to look like foxes, protesting against the
fur trade next to the
Three Smiths Statue in Helsinki,
Finland on March 25, 2010
Profile PETA is an animal rights organization that opposes
speciesism, and the abuse of animals in any way, such as for food, clothing, entertainment, or research. In 2025, PETA's website claimed they had 10.5 million supporters, and received donations of $80 million for 2024.
Campaigns and consumer boycotts The organization is known for aggressive media stunts, combined with a solid base of celebrity support—in addition to its honorary directors,
Paul McCartney,
Alicia Silverstone,
Eva Mendes,
Charlize Theron,
Ellen DeGeneres, and many other notable celebrities have appeared in PETA ads. Every week, Newkirk holds what
The New Yorker calls a "war council", with two dozen of her top strategists gathered at a square table in the PETA conference room, with no suggestion considered too "kooky or unkind". Many of the campaigns have focused on large corporations. Fast food companies such as
KFC,
Wendy's, and
Burger King have been targeted. In the animal-testing industry, PETA's consumer boycotts have focused on
Avon,
Benetton,
Bristol-Myers-Squibb,
Chesebrough-Pond's,
Dow Chemical,
General Motors, and others. The group's
modus operandi includes buying shares in target companies such as
McDonald's and
Kraft Foods to exert influence. The campaigns have delivered results for PETA. McDonald's and Wendy's introduced vegetarian options after PETA targeted them; and
Polo Ralph Lauren said it would no longer use fur. Avon,
Estée Lauder, Benetton, and
Tonka Toy Co. all stopped testing products on animals,
the Pentagon stopped shooting pigs and goats in wounds tests, and a slaughterhouse in Texas was closed down.
The New Yorker writes that PETA activists have crawled through the streets of Paris wearing
leg-hold traps and thrown around money soaked in fake blood at the International Fur Fair. "The thing is, we make them gawk" she told
Satya magazine, "maybe like a traffic accident that you have to look at." PETA has also objected to the practice of
mulesing (removing strips of wool-bearing skin from around the buttocks of a sheep). In October 2004, PETA launched a boycott against the Australian wool industry, leading some clothing retailers to ban products using Australian wool from their stores. In response, the Australian wool industry sued PETA, arguing among other things that mulesing prevents
flystrike, a very painful disease that can affect sheep. A settlement was reached, and PETA agreed to stop the boycott, while the wool industry agreed to seek alternatives to mulesing. In 2011, PETA named five orcas as plaintiffs and
sued SeaWorld over the animals' captivity, seeking their protection under the
Thirteenth Amendment. A federal judge heard the case and dismissed it in early 2012. In August 2014, SeaWorld announced it was building new orca tanks that would almost double the size of the existing ones to provide more space for its whales. PETA responded that a "larger prison is still a prison." In 2016, SeaWorld admitted that it had been sending its employees to pose as activists to
spy on PETA. Following an investigation by an outside law firm, SeaWorld's Board of Directors directed management to end the practice. in an anti-fur protest in 2007 In 2011,
Patricia de Leon was the Hispanic spokesperson for PETA's anti-
bullfighting campaign. Some campaigns have been particularly controversial. Newkirk was criticized in 2003 for sending a letter to
Palestine Liberation Organization leader
Yasser Arafat asking him to keep animals out of the conflict, after a donkey was
blown up during an attack in Jerusalem. To reduce milk consumption, it created the "Got Beer?" campaign, a parody of the dairy industry's series of
Got Milk? ads, which featured celebrities with milk "mustaches" on their upper lips. When the mayor of New York,
Rudy Giuliani, was diagnosed with prostate cancer in 2000, PETA ran a photograph of him with a white mustache and the words "Got prostate cancer?" to illustrate their claim that dairy products contribute to cancer, an ad that caused an outcry in the United States. After PETA placed ads in school newspapers linking milk to acne, obesity, heart disease, cancer, and strokes,
Mothers Against Drunk Driving and college officials complained it encouraged underage drinking; the British Advertising Standards Authority asked that the ads be discontinued after complaints from interest groups such as The
National Farmers' Unions. In August 2011, it was announced that PETA will be launching a
soft pornography website in the
.xxx domain. PETA spokesperson Lindsay Rajt told the
Huffington Post, "We try to use absolutely every outlet to stick up for animals," adding that "We are careful about what we do and wouldn't use nudity or some of our flashier tactics if we didn't know they worked." PETA also used nudity in its "Veggie Love" ad which it prepared for the
Super Bowl, only to have it banned by the network. PETA's work has drawn the ire of some feminists who argue that the organization sacrifices women's rights to press its agenda. Lindsay Beyerstein criticized PETA saying "They're the ones drawing disturbing analogies between pornography,
misogyny and animal cruelty." PETA has approached cities to pressure them to change their names, including
Fishkill, New York in 1996,
Hamburg, New York in 2003, and
Commerce City, Colorado in 2007. PETA sometimes issues isolated statements or press releases, commenting on current events. After
Lady Gaga wore
a dress made of meat in 2010, PETA issued a statement objecting to the dress. After a fisherman in Florida was bitten by a shark in 2011, PETA proposed an advertisement showing a shark devouring a human, with the caption "Payback Is Hell, Go Vegan". The proposed ad drew criticism from relatives of the injured fisherman. After Minnesota dentist Walter Palmer admitted that he had killed
Cecil the lion in Zimbabwe in 2015, PETA's president, Newkirk, issued a statement on behalf of PETA in which she said:
Undercover work PETA sends its staff undercover into industries and other facilities that use animals to document the alleged abuse of animals. Investigators may spend many months as employees of a facility, making copies of documents and wearing hidden cameras.
