Welcome to Born Free USA united with Animal Protection Institute
Look around. You'll find that this website offers you a wealth of resources to help us help animals.
Other ways to be our friend and a friend to animals
Get in on the contest: Help circus elephants, win great music!
Born Free USA united with API and Australian rock band All India Radio have teamed up to spread the word about our work on behalf of circus elephants in the U.S.
All India Radio has given Born Free USA united with API rights to distribute the artistically haunting video to their newest single “Persist,” which documents the tragic death of Topsy, a circus elephant publicly electrocuted at Coney Island in 1903.
To win a free copy of All India Radio’s newest album Fall, enter our contest here.
More NewsStop the Capture and Slaughter of Thousands of Dolphins in Japan
Around 23,000 dolphins and porpoises are killed throughout Japan every year, with the largest single slaughter of dolphins in the world occuring in Taiji, Japan. Please help bring this to an end by contacting officials today.
More Action AlertsMassachusetts: H 761 Expands the Use of Cruel Traps
Bill Description: This bill would weaken existing law by allowing the use of cruel traps for "scientific research projects." Furthermore, it would allow the use of Conibear traps on coyotes.
More LegislationJenny the Elephant Is Spared Shipment to Mexico
Dallas, TX — After weeks of protest, the Dallas Zoo has succumbed to substantial public pressure and decided to keep Jenny, its only elephant, in Dallas, rather than shipping her to a drive-through tourist attraction in Mexico. Although sending her to Mexico clearly would not have been in Jenny’s best interest, Born Free USA united with Animal Protection Institute (Born Free USA) is joining other national and local animal advocacy groups in urging Zoo officials to send her to The Elephant Sanctuary in Tennessee, where she will receive the highest standard of humane care.
More Press ReleasesThe show may soon be over
“Ringling Bros. has been battling with animal welfare advocates for a generation or more, and a landmark federal lawsuit headed to trial in October could finally answer the question of whether rough, regular treatment of endangered Asian elephants by circus handlers constitutes illegal animal abuse. At stake is the future of performing animals in circuses, particularly this 138-year-old global institution. Circus officials say that if the court prohibits the use of tools like leg chains and the ankus (an elephant training tool that activists call a bull hook and handlers call a guide), they’ll stop touring with elephants — a feature that they admit is their biggest draw.”
The trial — API is one of the plaintiffs — is set to begin on October 20.
Dirty secrets under the big top
Steven T. Jones
San Francisco Bay Guardian
More Animal News
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