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Feld Entertainment has 54 Asian elephants, 19 which travel and perform and 35 which live at the company's 200-acre conservatory in Florida. The newest, born a few minutes before inauguration day, was named Barack after the new president and was the first conceived by artificial insemination. The activists showed close-up photos of the elephants' front and back legs, bound with chains to the inside of train cars where she said they can spend up to 100 hours at a time traveling between cities. A video showed three elephants chained up close together in a single box car. The circus showed a video of two elephants outside the Palace of Auburn Hills in Michigan, munching on branches set out in the parking lot. An electronic wire pens them in a wide open space, and one elephant puts her foot on a circus barrel while she eats, then nuzzles her companion's ear with her trunk. Simpson said the elephants are chained primarily at night, to keep them from eating each other's food or picking on their sleeping companions. Simpson said the 8,000-pound elephants go on the train willingly because this is where they eat, drink and travel with their elephant friends. "They enjoy this experience. They enjoy interacting with these human handlers. It's vigorous physical exercise," he said. Simpson also said when they retire from circus life the company takes care of them at its Center for Elephant Conservation in Florida. He showed a clip of elephants in their 50s, eating hay. Meyer said the circus tries to create the illusion of a happy lives for its signature act, but even at the conservation and breeding center, the animals spend most of their day chained in a barn on concrete, with some never going out on the grass. In addition to the four animal welfare groups, plaintiffs in the case include Tom Rider, a former circus employee who alleges that he witnessed abuse of the elephants on numerous occasions. Simpson said Rider never complained to Ringling Bros. management and only spoke out after animal rights groups started paying him
-- a total of $165,000 over the last nine years.
___ On the Net: Feld Entertainment: American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals: http://www.aspca.org/
http://www.feldentertainment.com/
[Associated
Press;
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