Animal warfare: The fight goes on
The assault against the Humane Society of the United States has become a double-barreled one, with two groups publicly urging Americans to donate their money to individual animal shelters instead of the national animal welfare organization.
HumaneWatch, a project of the Center for Consumer Freedom (CCF), is issuing a “consumer alert,” in the form of a national television ad (above), reminding Americans to be wary of “the deceptive fundraising practices of the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS).”
The television ad campaign comes a week after the newly formed Humane Society for Shelter Pets (HSSP) took out full page ads in national newspapers, making the same claim.
Both groups have a connection to Washington lobbyist Richard Berman. He’s the founder and operator of the CCF, and acknowledges that his public relations firm helped get HSSP of the ground.
Both the Humane Watch and HSSP ads make the point that only 1 percent of money donated to HSUS ends up going to care for cats and dogs at local shelters, even though those animals are most commonly featured in HSUS fundraising appeals.
CCF says it examined 28 HSUS ads that ran from January 2009 through September 2011 and found that more than 85 percent of the animals shown in the ads were shelter dogs and cats.
Humane Watch says HSUS fundraising appeals perpetuate the misperception that HSUS is an organization that primarily supports pet shelters.
“HSUS uses emotionally manipulative ads to raise money on the backs of abandoned and abused dogs and cats, yet it gives just one penny of each dollar it raises to local pet shelters,” said CCF Senior Research Analyst J. Justin Wilson. “HumaneWatch.org wants to ensure that donations go to support the cause donors intend. If they want their dollars to aid cats and dogs in their community they should give directly to local pet shelters instead of inadvertently bankrolling HSUS’s aggressive animal rights agenda.”
HSUS CEO Wayne Pacelle denies that HSUS advertising is misleading, and while he doesn’t dispute that only 1 percent of donations are passed on to local shelters, points out that the organization’s mission extends to protecting all animals, and that much more money is spent on its dog-related campaigns, such as those against dogfighting and puppy mills.
Last week, on his blog, Pacelle blasted Berman – both professionally and personally – portraying him as intent on undermining the reputation of HSUS because many of its causes run contrary to industries Berman represents:
In forming his new group, [Rick Berman] hasn’t come out and said he likes cruelty. He’s hoping you forgot his efforts to defend sealing, puppy mills, and other forms of abuse. But today, by saying all animal welfare money should go to animal shelters, he’s saying that no money should go to combat puppy mills, animal fighting ventures, factory farms, captive hunts, the exotic animal trade, the fur trade, or other animal welfare problems.
Berman repeated Pacelle’s above remark, and Pacelle’s references to him as a “con man” and “king of charity fraud,” on his blog — at the same time labeling those comments libelous:
“… I realized last week that when it comes to ‘nasty,’ I’m a novice. If you really want to learn something about how to wage a nasty (and I mean vicious) battle, look no further than Wayne Pacelle, CEO of The Humane Society of the United States (HSUS). In the past his organization has hired people to stalk and photograph me at my home, hired unemployed journalists to write hit pieces about me, filed erroneous and failed ethics complaints, and he has made reams of false and libelous claims about my organization’s motives and our funders. But recently he’s taken his personal brand of intimidation and harassment to a whole new level.”
Bermann acknowledged that his firm, Berman and Company, helped get HSSP off the ground. But he said while he supports new organization, he neither runs nor manages it.
Berman contacted ohmidog! last week, demanding that Pacelle’s “false and defamatory” remarks be removed from this website. We declined to do so, but did offer to publish his response in its entirety.
It follows:
“Last week a new animal advocacy group called the Humane Society for Shelter Pets (HSSP) jumped onto the scene with a high-profile advertising campaign asking people to give to their local pet shelters instead of to national groups that give the impression of helping shelters, but don’t pass more than a pittance of the money along. I’m proud to say that my firm, Berman and Company, helped get this excellent group off the ground by providing substantial pro bono PR and operational services. The group is managed by two long-time animal advocates, Jeff Douglas, who has 30 years of experience promoting veterinarians, and Diana Culp, the former director of education for Humane Society of the United States who now works at a local animal shelter. The group’s Board of Directors is chaired by Debbie Price, Director of Education and Policy at one of the nation’s largest non-profit groups.
