Australia In Australia, several laws have been passed to strengthen existing laws for trespass, theft and vandalism—aimed at reducing animal rights
vigilantism (according to livestock farmers) or
gagging (according to activists). Between 2015 and 2017,
New South Wales passed several laws addressing
trespass by "vegan vigilantes" at farms and
slaughterhouses within
bills about
biosecurity. The
Right to Farm Bill 2019 added
criminal penalties for those who damage property, release livestock, or induce others to commit "aggravated unlawful entry". The
Australian Government passed the
Criminal Code Amendment (Agricultural Protection) Act 2019 which introduced further penalties for those who publish information on the internet with the intent of inciting other "green-collared criminals" to "unlawfully damage or destroy property, or commit theft, on agricultural land".
Canada Alberta Bill 27, the
Trespass Statutes (Protecting Law-Abiding Property Owners) Amendment Act, is a bill aimed at giving property owners more rights and imposes higher fines on those who trespass. The bill, which had its first reading in November 2019, makes specific reference to "land used for the production of crops, the raising and maintenance of animals, and the keeping of bees."
Ontario The
Security From Trespass and Protecting Food Safety Act, 2019 was passed on June 18, 2020. Introduced in December 2019 as Bill 156 by the
Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario, it was endorsed by the
Ontario Federation of Agriculture and Union des Cultivateurs Franco-Ontariens. In February 2020, a group of law professors in Canada sent a letter to the
Attorney General of Ontario, expressing concern that aspects of the law would infringe on the
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Proponents of the bill cited the need for increased protections from
biosecurity risks, trespass, disruption of operations, theft and harassment. The law prohibits unauthorized persons from trespassing on farm property and animal processing facilities, and prohibits protesters from interacting with livestock haulers. A person found guilty can be fined up to $15,000 for the first offence and $25,000 for subsequent offences. The day after the bill was passed, animal rights activist Regan Russell was
fatally run over by a transport truck outside a pig slaughterhouse in
Burlington, where an animal rights group had been stopping trucks outside the entrance and giving water to pigs in the trailers. The incident sparked protests against the bill by animal rights groups in Canada and abroad. In March 2021, an animal rights advocacy group sued the Ontario government over the bill.
France Déméter is a cell of the French national gendarmerie created in 2019. Its objective is to protect farmers from aggression and intrusion on farms. The system is criticized by several associations, as well as by the agricultural union Confédération paysanne. The administrative court of Paris asks the Ministry of the Interior to put an end to the prevention of "actions of an ideological nature" of the cell on 1 February 2022.
United States Several states have passed ag-gag laws, many of which have been challenged in court. A number of U.S. ag-gag laws have been overturned as violations of the First Amendment to the U.S. constitution.
Arkansas On March 23, 2017, Arkansas Governor
Asa Hutchinson signed Arkansas' ag-gag bill into law after District Judge James Moody threw out a lawsuit challenging it on grounds of constitutional violation. The constitutionality of Arkansas' ag-gag law is currently being challenged by the
Animal Legal Defense Fund, Animal Equality, the
Center for Biological Diversity and the
Food Chain Workers Alliance, along with legal experts, scholars, and 23 media organizations who filed briefs in support. Legal professionals state that if the ruling is left standing, it "would drastically limit the ability of federal courts to protect rights guaranteed by the First Amendment."
Idaho In February 2014, Idaho Governor
Butch Otter signed Idaho's ag-gag bill, the "Agricultural Security Act", into law, which imposed fines and jail time on activists who secretly film abuse on Idaho's commercial farms. It came about as the result of the animal rights organization
Mercy for Animals releasing a video of animal abuse by workers on Bettencourt Dairy farms. This decision was appealed to the
Ninth Circuit, and parts of Idaho's law were struck down on First Amendment grounds in early 2018. On January 9, 2019, Iowa's ag-gag law was ruled unconstitutional by the
U.S. Southern District Court of Iowa. In April 2019, another ag-gag law was signed, but on December 2, 2019, the
U.S. Southern District Court of Iowa issued a preliminary injunction against enforcement of the statute. In June 2020, a third ag-gag law was signed introducing a new crime called "
food operation trespass," a type of aggravated
misdemeanor. In April 2021, a fourth ag-gag law, HF 775 was signed. The fourth law created "unauthorized sampling" and an additional "Cameras or electronic surveillance devices" crime applicable if someone is criminally trespassing, the penalty for which is an aggravated misdemeanor for a first offense and a class D felony for a second or subsequent-offense. On September 26, 2022, the
U.S. Southern District Court of Iowa found the law to be unconstitutional.
Kansas After being the first state to pass ag-gag legislation in 1990, Kansas struck down their ag-gag laws in 2019 on the basis they violate First Amendment rights; making them the fourth state to do so.
Kentucky In 2024, Kentucky passed an ag-gag bill. While adding to state statutes prohibitions on the use of drones for recording audio, video and photography of "key infrastructures", the 2024 state legislature added commercial food manufacturing and processing facilities, animal feeding operations, and concentrated animal feeding operations, to the list of "key infrastructures", effectively prohibiting all photography or recordings "on or above" such operations without prior consent. The bill was vetoed by the governor, but overridden by the legislature.
North Carolina In 2020, in the case of
PETA et al. v. Stein,
Judge Schroeder struck four subsections of North Carolina's 2015 Property Protection Act, writing "the law is declared unconstitutional as applied to them in their exercise of speech." The plaintiffs included
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals,
Center for Food Safety,
Animal Legal Defense Fund,
Farm Sanctuary,
Food & Water Watch,
Government Accountability Project,
Farm Forward, and the
American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. In February 2023, the
United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit narrowed the 2020 ruling, and in October 2023 the
Supreme Court rejected North Carolina's appeal.
Utah From 2012 to 2017, Utah had an ag-gag law criminalizing entering an animal facility and filming without consent. Amy Meyer, the director of the Utah Animal Rights Coalition, along with
Animal Legal Defense Fund and
PETA, brought a
facial challenge to the law, and in 2017 a district court judge concluded that Utah Code § 76-6-112 was unconstitutional. Meyer had been arrested in 2013 under the law, but the case was later dismissed when it was determined she was on public property at the time she was filming. ==Support==