Lawsuit seeks to represent anyone who purchased tickets, memberships or SeaWorld orca experiences.
Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro LLP is a consumer-rights class-action law firm with offices in nine cities. The firm has been named to the National Law Journals Plaintiffs Hot List eight times.
SeaWorld customers, represented by attorneys at Hagens Berman, today filed a ground-breaking class-action lawsuit against SeaWorld Entertainment Inc. (NYSE: SEAS), alleging that SeaWorld deliberately conceals the unethical treatment and conditions of its captive orcas, including psychoactive drugging, forced separation of calves from mothers, forced and unnatural breeding, and cramped conditions that lead to aggression and disease, according to the filing.
The lawsuit states that SeaWorld has also hidden dangers to whale trainers, misleading the public through a deceptive and false illusion that its whales are thriving and well cared-for when the opposite is true. The lawsuit seeks to represent hundreds of thousands of visitors to SeaWorld’s entertainment parks located in California, Florida and Texas.
The lawsuit, filed on Mar. 25, 2015 in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of California, focuses on the treatment of orcas captive at SeaWorldand performing in SeaWorlds Shamu show in which orcas perform in a seemingly peaceful and cooperative manner with trainers to the delight of millions of consumers. During its signature Shamu show and in its massive global marketing campaign, SeaWorld states that it cares for, protects and even nourishes its captive orcas, according to the complaint. The deceptive and false illusion carefully scripted by SeaWorld that these orcas thrive and are willing if not eager performers has been created for the public and has concealed not only the mistreatment of these animals, but also concealed orca behavior that evidences how their captive lives at SeaWorld are harmful to their welfare, the complaint reads.
Lawsuit: SeaWorld’s Mistreatment of Orca Whales.
- Psychoactive Drugs: According to the complaint, the conditions and treatment of SeaWorlds orcas leads SeaWorld to administer a variety of powerful drugs to them, sometimes for their entire lives. Among the drugs forced upon its captive orcas are antacid products, used to treat stress-induced ulcers and antipsychotic and psychoactive drugs, including generic Valium given to calm captive whales, according to the lawsuit.
- Teeth Damage and Infection: The lawsuit states that due to forced confinement at SeaWorld, orcas routinely rip paint off the inner walls of their pools by using their teeth something SeaWorld allegedly hides from the public. SeaWorlds orcas also obsessively damage their teeth along the ledges, floors and pool stages, wearing down their teeth and leaving holes ripe for bacteria to enter the bloodstream. Whales are often subjected to a lifelong daily flushing regimen to stave off infection, according to the complaint.
- Severe Confinement: Orcas often swim up to 100 miles a day in the wild but are kept in unnatural and unhealthy small tanks according to the lawsuit. SeaWorld keeps its orcas in a series of interlocking chemical baths. When not actually performing, SeaWorlds captive orcas spend many hours a day in so-called med pools only eight feet deep, the lawsuit states.
- Shortened Lifespan: Orcas in the wild have an average life closer to that of human beings their estimated maximum lifespan is 60 to 70 years for males and 80 to more than 90 for females. The suit states that in captivity, most die in their teens or 20s and only a handful have reached 35.
- Separation of Calves: The complaint states that SeaWorld separates mothers from calves, and separated mothers exhibit distressed behavior for years as a result in at least one instance emitting unique long-range vocalizations long after a calf was taken to another amusement park.
- Exposure to Harsh Sunlight: The orcas are kept in shallow pools and have nearly perpetual sunburns that SeaWorld allegedly covers up with black zinc oxide, the suit states.
- Collapsed Dorsal Fins: The lawsuit alleges that as a result of captivity, orcas at SeaWorld have collapsed dorsal fins a condition rarely found in the wild though SeaWorld falsely denies this is the case.
Source: seekingalpha.com