“You’d think that this venerable team coming together in an organization devoted to encouraging funding local pet shelters wouldn’t be controversial. Unfortunately for the group, Wayne Pacelle does not like competition. He was apoplectic at the notion that people would forego giving to his behemoth organization in favor of local shelters and irate that a pet shelter group was pointing out that HSUS—despite more than 85 percent of the animals in their ads being dogs and cats—gives only 1 percent of the money it raises to local pet shelters.
“Rather than respond directly to HSSP’s concerns, Mr. Pacelle has lashed out wildly against me, my firm, and the non-profits my firm manages …”
“First of all, HSSP isn’t my group. While my firm has in the past established a number of non-profits (most of which are 15-20 years old) to educate the public on free-market issues, this group is different. My firm simply wanted to help this shelter organization get off the ground and so we donated over 1,000 hours of our time to its efforts. Check its 990’s (publicly available tax returns). Wayne Pacelle is simply trying to change the conversation.
“Also, no matter how many times Wayne Pacelle claims that I or any organization affiliated with me defends or is funded by cock fighters, etc., won’t make it true. I don’t defend animal abusers, but one of my firm’s managed non-profits does defend farmers. As far as I’m concerned, farmers are not animal abusers.
“As has been said to Mr. Pacelle in the cease and desist that was sent to him and his Board of Directors, the allegations related to sealers, puppy millers, cock fighters, etc., are entirely false. Neither I, nor any Berman and Company-managed organization gets money from any of these groups, nor do we defend them. Mr. Pacelle is aware that he is making false and defamatory statements against me, my firm and its non-profit clients, and yet he continues to do so with a wanton disregard for the truth. And frankly, by doing so he puts HSUS in legal peril. (Ironically, the only known animal abuser in the mix here is actually a partner of Pacelle and HSUS: Convicted dogfighting kingpin Michael Vick. Pacelle has even said that Vick ‘would do a good job as a pet owner.’)
“Finally, not I, nor any of the organizations managed by my firm have ever said that ‘no money should go to combat puppy mills, animal fighting ventures, factory farms, captive hunts, the exotic animal trade, the fur trade, or other animal welfare problems.’
“What we are saying is that donors should be clear about where their money is going. If people want to support HSUS’s animal-rights (as distinct from animal welfare), anti-meat agenda, then by all means do so.
“But 71 percent of the public believes that HSUS is an umbrella group for local shelters and HSUS actively perpetuates this confusion by running emotionally manipulative advertising campaigns in which 85 percent of the images are of dogs and cats. The HSUS is using its largess to purposefully confuse people about what it does and where its money goes. I thought it was worth my firm’s time to donate our help to an organization that would set the record straight about HSUS and encourage people to give local. That type of ‘record setting’ is what this firm does every day over a wide range of issues.
“This new organization does not collect money from the public and, like I said, much of my firm’s work has been pro bono. So all of Wayne’s wailing that there is some personal enrichment on my end is bogus. Any inquiry from the IRS about our work has been answered completely and allowed us to remain in good standing.
“Since HSSP launched, it has been welcomed warmly by the shelter community, with over 500 shelters signing on immediately to the HSSP mission of educating the public. Pacelle on the other hand has gone nuclear to keep people from hearing the truth about HSUS’s deceptive advertising campaign. In fact, HSUS has done so many terrible things in the last week that I have to enumerate them in bullet format:
- HSUS is harassing and intimidating HSSP’s co-director Didi Culp at her place of work. Because she used to work for them, they are most threatened by what she has to say. They have gone so far as to file baseless ethics complaints against her in order to intimidate her into silence.
- HSUS is reaching out to its network of animal rights bloggers to repeat the false and defamatory claims about me across the internet, even going so far as to use information about my children and family. These bloggers are also encouraging people to file false claims against HSSP with the Federal Trade Commission.
- HSUS and their animal rights minions have started several websites attacking me and people on my staff, both current and former.
- Following the HSSP launch, one of the websites managed by my firm was mysteriously hacked and modified to include a virus. I can’t say for certain that this is HSUS or someone in the broader animal rights community, but it’s a mighty coincidence.
- Pacelle has referred to me publicly as a “con man” and the “king of charity fraud” among other libelous statements. Furthermore, he keeps referring to me as a tobacco lobbyist and alleging that I tell people that “smoking is fine,” despite knowing full well that I haven’t done any work on tobacco issues in over a decade—and when I did it was related to retaining separated smoking sections in restaurants. I never told anyone that “smoking is fine” with regard to the health impact.