1990s • In 1984, PETA produced a 26-minute film,
Unnecessary Fuss, based on 60 hours of research video footage stolen by the
Animal Liberation Front during a break-in at the
University of Pennsylvania's head injury clinic. The footage showed experiments on the
baboons with a hydraulic device intended to simulate
whiplash. The publicity led to investigations, suspension of grant funding, the firing of a veterinarian, the closure of the research lab, and a period of probation for the university. • In 1990, two PETA activists posed as employees of
Carolina Biological, where they took pictures and video footage inside the company, alleging that
cats were being mistreated. Following the release of PETA's tapes, the
US Department of Agriculture (USDA) conducted its own inspection and subsequently charged the company with seven violations of the
Animal Welfare Act. Four years later, an administrative judge ruled that Carolina Biological had not committed any violations. • In 1990,
Bobby Berosini, a Las Vegas entertainer, lost his wildlife license as well as (on appeal) a later lawsuit against PETA, after PETA broadcast an undercover film of him slapping and punching
orangutans in 1989. • In 1997, PETA made a film which aired on television from footage obtained by PETA member Michele Rokke, who went undercover to report on UK company
Huntingdon Life Sciences. Huntingdon sued PETA, and PETA agreed to drop its campaign against Huntingdon. • In 1999, a North Carolina grand jury indicted three workers at a
hog farm after three-months of videotaping by a PETA operative while he was employed at the farm. The veterinarian who oversaw the farm said the video PETA had made from the footage was a distortion and was made by someone who "lied during his employment interview".
2000s • In 2004, PETA released video tapes taken from eight months of undercover filming in a West Virginia
slaughterhouse that supplies chicken to the fast food industry. The recordings showed workers stomping on live
chickens and throwing dozens against a wall. The parent corporation sent in their inspectors and told the plant to take corrective measures or risk losing their contract. Eleven employees were fired and the company introduced an anti-cruelty pledge for workers to sign. • For 11 months PETA shot footage inside a facility in Virginia operated by Covance (now
Fortrea). Alleging that the footage showed
primates being choked, hit, and denied medical attention, PETA sent the video and a 253-page complaint to the USDA. The department investigated and the company was fined $8,720. In June 2005, the company filed a lawsuit against PETA and the investigator for fraud, breach of employee contract, and conspiracy. PETA agreed to hand over all video footage and written notes to the company, and agreed to a ban on conducting any infiltration of the company for five years. • In 2006, PETA filmed a trainer at Carson & Barnes Circus instructing others to beat the
elephants to make them obey. A company spokesman said they stopped using
electrical prods on animals after the video was released. • In 2007, the owners of a
chinchilla ranch in Michigan sued PETA after it pretended in 2004 to be an interested buyer and secretly filming them, creating a video "Nightmare on Chinchilla Farm". A judge dismissed the case, writing "Undercover investigations are one of the main ways our criminal justice system operates," and noted that investigative television shows "often conduct undercover investigations to reveal improper, unethical, or criminal behavior." • In 2008, the famous Spanish singer
Alaska collaborated with PETA in a joint campaign with
AnimaNaturalis, posing nude in a picture to raise awareness for what she considers cruel activity –
bullfighting.
