A viral campaign to rescue beagles used for experiments is part of a much bigger fight.
Vox Story Spotlight Logo
 

Earlier this month, more than 1,000 activists tried to storm a research dog breeding facility in rural Wisconsin to take out an estimated 2,000 beagles kept there. It was an unprecedented show of support from the animal rights front. But it was met with an unprecedented show of force by law enforcement agencies. Rubber bullets, tear gas, pepper spray, and other suppression methods met the activists, many of whom had never participated in a rescue attempt before. Vox’s own Marina Bolotnikova brings us in-person reporting from the scene. 

Marina, a senior reporter for Vox’s Future Perfect, has covered animal welfare for years and had written about this particular research dog breeder before — and also happens to live nearby. So when she heard that activists were planning not one but two rescue attempts, she told me she would be there to report on them, whether we wanted a story or not. And of course we did. 

Her extensive story (for which she braved tear gas herself) situates the dramatic events of the day in the broader trajectory of animal advocacy. The day appeared to be, as she notes, “a devastating defeat” for the activists, who failed to remove a single dog from the breeder — which has been accused of hundreds of animal welfare violations. But perhaps the extreme force brought by law enforcement that day signals a hidden success: that the movement is now entering a new, more powerful era that has just recently lead to the purchase of 1,500 of the company’s beagles that will be adopted them out to homes. 

This kind of intensive, in-person reporting is made possible by our Vox Members. If you would like to support Vox’s independent journalism, please consider becoming a Vox Member today.

—Katherine Courage, deputy editor Future Perfect

 

How 2,000 beagles set the animal rights movement on fire

A viral campaign pitted activists against police tear gas in Wisconsin. It revealed a much bigger fight.

by Marina Bolotnikova

Activists collided with a heavy police presence at Ridglan Farms

It’s exceptionally rare that the tiny, perpetually marginal, and politically outmatched animal rights movement manages to capture national attention. A lack of attention is that movement’s core problem and central organizing question. How can it convince the public to make space in their minds for something they’d really, really prefer not to: the industrialized torture of animals by the billions for food, research, and other human ends?

One coalition of grassroots activists has offered one possible answer. It has recently mounted one of the most audacious and most news-making animal rights campaigns in recent memory, and, in the process, turned an obscure breeder of beagles for biomedical experimentation into an issue of national political significance.

On March 15, dozens of activists stormed Ridglan Farms, a dog facility outside Madison, Wisconsin, that raises beagles for research labs across the country and has been accused by state regulators of hundreds of animal welfare violations. The activists entered one of the company’s buildings and extracted 30 of the dogs held in cages there (who are, under the law, Ridglan’s property). Twenty-two beagles were driven off the site and have since been placed in homes, while eight were seized from activists by police and believed to be returned to Ridglan.

That event produced an arresting set of images seen by tens of millions of Americans in the news and on social media, and it reached the agenda of political leaders all the way up to Congress and the Trump administration. So, the group, a loose assemblage known as the Coalition to Save the Ridglan Dogs, sought to raise the stakes even higher: They would rapidly recruit and train hundreds of new volunteers and return to Ridglan within a few weeks to remove all of the nearly 2,000 beagles believed to still be confined there. 

This next rescue attempt, on April 18, unfolded much differently, when more than 1,000 activists arriving at the facility were caught off guard by a major show of force from law enforcement. The police, primarily the Dane County Sheriff with help from other law enforcement agencies, tackled activists and deployed rubber bullets; pepper spray; tear gas; and, the sheriff’s office confirmed to me, stinger grenades, which are less-lethal grenades that release rubber pellets and are often used for riot control.

One woman had her nose broken. A 67-year-old Navy veteran was pinned to the ground, covered with tear gas, and struggled to breathe as an officer pressed a knee into his back. Another man trying to go through a hole in Ridglan’s fence was knocked unconscious by police and had a tooth knocked out. Police removed a woman’s protective goggles to douse her in the face with pepper spray. Numerous people ended up in the emergency room. Reporting from the scene, I found myself, for a minute or two, also choked by tear gas.

Read the full story

 

More on Vox

What haunts America’s animal shelter workers

by Kenny Torrella

“It’s draining, heartbreaking, and maddening.”

Why “neighborism” is having a moment

by Sara Radin

After decades of social isolation, people are realizing proximity is a resource.

The surprising reason why buying guns helps endangered species

by Benji Jones

And why wildlife agencies are building so many shooting ranges.

More animal rights coverage >>>

 
Vox logo

This email was sent to npdspy7ne@niepodam.pl. Unsubscribe from this email and manage your email preferences.

View our Privacy Notice and our Terms of Service. View this email in your browser. 

 

Vox Media, 1201 Connecticut Ave. NW, Floor 12, Washington, DC 20036.
Copyright © 2026. All rights reserved.

https://link.vox.com/oc/609000c299147410babf8937r2wva.6t3/380658d5

Facebook TwitterYouTube