- Pacelle’s favorite scurrilous claim is that I pocket the ‘lion’s share’ of ’90 percent of funds that wash through [my] other misnamed charities. First of all, Mr. Pacelle is getting cute with the word ‘charities’ here. The organizations that Berman and Company manages are non-profit groups and trade associations that educate the public about various issues. This is a typical Wayne Pacelle straw man. Second, Berman and Company doesn’t ‘wash’ the money, it bills the money for services rendered. And it’s nonsense that the ‘lion’s share’ goes to me. Like any business, the money goes to pay the staff’s salaries, keep the lights on, pay for advertising, etc…
“And that’s Wayne Pacelle’s whole game. Rather than fight about the facts or ideas, he strips every position I’ve ever taken of its nuance and presents it out of context. So when he says that I ‘defend drunk driving’ and ‘fight MADD,’ the truth is that the Berman and Company-managed American Beverage Institute (ABI) has legitimate disagreements with MADD over policy issues. And on many of those issues, the founder of MADD—who I worked with for years—is in agreement with ABI.
“Unfortunately for Wayne, people will be distracted by this personal attack approach for only so long. Eventually he’ll have to answer for his organization’s dishonest advertising and fundraising campaigns and explain to the American public why he gets them to give HSUS money with pictures of sad dogs and cats, but gives 1 penny on the dollar to local shelters. And if I were him, I would stop telling reporters that HSUS’s TV ads contain a disclaimer that HSUS isn’t associated with local pet shelters. We looked at all of their ads over the past two years, and over 90 percent of them don’t have a disclaimer on them. And the ones that do require a magnifying glass to understand.
“The Humane Society for Shelter Pets is an exciting new organization with important goals. At the end of the day, this new group is going to succeed in getting the word out about the importance of giving to your local shelter and the American public is going to realize that HSUS is altogether different from local humane societies—despite its best efforts at brand confusion. So no matter how nasty Wayne and HSUS get, they won’t stop me from being proud of my contribution to this excellent new organization and he won’t be able to stop its leadership from excelling. And that’s all that matters.”
Posted by jwoestendiek December 20th, 2011 under Muttsblog.
Tags: ads, advertisements, allegations, animal welfare, animals, barbs, blogs, campaign, cats, ccf, center for consumer freedom, deceptive, discredit, dogs, donations, fundraising, funds, hssp, hsus, humane society for shelter pets, humane society of the united states, humane watch, libel, media, pets, reputation, response, richard berman, shelters, wayne pacelle
Comments
Comment from jonathan gilbert
Time December 20, 2011 at 9:57 am
a little more on Berman http://www.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.huffingtonpost.com%2F2011%2F12%2F14%2Frick-berman-anti-labor-front-group_n_1148360.html&h=EAQE8ktFoAQG-aMaiCefcPztl3irTtJsl6N-CH25QQM3pyA
Comment from Anne’n'Spencer
Time December 20, 2011 at 11:20 am
I am very, very leery of anything that is associated with the CCF. Their website (which features a big, juicy burger with all the trimmings) is in my opinion a treasure trove of misinformation regarding food, especially meat–but also including sweets, sugary drinks, snacks, and junk foods. I am convinced that they are a shill for agribusiness and the large scale food industry.
I am by no means a vegetarian. I’m an unabashed carnivore who enjoys an occasional soft drink. But I’m convinced that if I had followed their “guidelines,” I’d be dead by now. I’m also convinced that I would have raised two unhealthy, obese children with heart trouble and diabetes. The function of that website is to make consumers feel it is perfectly OK to eat more of those questionable foods. In this, they fly in the face of a great deal of sensible nutritional advice including what I’ve received over the years from my own family doctor and my kids’ pediatricians back in the day. I’m not even going to venture into the drunk drivers arena. That would take a whole book.
They are after HSUS because HSUS has taken a stand on the humane treatment and slaughter of pigs, cattle, chickens, and other farm animals. It is in the interest of those lining their pockets that HSUS be discredited.
Shelter pets and local Humane Societies are the unfortunate–even tragic–victims of this scurrilous attack. It will also have the unfortunate side-effect (I believe) of attracting people with conservative or anti-government leanings to contribute to the bogus group while believing they’ve done something good for shelter animals.
