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    You are at:Home»State News»Lawsuit: Kansas “Ag-Gag” law violates free speech rights

    Lawsuit: Kansas “Ag-Gag” law violates free speech rights

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    By KMAN Staff on December 6, 2018 State News

    WICHITA — Animal rights groups are challenging a Kansas law banning secret filming at slaughterhouses and other livestock facilities.

    At issue in the federal lawsuit filed Tuesday is the state’s “Ag-Gag” law enacted in 1990. The law makes it a crime for anyone to take a picture or video at animal facilities without the owner’s consent or to enter them under false pretenses.

    The Animal Legal Defense Fund, the Center for Food Safety and others contend in their lawsuit that undercover operations expose unsafe and inhumane conditions. They argue such investigations are a crucial form of free speech.

    The Kansas attorney general’s office said will defend the statute against this lawsuit.

    Similar laws in Utah, Idaho and some other states have been struck down as an unconstitutional violation of the First Amendment.

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