2010s • In 2013, PETA investigated
angora rabbit farms in China and released video footage showing farmers ripping out the wool from live rabbits while they screamed. In 2015,
Inditex announced they would discontinue their use of angora and donated their existing inventory to
Syrian refugees. Seventy other retailers had also stopped selling angora wool since the release of PETA's graphic video footage. • Between 2012 and 2014, PETA investigated
sheep shearing sheds in the
wool industry in Australia and the US. PETA sent reports and film footage to local authorities alleging that shearers had kicked and beat
sheep, stomped on their heads, necks and legs, punched them with clippers, slammed them onto the floor, and sewed up cuts without pain relief. An American Wool Council spokesperson said "We do not condone or support the actions of anyone that results in the abuse of sheep either intentionally or unintentionally. Rough handling of animals that might result in the injury of a sheep is an unacceptable maneuver during the shearing process or anytime when sheep are handled." • In 2014, PETA conducted an undercover investigation of the
horse-racing industry, filming seven hours of footage that, as
The New York Times reported, "showed mistreatment of the
horses to be widespread and cavalier." Noted trainer
Steve Asmussen and his top assistant trainer, Scott Blasi, were accused "of subjecting their horses to cruel and injurious treatments, administering drugs to them for nontherapeutic purposes, and having one of their
jockeys use an electrical device to shock horses into running faster." The newspaper noted that this investigation "was PETA's first significant step into advocacy in the horse racing world." In November 2015, as a result of PETA's investigation, Asmussen was fined $10,000 by the
New York State Gaming Commission. Robert Williams, executive director of the commission, said, "We recognize PETA for playing a role in bringing about changes necessary to make thoroughbred racing safer and fairer for all." While the fine from the New York State Gaming Commission was for a minor transgression, the most serious charges were deemed unfounded. After a thorough investigation, the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission did not bring any charges against Asmussen, stating the allegations "had neither a factual or scientific basis." • In 2015, as
The Washington Post reported, PETA investigated Sweet Stem Farm, a
pig farm that supplies meat to
Whole Foods. The resulting video footage "featured images of pigs, some allegedly sick and not given appropriate care, crowded into hot pens and roughly handled by employees," contradicting both the farm's own video self-portrait and Whole Foods' claims about "humane meat" (a term that PETA maintains is an oxymoron).
The Post notes that "[i]n the wake of the PETA investigation, Whole Foods has removed the Sweet Stem video from its Web site." PETA subsequently filed a class-action lawsuit against Whole Foods, "alleging that the chain's claims about animal welfare amount to a 'sham. The lawsuit was dismissed by a federal magistrate, who ruled that the store's signage "amounted to permissible 'puffery and that "the statement that 'no cages' were used to raise broiler chickens was not misleading merely because Whole Foods failed to also disclose that poultry suppliers normally do not use cages in the first place." • Other PETA investigations from around this time focused on
crocodile and alligator farms in Texas and Zimbabwe, a
monkey breeding facility in Florida,
pigeon racing in Taiwan,
ostrich slaughterhouses and
tanneries in South Africa. • CBS News reported in November 2016 that PETA had captured footage from restaurants that serve live
octopus,
shrimp, and other marine animals. The group's video showed "an octopus writhing as its limbs are severed by a chef at T Equals Fish, a
Koreatown sushi restaurant in Los Angeles." PETA noted that octopuses "are considered among the most intelligent invertebrates" and "are capable of feeling pain just as a pig or rabbit would." • In December 2016, PETA released video footage from an investigation at
Texas A&M University's dog laboratory, which deliberately breeds
dogs to contract
muscular dystrophy. PETA claims that for "35 years, dogs have suffered in cruel muscular dystrophy experiments ... which haven't resulted in a cure or treatment for reversing the course of muscular dystrophy in humans." The
Houston Press noted that "Texas A&M has been less than transparent about the research, and in some cases has denied that the dogs experience pain or discomfort." Among other efforts, PETA placed a billboard to oppose the ineffectual research on animals. • Bio Corporation, a company that supplies dead animals for study and dissection, was the subject of a November 2017 PETA undercover investigation. It was claimed that video footage showed workers at the company's facility in Alexandria, Minnesota "drowning fully-conscious
