SeaWorld admits employees spied on animal rights activists

  26 February 2016    Read: 1298
SeaWorld admits employees spied on animal rights activists
The CEO said the practice had been conducted "in the face of credible threats".
SeaWorld officials acknowledged Thursday that company employees spied on critics by posing as animal welfare activists.

The company has ended the practice “in which certain employees posed as animal rights activists,” SeaWorld CEO Joel Manby said on an earnings call, the Orlando Sentinel reports. Manby said the company had begun the spying “in the face of credible threats,” according to the Sentinel.

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals made the spying allegations last year. One employee who had been suspended during an investigation has returned to his job. SeaWorld did not reveal whether any employees were punished as a result of the investigation.

The acknowledgement comes as the embattled park operator tries to restore its public image. The company has been hampered by protests over ethical concerns regarding the treatment of animals in recent years, particularly after the release of the documentary Blackfish.

More about:  


News Line