Unfortunately, people will believe anything they read on the Internet, and that website takes full advantage of this fact. I pity the human children whose parents go their for nutritional information. I pity the farm animals who may be robbed of a voice speaking up on their behalf. And I pity the shelter pets who will die because of this cynically misguided effort.
Eat less red meat and try a couple of vegetarian meals each week. Don’t feed your children the empty calories of sugary drinks, processed sweet cereals, and salty snack foods. Donate what you can to your local shelters and to those national organizations helping animals. Don’t be the shill of agribusiness. They don’t have your best interests at heart.
Comment from SarahHSUS
Time December 20, 2011 at 11:49 am
As someone who works at the HSUS, and has worked at a shelter, I’m glad to see people learning about who is really behind Humane Watch and Humane Society for Shelter Pets.
We at HSUS are proud of the work that we do, and also support the work that shelters and rescues do. It’s important to realize that one can support both national and local efforts to help animals, whether it’s financial, volunteering time, or spreading the word.
At HSUS we work on issues ranging from ending puppy mills to working to have farm animals raised for food treated humanely. As stated in another article about this issue, to say we should spend all of our funds only on animal shelters is like saying that an AIDS charity should spend all its money on hospice and nothing on prevention. We work to prevent pets from ending up in shelters in the first place, in addition to a broad range of other issues, as mentioned above.
I’d encourage folks to check out our FAQ on Berman and why he’s attacking us: http://www.humanesociety.org/issues/opposition/facts/faq_berman_hssp12162011.html
A quick excerpt from that is below:
“Recently, he has aligned himself with the agribusiness lobby and appealed to factory farming interests for support, telling them that he will try and slow down The HSUS’s advances in improving the treatment of farm animals. By attacking The HSUS, Berman and his organizations have given encouragement to others who profit from the status quo cruelty to animals—whether large-scale puppy mill operators, criminal cockfighters, the seal slaughter industry, horse slaughter profiteers, or others.”
Comment from anon
Time December 20, 2011 at 12:28 pm
When I have available funds, I will make ANOTHER HSUS donation! along with usual donations to local shelters.
Comment from Shelley
Time December 20, 2011 at 3:13 pm
His letter to you has several inconsistencies. First of all, he references the new organization’s IRS 990s, but as a new organization, it wouldn’t have any 990 filings yet.
His other organizations, such as HumaneWatch, have been around long enough, but you won’t find any 990 published at any of his web sites. He talks about it, but doesn’t publish any.
He talks about sending a cease and desist to Wayne Pacelle, but anyone can send a cease and desist letter–the term is meaningless unless he has legal grounds to force an action.
Berman’s comment about Pacelle’s statement about the money is confused, to be kind. Rather than directly respond to Pacelle’s claim that 90% of the money goes to Berman’s PR firm, he pretends that Pacelle is talking about the money going to him, personally, and rants about cost of a business doing business.
For a person who hounds the HSUS on financial matters, he and his enterprises have no transparency in their financial dealings, and he seems to be incredibly reluctant to provide financial reporting or even easy access to IRS forms for his “nonprofits”.
As for HSSP, I have to ask: if it’s about local shelters, then why do all the ads feature nothing but the Humane Society of the US?
And we already know from the new director that it was funded by members in the “pet industry”–pet industry? Like large scale commercial dog breeders?
Contradictory information, non-transparent financials…nothing in this engineers trust.
Comment from Tigressbythetail
Time December 20, 2011 at 4:22 pm
“I realized last week that when it comes to ‘nasty,’ I’m a novice” LMAOF!!!!!!!! I almost choked on that one.
I love dogs and cats. I have a house full of them because people don’t spay/neuter. Their “garbage” is my treasure. But the way dogs and cats are treated is directly related to the way all other animals are treated in our society and until respect for ALL species takes root, there will always be abused dogs and cats. That’s why I am a member of the HSUS. My money goes to this organization exactly because they are big and powerful enough to challenge the big and powerful. Local organizations are a bandaid on the problem that will never end until people are educated and laws are changed and that IS the mission of the HSUS. Also, how can Berman and vermin ignore all the mass rescues HSUS has been involved in? Many of them from his clients, the puppymillers. Many of the dogs and cats in these commercials are from those rescues, and if any of the pets are from shelters, the very fact that puppymills are permitted to continue breeding like a factory seriously adds to the overpopulation of those shelters. So how is the public being misled by the HSUS?
