!
Bobby Berosini, after the better part of a lifetime spent working
with orangutans, knows the danger signs that indicate an animal is
becoming agitated; to avoid what could have been an extremely dangerous
situation, he was required to keep tight control of the apes.
Gesmundo’s plan? Videotape
Bobby getting control of the agitated orangs; the tape was to be used in
PeTA’s attack/fund raising effort. In
June 1989, the Stardust declined to renew Gesmundo’s contract.
With limited time left to accomplish his mission, Gesmundo
stepped up his pace, and meanwhile was secretly videotaping the pre-show
events. By this time,
Gesmundo had likewise stepped up his harassment of the orangs;
unsubstantiated information later brought to light implicated repeated
contacts between PeTA staffers and Gesmundo, as well as some of the
other dancers. During this
time, Gesmundo began his “undercover” videotaping. Indeed,
it becomes apparent that PeTA was involved during the whole fiasco.
The timing of the backstage harassment of the apes, the meeting
between PAWS and PeTA leaders in Las Vegas, the timing of the campaign
– it truly strains credulity to claim all were coincidental. The
incident came to a head on the night of July 17, 1989, after Gesmundo
was fired from the Stardust. Witnesses
overheard Gesmundo talking about the “tapes” and was also heard to
admit he had edited the tapes, and added his own sounds. PeTA
received Gesmundo’s “tapes” the next day, and the fund-raising
efforts began immediately. Both
organizations, PeTA and PAWS, set up “surveillance” – read that
harassment – of the Berosini home.
Meanwhile, PeTA, anticipating legal action, agreed to pay
Gesmundo’s legal fees, if necessary – they later did precisely that. Following
the initial media blitz, Bobby Berosini announced that PeTA was welcome
to inspect his orangutans and their housing – two members of the
Nevada SPCA did so, and informed PeTA that there were in fact “no
signs of abuse,” and requested that PeTA cease their attacks.
PeTA not only ignored the testimony of the SPCA members, they
also refused to visit the Berosini home for themselves.
One wonders why? Perhaps
their allegations of abuse would be refuted, were they to see the
animals themselves? As
a result of PeTA’s relentless attacks, Bobby Berosini filed a
defamation suit against PeTA in August of 1989.
The case went to trial in 1990.
The verdict? In
August 1990, after 29 days of hearing evidence, the jury unanimously
found PETA guilty of Defamation and Misappropriation of Name, Likeness
and Character. They
awarded Berosini damages of $4.2 million. PeTA
appealed; in 1994 the decision was overturned by the Nevada Supreme
Court. The statement of the
Court claimed that PeTA “had the right to voice an opinion.” PeTA
was awarded costs and legal fees. The
appeal case, however, was fraught with irregularities.
The decision cited statements from Mrs. Berosini that did not
appear in court transcripts; the opinion cited witnesses who never
testified during the trial. One
of the Supreme Court judges was later found to be an active member of a
local animal rights group; he was later removed from the case.
However, in May of 1995 the court reaffirmed the decision,
although later striking the attorney fees from the award. Following
a comprehensive inspection of the Berosini’s facility and orangs, the
USDA issued a report in August 1989 that there were no signs of any
abuse. PeTA immediately
went on the offensive, issuing a fund-raising letter with the headline,
“BEROSINI BUSTED.” PeTA
continues to use this theme up to the time of this writing, in spite
of the fact that Bobby Berosini has been cleared of all charges of
abuse, and independent inspections revealed no signs of any abuse or
neglect. On
June 13, 2000, I went to the PeTA World Wide Web site, and perused their
published claims about the Berosini case.
On that date, the PeTA Web site claimed the following: “PETA
distributed an undercover video showing Las Vegas entertainer Bobby
Berosini beating orangutans with a metal rod. The U.S. Department of the
Interior revoked Berosini's captive-bred wildlife permit, making it
illegal for Berosini to buy or sell orangutans.”
[i] None
of the above is true. No
metal rod was involved. USDA’s
temporary revocation of the Berosini’s permit was due to a change in
regulations, not due to any allegation of abuse; the permit was later
renewed. PeTA
continues: "There's a lesson here for any entertainers who still feel that beating up on animals is a way to make a living," said PETA President Ingrid Newkirk, "Berosini kept intelligent apes locked in solid steel boxes for four decades, he needs to go to jail, although even that won't begin to settle the score." “The
video shows a pattern of abusive treatment.”
