For Immediate Release
Sep 22, 2010
Animal Liberation Front Issues Communique for Washington Mink Liberation
Largest Mink Release in Washington in Seven Years
Granite Falls, WA: In a communique received yesterday by the North American
Animal Liberation Press Office, the Animal Liberation Front (ALF) took credit
for the release of 400 mink this month from Beck's Fur farm in Granite Falls,
Washington.
The communique reads, in full:
In the early hours September 9th 2010 the ALF paid a visit to the Beck's fur
farm in Granite Falls, WA. Thanks to the news reports we know that we released
approx. 400 of the mink there and all we can say is that it wasn't enough. We
wish that there had been time that night to free all the prisoners that hell
hole contains. We are heart broken for everyone left behind but take solace in
the fact that we will do better the next time. This action is dedicated to one
who will only be known as x/one blue/one brown/all heart/x --ALF
Harvey Beck had reported an earlier attempted raid of his farm in the summer of
1997. No animals were reported to have been released in that incident. According
to the fur farm directory
The Blueprint, Granite Falls is home to two known mink farms: The Jeff
Craggs fur farm, and Beck�s Mink Farm. Images of the farms can be viewed online
here:
Becks Mink Farm. and
Becks Mink Farm. The
largest mink
release in the state occurred in 2003, when 10,000 mink were released from
the
Roesler Brothers Fur Farm in nearby Sultan, Washington.
Imprisoned in cages for life, fur-bearing animals are forced to endure intensive
confinement, compared to the miles of territory these animals would enjoy in the
wild - their natural state. The natural instincts of these captive animals are
completely frustrated; self-mutilation, sickness, infection, poor sanitation and
the sheer stress of confinement lead animals to premature death. When they
survive, animals of sufficient size are killed by anal electrocution or gassing,
then skinned. Whereas reports from the fur industry have surfaced that
liberations were harmful to the animals, the Animal Liberation Front and other
organizations have a long history of successfully releasing animals into the
wild. In addition to liberating the wild animals destined for a certain, painful
and agonizing death, another goal of liberationists is to cause economic damage
to fur farms; dozens of fur farming operations have seen economic ruin since
"Operation Bite Back" began by the ALF in the 1990s.