pigeons, injecting live
crayfish with
latex and claiming that they sometimes would freeze
turtles to death." PETA brought 25 charges of cruelty to animals against the company. Drowning is not considered an acceptable form of euthanasia, according to the
American Veterinary Medical Association, and its standards of humane euthanasia must be followed by companies certified by the
United States Department of Agriculture such as Bio Corporation. On April 18, 2018, the case was dismissed and all charges dropped based on the Alexandria City Attorney's Office's assessment that the allegations of cruelty against either pigeons or crayfish were not sufficiently supported. Daniel Paden, PETA's director of evidence analysis, said that PETA is "reviewing its options to protect animals killed at Bio Corporation." • In 2018, police raided a
PetSmart store in Tennessee, after receiving video footage from PETA. Police confiscated six animals: a
guinea pig,
mice, and
hamsters. PetSmart sued the ex-employee, Jenna Jordan, claiming she was a paid PETA operative who obtained employment at PetSmart stores in Arizona, Florida and Tennessee to obtain recordings which she provided to PETA. Jordan was accused of committing "animal neglect, theft of confidential information, unlawfully surveilled private conversations, and filing false reports with law enforcement under false pretenses in three states." In 2019, PetSmart added PETA as a defendant in the lawsuit. • On May 1, 2018, PETA released an investigation of the
mohair industry that led more than 80 retailers, including
UNIQLO and
Zappos, to drop products made with mohair. The video evidence "depicts
goats being thrown around wood floors, dunked in poisonous cleaning solution or having their ears mutilated with pliers. ... [E]mployees are shown cutting goats' throats, breaking their necks, electrically shocking them and beheading them."
Ag-gag laws Various U.S. states have passed
ag-gag laws to prevent animal rights and animal welfare groups from conducting undercover investigations of operations that use animals. In response, PETA has been involved with other groups bringing lawsuits, citing
First Amendment protections for free speech. • In 2017, a federal judge ruled Utah's ag-gag law an unconstitutional violation of the First Amendment in a case brought against the state by PETA, the
Animal Legal Defense Fund, and Amy Meyer, the director of the Utah Animal Rights Coalition. • In 2018, Idaho's ag-gag law was struck down as unconstitutional in a case brought by
ACLU-Idaho, the
ALDF and PETA. • In 2019, a federal judge struck down Iowa's 2012 ag-gag law in a case filed in 2017 by co-plaintiffs PETA,
ALDF,
ACLU-Iowa,
Iowa Citizens for Community Improvement, Bailing Out Benji, and
Center for Food Safety. • 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 PETA,
Center for Food Safety,
ALDF,
Farm Sanctuary,
Food & Water Watch,
Government Accountability Project,
Farm Forward, and the
ASPCA.
Legal proceedings Two PETA employees were acquitted in 2007 of cruelty to animals after at least 80 euthanized animals were left in dumpsters in a shopping center in
Ahoskie, North Carolina, over the course of a month in 2005; the two employees were seen leaving behind 18 dead animals, and 13 more were found inside their van. The animals had been
euthanized after being removed from shelters in
Northampton and
Bertie counties. A Bertie County Deputy Sheriff stated that the two employees assured the Bertie Animal Shelter that "they were picking up the
dogs to take them back to Norfolk where they would find them good homes." During the trial, Daphna Nachminovitch, the supervisor of PETA's Community Animal Project, said PETA began euthanizing animals in some rural North Carolina shelters after it found the shelters killing animals in ways PETA considers inhumane, including by shooting them. She also stated that the dumping of animals did not follow PETA's policy. In November 2014, a resident of
Accomack County, Virginia, produced video evidence that two workers in a van marked with a PETA logo had entered his property in a
trailer park and taken his
dog, who was then euthanized. He reported the incident to the police, who identified and charged two PETA workers, but the charges were later dropped by the
commonwealth attorney on the grounds that it was not possible to prove
criminal intent. The trailer park's manager had contacted PETA after a group of residents moved out, leaving their dogs behind, which is why the workers were on the property. The state later determined that PETA had violated state law by failing to ensure that the
Chihuahua, who was not wearing a collar or tag, was properly identified and for failing to keep the dog alive for five days before euthanizing the animal. Citing a "severity of this lapse in judgment," the
