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Layton man pleads guilty to ALF mink farm actions

Breaking news, September 3, 2009
Layton activist pleads guilty to mink-farm raid

By Emiley Morgan
Published: Thursday, Sept. 3, 2009 11:09 p.m. MDT
Deseret News (Utah)

A 23-year-old Layton man who was charged with damaging and interfering with animal enterprises after he and another man were accused of raiding local mink farms pleaded guilty in federal court Wednesday to one of the raids. William James Viehl was indicted on two counts of damaging and interfering with the operations of an animal enterprise in March after he and Ogden resident Alex Jason Hall, 21, raided one mink farm in South Jordan and attempted a second raid on a similar farm in Heber, said U.S. Attorney spokeswoman Melodie Rydalch.

The raid to which Viehl pleaded guilty took place at the McMullin mink farm in South Jordan in August 2008. Rydalch said the raid consisted of releasing minks and spray-painting parts of the farm, including a barn. She said the plea agreement "stated the damage and loss to real and personal property at the farm exceeded $10,000."

In a statement released Thursday, U.S. Attorney Brett Tolman said that while the government respects the beliefs and opinions of activist groups, prosecutors will take "aggressive action" when it comes to criminal actions.

"Regardless of your opinion, the fur industry is lawful and provides income for many Utah families. The law protects them, plain and simple. We all rely on the rule of law to protect us, our opinions and our lawful ventures. Criminal acts targeting businesses in the dark of night are not going to be tolerated in our communities," Tolman said.

The Animal Liberation Front said it was responsible for the August raid, suggesting that the two men indicted for that raid may be animal-rights activists associated with that group.

Viehl and Hall both originally pleaded not guilty to the charges, and Hall's case is currently ongoing. Sentencing in Viehl's case is scheduled for Nov. 12.

e-mail:  emorgan@desnews.com

a big thank you to all the liberators 06.Sep.2009 12:01

with you in mind and spirit

how very disturbing that this government and society can deem it a crime when individuals reach out to protect and help innocent animals being held in captivity under the worst of conditions and fates.

Yay for mink liberators! 08.Sep.2009 21:39

:-D

They say the "damage" somehow "exceeded $10,000."

The only "damage" done to the property appears to have been spraypaint.

The living, breathing, thinking, feeling mink who were freed from their salivating, putrid, corpse-infested hands are NOT THEIR PROPERTY. Therefore, a sane culture could not allow them to "claim" the bodies of the freed mink as part of their damages. THEY would have "damaged" the mink. The liberators merely freed them.

Drag that we don't live in a sane culture, but thank God some people are willing to show compassion, mercy, and solidarity toward the many, many non-human victims of human-induced oppression. When the law is wrong, it's wrong.

Now, we stand in solidarity with William V. Because he followed his heart, his heart is free whether his body is incarcerated or not. He will need all our love and support to stay strong through this, and he deserves it.