The only surviving cow among a group of 40 bovines who escaped a Pico Rivera slaughterhouse has arrived at her new home at a Southland Farm Sanctuary, where she will live out her days in peace, officials said Sunday.
“The as-of-yet unnamed cow is very hesitant and fearful of humans, which is unsurprising considering everything she's gone through,” Farm Sanctuary in Acton posted Sunday. “She'll likely calm down as the days go on, and she comes to recognize that we aren't going to hurt her, though she may never warm up to humans fully. But that's one of the great parts of Sanctuary: we don't force her to spend time with us; we allow her to just be."
“She'll also have a routine thirty-day quarantine period to ensure she's healthy, and doesn't have anything she could pass on to our other residents. These first days, though, are just for her to settle in.”
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The sanctuary said the cow arrived at the facility on Saturday.
Farm Sanctuary is reopening to the public for tours on July 10. There will be food available for purchase presented by Vegan Street Fair and featuring Vegan Hooligans and Happy Ice, and visitors will get a chance to meet other survivors from Manning Beef.
More information can be found at FarmSanctuary.org.
Forty cows got away Tuesday night when an employee mistakenly left a door open. The animals stampeded through residential streets, causing some property damage. One was killed by a sheriff's deputy after charging at a family, and one was recovered two days later in South El Monte, about five miles away.
That animal was sent to Farm Sanctuary thanks to the efforts of songwriter Diane Warren and the group Animal Alliance Network.
“Seeing these cows escaping their horrible fate broke my heart,” Warren said. “They knew what awaited them. These are smart, empathetic, beautiful souls.”
Meanwhile, despite offers from other sanctuaries to provide homes for some of the other cows who briefly escaped the slaughterhouse, the other animals were killed for meat, company officials said.
“I am in the meat business. The animals were harvested. Note they were raised for the public to consume,” Anthony Di Maria, chairman of Manning Beef LLC, told City News Service.
Pico Rivera City Manager Steve Carmona said Thursday the city had been talking to Manning Beef about possibly moving all the escaped cows to a sanctuary. Carmona said the city had “a number of folks who reached out -- other sanctuaries and also private individuals -- who offered to donate to acquire these animals. We will facilitate the dialogue with the owner to see if that can happen.”
But Di Maria said Saturday that only one cow would be donated.
He added that he has donated both mother and calf “numerous times” to sanctuaries in the past when a pregnant animal is delivered to the facility.
“We do have feelings as humans for animals,” Pico Rivera City Councilman Erik Lutz told reporters Thursday. “... It's ironic, but yes we do have to eat, and in a couple of hours I'd imagine all of you will be hungry too.”
Carmona added that Pico Rivera “obviously will not allow any future slaughterhouse to exist” in the city.
About 40 demonstrators gathered outside the slaughterhouse in the 9500 block of Beverly Road on Thursday evening to plead for the cows' freedom, and Manning Beef's Facebook page contained several posts this week from members of the public urging the company to spare the animals' lives.
“While it seems like it should be simple to donate an animal to a sanctuary, strict but important regulations that are in place to keep animals and humans safe apply in the situation. We're in the process of releasing the last cow found,” the company posted early Saturday.
The company also said its owner was injured during the original effort to recover the animals.
“The owner actually broke his hip while helping to corral the cattle. While his surgery today was successful, he remains in a great deal of pain and will face a long road towards recovery,” the post said.
Shortly after 4 a.m. Thursday, Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department officials received a call from someone who had spotted the final cow, and deputies managed to find the animal at about 6 a.m. near Rosemead Boulevard and the Pomona (60) Freeway.
The cows escaped around 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, when the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department's Pico Rivera station received a call of cows running loose on city streets.
Sheriff's officials said an open gate had allowed the cows to flee the slaughterhouse at about 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. The cows were on the loose for hours, roaming through residential neighborhoods and evading capture.
One of the cows charged a family of four, knocking some of them to the ground, according to the sheriff's department. The family members were taken to a local hospital, where they were treated for minor injuries.
“To protect the family from further injury, a Los Angeles County Sheriff's deputy shot and killed the animal,” according to the department.
A leading animal rights group on Wednesday expressed sorrow at the animals' recapture.
“PETA wishes the cows who escaped from a slaughterhouse into a Pico Rivera, California, neighborhood on Tuesday had made it to freedom, something they fought hard to gain, instead of being rounded up and returned to the slaughterhouse or -- in one cow's case -- being shot on the scene by law enforcement,” according to a PETA statement.
“These cows' desperate bid for freedom should have been recognized by moving them to a sanctuary, where they could have bonded with other rescued cows, nursed their calves in peace, and lived out their lives just as you and I hope to do,” PETA President Ingrid Newkirk said. “PETA invites anyone who cheered their escape or mourned their deaths to extend that compassion to all cows -- and all other animals -- by going vegan.”