Virginia Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services issued PETA a first-ever violation and imposed a $500 fine. The contract worker who had taken the dog was dismissed by PETA. In 2015, PETA sued British nature photographer David Slater in
US court as a
next friend for a wild
macaque monkey, whom they named Naruto. PETA argued that the monkey was entitled to the
copyright of a
selfie it had taken while handling Slater's camera, and naming themselves to be the administrator of any copyright revenue. The
monkey selfie copyright dispute was originally dismissed by
Judge Orrick who wrote there is no indication that the
Copyright Act extends to animals and a monkey could not own a copyright. PETA appealed, but the
Court of Appeals found in favor of Slater saying that "PETA's real motivation in this case was to advance its own interests, not Naruto's." The decision cited
Cetacean v. Bush (2004) that says animals cannot sue unless
Congress makes it clear in the
statute that animals can sue, and added that "next friend" representation cannot be applied to animals. The court also wrote:
Video games PETA has created
a number of satirical video games with such names as
How Green Is My Diet? and
KKK or AKC? Spot the Difference. PETA uses these games to spread attention about animal rights and animal welfare and to advocate vegetarian and vegan diets. PETA's head of online marketing Joel Bartlett said "We've found that parody games are extremely popular. By connecting our message with something people are already interested in, we're able to create more buzz." In 2017, Ingrid Newkirk sent a letter of complaint to
Nintendo about their video game
1-2-Switch, during which players get to milk a cow. In her letter, Newkirk called the game "unrealistic" and wrote "you've taken all the cruelty out of milking". She also suggested that "instead of sugarcoating the subject, Nintendo switch to simulating activities in which no animals suffer." In March 2020, PETA issued a "Vegan Guide to Animal Crossing" for the video game
Animal Crossing: New Horizons.
Person of the year Each year, PETA selects a "Person of the Year" who has helped advance the cause of animal rights. •
2006: Eric Ryan and Adam Lowry (founders of
Method Products). •
2007: Robert C. Byrd (for his passionate defense of animals throughout six decades of public service). •
2008:
Oprah Winfrey (for using her powerful voice to defend those without one). •
2009:
Tim Gunn (Man of the Year) and
Ellen DeGeneres (Woman of the Year). •
2010: Bill Clinton (for his influence to promote the benefits of following a vegan diet). •
2011:
Russell Simmons (for tirelessly advocating for animals and setting a positive example for others by promoting a vegan lifestyle). •
2012:
Anjelica Huston. (for her work to keep animals with their families in the habitats where they belong, instead of being used on production sets and fur farms and to pull carriages). •
2013:
Ricky Gervais. •
2014:
Bill de Blasio. (for his defense of tigers, elephants, and horses forced to work in New York and his promotion of vegan eating). •
2015:
Pope Francis (selected for his encouragement to treat animals with kindness and to respect the environment). •
2016:
Mary Matalin (chosen for her fight for the humane treatment of farm animals and monkeys). •
2017: Naruto (a monkey unaware of
his role in a copyright case). •
2018:
California Wildfire Heroes. •
2019:
Joaquin Phoenix. •
2020:
Tabitha Brown. •
2021:
Billie Eilish. •
2022:
James Cromwell (for speaking out against the live export of pigs from Ireland, and pressuring Starbucks to end its vegan milk up-charge). •
2023:
James Gunn •
2024:
Stella McCartney •
2025:
Jane Goodall PETA India •
2011:
Hema Malini (for taking a stand and speaking out for animals). •
2012:
R. Madhavan (for helping make the world a better place for animals).
PETA UK •
2008:
Leona Lewis. (for her campaign against
foie gras). •
2009:
Roger Moore. •
2010:
Pamela Anderson. •
2011:
Morrissey. •
2012:
Brian May (for badger activism). •
2014:
Tony Benn. •
2016: Pamela Anderson. •
2017: Roger Moore. •
2018:
Lewis Hamilton. •
2020:
Carrie Johnson (for her work to protect endangered animals). •
2023:
Paul O'Grady (for his lifelong determination to make the world a kinder place for animals).
Labels PETA certifies beauty and cosmetics companies with bunny labels in two tiers. In the first tier ("Animal Test-Free"), the entire company does not use animal testing. The company may still produce non-vegan products. In the second tier ("Cruelty-Free"), the company may not produce non-vegan products. The company is animal test-free and also vegan, i.e. does not use any animal-derived ingredients. If a company carries the PETA "animal test-free" or "cruelty-free" label, it must also have signed agreements with its suppliers that they do not use animal testing. PETA also awards a "vegan" label to clothing and furniture products (instead of entire companies), which means that the products are free from animal-derived ingredients, but the companies can still produce non-vegan products. ==Positions==