[ii] Bobby
Berosini’s apes do not, and never did, live in “solid steel
boxes.” That statement is
a blatant falsehood. The
video was heavily edited; PeTA has a history of such “creative”
effort. In
the interest of truth, I have done what PeTA refused to do.
On April 22, 2000, I personally visited Bobby Berosini at his
home in Las Vegas. Accompanying
me was my wife, Dawn, who holds a degree in Animal Science from Virginia
Tech. Dawn also worked for
the Garden City, Kansas, municipal zoo as a keeper, with responsibility
for primate care. In all
modesty, between the two of us, we possess some small knowledge of
animals and their behavior. We
spent roughly two and one half hours visiting with the Berosinis and
their young female orangutan, Katy. Bobby
Berosini spoke passionately of his views of personal freedom, of his
early escape from a Communist dictatorship, of his ideals of what
America can represent as a free nation, composed of free people, of the
individual rights that America stands for.
How ironic that Bobby is now the victim of an organization that
is an vehemently anti-freedom as any Stalinist, as fiercely repressive
as any dictator could ever hope to be.
What’s worse, during the course of our visit, it swiftly became
apparent how baseless the claims of the PeTA video were. Far
from the “solid steel boxes” that PeTA so arrogantly claims, the
Berosini orangs in fact have their own large, comfortable enclosure
behind the Berosini home, including a large open-air run.
Katie is a gentle, charming young lady.
The only behavioral cues she exhibited around Bobby Berosini were
affection and a desire for attention.
Katie is obviously happy, content, loved, and well cared for.
PeTA could have seen this for themselves, but refused.
Why? To
put it bluntly, no person with even an elementary knowledge of animals
and animal behavior could make a serious claim of any sort of abuse
after a visit to the Berosini home.
But then… PeTA
refused the offer of a tour. Why? Bobby
Berosini is a remarkable man – an escapee from a Communist nation at
an early age, the son of a multi-generation family of entertainers; his
love for his animals is obvious and profound, the orangutans are, in
Bobby’s eyes, members of his family.
PeTA couldn’t be bothered to accept an invitation to the
Berosini home to see this for themselves.
Why? PeTA
later petitioned a court to “prove” their allegations of abuse.
Their request was for a court order to have a veterinarian peel
back the skin of the orangs, to reveal subcutaneous bruising.
This would have very likely resulted in the deaths of the apes.
Bobby Berosini was horrified; fortunately, so was the judge,
stating that he was not about to “order abuse to prove abuse.”
The request was dismissed, “with prejudice.”
PeTA was oblivious. Why? In
another attempt in the courts, PeTA attempted to wrest custody of the
apes from the Berosinis, and to thus remove them from the only home
they’ve known, from their family who loves them.
What would have become of the apes after that?
Who knows? PeTA
apparently had no plan. Just
the removal of the orangs from their fabricated allegations of
“abuse” was enough justification for PeTA.
The welfare of the orangs was of little concern.
Why? All
the “whys” seem to boil down to two answers. Money.
Power. Money
to further PeTA’s anti-freedom, anti-human agenda.
PeTA continues to invoke the name of Berosini in their endless
fund-raising efforts. Power,
to intimidate, to extort, to punish any who oppose PeTA and the PeTA
agenda. The entire saga of
Berosini vs. PeTA smacks of conspiracy, of corruption, of hate; the
story reveals PeTA’s anti-freedom agenda more clearly than any of
their other actions to date. Bobby
Berosini committed what was, in PeTA’s somewhat myopic eyes, the
gravest sin – he fought back. With
the same courage the led him to flee a Communist dictatorship, he fought
back. With the same
convictions that he so passionately expresses when describing his vision
of the American ideal of freedom, he fought back.
With the same passion that he demonstrated in his legal fight to
keep his orangutans, his family, he fought back. As
of the time of this writing, he’s still fighting.
If
the America of his ideals does not fail him, he will ultimately win.
As matters stand, PeTA’s allegations of abuse have been utterly
refuted; however, they continue to use him to raise money; for the sake
of their baseless propagandizing, they continue to besmirch the name of
a good man, a fine animal trainer, a caring surrogate parent for his
animals. Bobby
Berosini has one huge edge in his fight.
He has one attribute that the PeTA propagandists not only lack,
but that they can’t even comprehend.
He has integrity. In
the end, that difference will bear Bobby Berosini above this crisis; in
the end, that difference will once more reveal PeTA’s claims as little
more than comic relief. [i] People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, http://www.peta-online.org/g4/mc/facts/fsm2.html June 13, 2000 [ii] People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, http://www.peta-online.org/g4/news/500/500berov.html June 1, 2000
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