Berman represents those who would destroy the HSUS. They have offended agribusiness and the hunting lobby whose animal abuse has too long been hidden from the public eye. It’s really simple. To find the truth, follow the money.
Comment from vida
Time December 20, 2011 at 7:48 pm
Berman, forever tied in my mind to his attempt to discredit MADD-what a conman.
HSUS is not my fave org, I am a no kill advocate but anything involving/backed by Berman is bad news for anyone who cares about animals.
Comment from KateH
Time December 21, 2011 at 12:36 am
Wow, HSUS really has their minions out in force. If anyone has even a small disagreement with how they do things, they go after them like a Blitzkreig. That alone should make people wonder why they are screaming like banshees because someone doesn’t think they are SUPERMARVELOUS. I do appreciate some of what HSUS tries to do, but come on, the fundraising IS deceptive – it really is. How about showing pictures of downer cows and chickens crowded in battery cages so that the work the HSUS does to reduce cruel factory farming practices is highlighted and understood? Instead of showing cats and kittens in shelters, show dogs and puppies outside in the rain in shoddy puppymill cages, so donors understand that HSUS is trying to make puppymills illegal? And please, for dog’s sake, if the HSUS really is in favor of shelter reform, then support the CAPA (Companion Animals Protection Act) bills that are being introduced at the state level, instead of using your lobbying money to defeat them.
Comment from Jen
Time December 21, 2011 at 8:49 am
I think it is important to know to support your local shelters, but the Hsus does great things too and deserve donations as well!
Comment from jonathan gilbert
Time December 21, 2011 at 9:23 am
Uh KateH, They do show a downer cow in one of their commercials. Secondly, there are some glaring loopholes in the CAPA bills ie no due dilligence on rescues that can pull from shelters, being one. Some CAPA require 501(3)(c) status which is nothing but a tax classification and does not vouch for personel and financial stability of any rescue.
Comment from Claudia Prather
Time December 21, 2011 at 10:21 am
One of the people chosen to lead HSSP is Didi Culp. She and Rick Berman have a lot in common. She was formerly employed at the shelter she is now back at. During her time there she actively used her time, computer and phone to help get a neighboring shelter Director fired. Now that is a way to say you want to work with local shelters isn’t it.
Ms. Culp has finally found someone that believes in doing things her way, unfortunately it will do nothing to help one animal.
Comment from Anne’n'Spencer
Time December 21, 2011 at 10:35 pm
Hmm. KateH, I am far from an HSUS “minion.” In fact, people who’ve hung out here for a while have seen outspoken comments from me *against* HSUS.
Vida summed it up in her comment–Berman’s “hatchet job” on MADD. I remember that. Since two people I love were killed some years ago by a drunk driver, you might say I hold a grudge. In case you couldn’t tell from my comment, I also consider him guilty of disseminating misinformation on nutrition and food safety that is harmful to our (human) children.
This happens to be a blog about pets. But whether it’s shelter pets, victims of alcoholic carnage on the road, or poorly nourished children, it’s all the same. The man is a panderer. His skills are on sale to the highest bidder, and he lines his pockets by disseminating clouds of FUD.
Comment from Rose
Time March 1, 2012 at 2:30 am
The HSUS was founded by 4 people who had formerly worked for the American Humane Association (AHA), which did not exist to serve as fund raiser for humane shelters. When the HSUS was founded, there was no intent to serve an impossible task of funding local animal shelters. The founders never claimed that and the HSUS does not claim to financially support local dog and cat rescue shelters. Their agenda, stated in their official history book, Protecting All Animals: A Fifty-Year History of the Humane Society of the United States, is to take on animal protection campaigns that are too large for local groups. And that is exactly what they do – bless them for it. I realize this post is being made rather late, considering the dates of the above posts, but is being made just in case somebody else besides myself, happens on this page.


























































Comment from jonathan gilbert
Time December 20, 2011 at 9:51 am
ALL factual and verifiable info on Berman,and his astroturf world can be found at http://www.humanewatch.info You can also go to fb pg Stop Humanewatch