Once Bitten

Animal rights activist gets sued, shy

For an animal rights activist who once mounted the Oscar Meyer Wienermobile, Nicolas Atwood is feeling awfully shy these days.

A decade ago, a Miami-Dade police officer had to escort a screaming Atwood off the giant hot dog by sliding him down the fiberglass frank. "Meat is murder!" said Atwood, then 24 and wearing a pink pig mask.

Maybe he's so bashful now because he can't control his most recent media exposure: The New York Stock Exchange is suing Atwood.

As part of a years-long campaign to shut down Huntingdon Life Sciences Inc., an international animal-testing contract company, animal rights activists have been targeting its clients, employees, and financial backers. The NYSE is on their list because Huntingdon shares are bought and sold on its online trading board, NYSE Arca. Exchange spokesman Rich Adamonis declined to comment on the lawsuit, as did Huntingdon's U.S. representative.

"This isn't about me," Atwood says. "It's about the movement."

Atwood runs a print and online magazine, Bite Back, that chronicles nearly everything activists are doing worldwide to fight for the rights of animals. Anytime someone spray-paints the windows of a Paris shop that sells foie gras or sets fire to a meat factory in Germany or rescues a guinea pig in Russia, Atwood posts it at www.directaction.info. In accompanying pictures, ALF is almost always seen spray-painted on a window or the street — that's short for the Animal Liberation Front, which aims to shut down businesses that harm animals. ALF says it's a nonviolent organization, although it endorses property destruction as well as breaking into facilities to rescue monkeys, mice, cats, dogs, or any other living creatures. Its ongoing "Operation Bite Back" was begun to combat fur research facilities and animal feed suppliers.

The stock exchange's lawsuit, filed May 16, also names ALF as a defendant. In the complaint, NYSE lawyer Paul M. Renner says Atwood's website is "encouraging or inciting... extremist and illegal activities." Renner is asking a federal judge to shut down Bite Back and order Atwood and ALF to pay unspecified damages. (A judge on Friday denied the exchange's motion for a temporary restraining order — lawyers are still seeking a permanent injunction.)

In a sworn statement attached to the suit, Brian F. Gimlett, NYSE director of security and a former agent for the U.S. Secret Service, described attacks made on NYSE employees around the world. Among the attacks linked to Atwood's website, according to Gimlett: The tires on the cars of two employees in Amsterdam were burned by acid, and one of their names was spray-painted on a car, as was the word murderer.Both the employees' home addresses were posted on Atwood's website. The same information for two other employees was also posted, as was a credit card number for another individual.

He's just a member of the media, Atwood says as he sits down at a rusting metal table in the backyard of the downtown West Palm Beach house he shares with his wife and dog, at 726 Palm St. He deserves the same protection as the mainstream media, he says, which routinely publishes personal information, including home addresses, about news subjects. Atwood has an unlisted phone number, because, he says, he wants to maintain his privacy. His address, however, is a matter of public record with the Palm Beach County Property Appraiser.

Atwood, now 34, even speaks animal, letting loose this metaphor about his current status as a defendant: "They're an 800-pound gorilla, and I'm just a little mouse."

The afternoon sun is blazing on the silver table, making it almost too hot to touch. The freckled arms of Atwood, a Minnesota native, begin reddening almost as soon as he sits down and reluctantly agrees to talk.

Like any dedicated activist, Atwood has been arrested before — once in 1998 in Fort Lauderdale after he and a member of the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals defaced a brass fish outside Outdoor World, just off Griffin Road near Interstate 95. Officers charged him with trespassing in connection with his summit to the top of the Wienermobile in 1997.

Syndicated columnist and humorist Dave Barry might have been called as a witness in the Wienermobile case if the state attorney's office hadn't dropped the misdemeanor charge against Atwood. In a 1997 column titled "A Frank Exchange," Barry chronicled Atwood's arrest. Oscar Meyer was running a national search for a child to appear in its next commercial and had dispatched a Wienermobile from its Wisconsin-based fleet to the parking lot of a Miami Publix grocery store. Atwood was there along with other members of the Animal Rights Foundation of Florida (ARFF). Wearing his pig mask, Atwood held a sign saying "Please Don't Eat Me."

Metro-Dade Police Officer Guy Duncan popped his head through the Wienermobile's sunroof to give Atwood a trespass citation. "Then, in a quick motion that made it appear as though he had been removing trespassers from the Wienermobiles all of his life, Duncan grabbed the man, spun him sideways and slid him off the roof, down onto the parking lot," Barry wrote. The crowd cheered as Atwood righted himself, back safely on solid ground. And all the while, the auditioning children were singing "Oh, I wish I were an Oscar Meyer wiener..."

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  • Jones 06/01/2007 12:46:00 AM

    Ardeth, you can't be serious. Do you really think Atwood is publishing home addresses and even credit card without being fully aware of what extremists will do with it? He's clearly saying "Here they are - go get em!" Why on earth would you defend actions like these? As for AETA - read it. It is bipartisan legislation that does not infringe on the first amendment. In fact, it hasn't even been used for prosecution yet so before you start crying wolf please make sure you have all your facts in line.

  • ardeth 05/31/2007 9:24:00 PM

    The problem is not animal rights advocates like Atwood. The problem is a law called the Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act (AETA), which is basically wasting the valuable time of the FBI and law enforcement by obliging them to pursue and arrest nonviolent people like Atwood, who are animal lovers, while allowing the real terrorists (you know, the suicide bomber types who are plotting to kill their fellow humans) to run free. There are already laws in existence to prosecute people if they deface public property or verbally threaten people. AETA is superfluous and a threat to everyone's civil rights, not just to the rights of animal and environmental advocates, but corporate America just loves it because it protects their financial interests as they continue to exploit animals for profit.

  • Ann Lowenstein 05/31/2007 8:22:00 PM

    "There is no 'mastermind' in the Animal Rights Movement..." Much like any other terrorist cell, these vicious perverts are isolated from one another to prevent mass arrests. I can't begin to say how delighted I am that the Feds are finally taking these psychotic freaks at face value, calling a spade a spade, and treating them like the criminals they are. I hope the suit against Atwood is a stunning success, and he loses everything. That would make me smile.

 

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