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California woman on trial for taking chickens from Perdue Farms' plant says she was rescuing them

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California woman on trial for taking chickens from Perdue Farms' plant says she was rescuing them
News

News

California woman on trial for taking chickens from Perdue Farms' plant says she was rescuing them

2025-10-29 08:31 Last Updated At:08:40

SANTA ROSA, Calif. (AP) — A California animal rights activist on trial for taking four chickens from one of Perdue Farms' major poultry plants said Tuesday that she was rescuing Poppy, Ivy, Aster, and Azalea from abuse while prosecutors say she broke the law.

Zoe Rosenberg, 23, faces more than five years in prison if convicted of a felony conspiracy charge and two misdemeanor counts of trespassing and a misdemeanor count of tampering with a vehicle.

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Animal rights activist Zoe Rosenberg, right, who is on trial for taking four chickens from one of Perdue Farms' major poultry plants, stands next to her attorney Chris Carraway outside Sonoma County Superior Court in Santa Rosa, Calif. on Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Terry Chea)

Animal rights activist Zoe Rosenberg, right, who is on trial for taking four chickens from one of Perdue Farms' major poultry plants, stands next to her attorney Chris Carraway outside Sonoma County Superior Court in Santa Rosa, Calif. on Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Terry Chea)

Animal rights activist Zoe Rosenberg, who is on trial for taking four chickens from one of Perdue Farms' major poultry plants, is pictured outside Sonoma County Superior Court in Santa Rosa, Calif. on Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Terry Chea)

Animal rights activist Zoe Rosenberg, who is on trial for taking four chickens from one of Perdue Farms' major poultry plants, is pictured outside Sonoma County Superior Court in Santa Rosa, Calif. on Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Terry Chea)

Animal welfare activist Zoe Rosenberg leads a protest march to the Sonoma County Sheriff's Office in Santa Rosa, Nov. 30, 2023. (Chad Surmick/The Press Democrat via AP)

Animal welfare activist Zoe Rosenberg leads a protest march to the Sonoma County Sheriff's Office in Santa Rosa, Nov. 30, 2023. (Chad Surmick/The Press Democrat via AP)

Animal welfare activist Zoe Rosenberg is arrested on a warrant by Sonoma County sheriff's deputy Joel Auerbach after a rally and subsequent march in response to the sentencing of fellow activist Wayne Hsiung at Sonoma County Superior Court in Santa Rosa, Nov. 30, 2023. (Chad Surmick/The Press Democrat via AP)

Animal welfare activist Zoe Rosenberg is arrested on a warrant by Sonoma County sheriff's deputy Joel Auerbach after a rally and subsequent march in response to the sentencing of fellow activist Wayne Hsiung at Sonoma County Superior Court in Santa Rosa, Nov. 30, 2023. (Chad Surmick/The Press Democrat via AP)

Animal rights activist Zoe Rosenberg talks to reporters outside the Sonoma County Superior Courthouse before her preliminary hearing May 3, 2024, in Santa Rosa, Calif. (Chad Surmick/The Press Democrat via AP)

Animal rights activist Zoe Rosenberg talks to reporters outside the Sonoma County Superior Courthouse before her preliminary hearing May 3, 2024, in Santa Rosa, Calif. (Chad Surmick/The Press Democrat via AP)

During the seven-week trial, her defense hasn’t focused on if she took the chickens from Petaluma Poultry in 2023 that supplies chickens to Perdue Farms — one of the United States' largest poultry providers for major grocery chains — but rather on the justification for doing so.

Rosenberg testified she disguised herself as a Petaluma Poultry worker using a fake badge and earpiece, according to The Press Democrat, a newspaper in Santa Rosa where the trial is being held. She shared a videotape on social media that showed what she did. She said she was acting out of concern about animal cruelty, not as part of a criminal conspiracy.

“These chickens were incredibly ill and they needed care and I think that when an animal is in distress, when an animal is being abused and the authorities aren’t stepping in, and they aren’t helping those animals that we do have the legal right to help them ourselves," Rosenberg told The Associated Press in an interview before Tuesday's closing arguments in the trial.

“My intent was to help animals and to do so legally, not to break the law," she added.

On Tuesday, about three dozen supporters wore orange poppies made of paper in their hair or attached to their clothes in representation of one of the rescued chickens named after the flower and as a show of support for Rosenberg.

Chris Carraway, one of Rosenberg’s lawyers, said in an interview Tuesday that the case is not "a whodunit but a why-dunit."

“Zoe really believed to her core that these chickens were suffering and that sincere belief guided her conduct to an act of compassion, an act of rescue,” Carraway told the jury.

Prosecutors argued that what she did was illegal. They said she did it as a publicity stunt for Direct Action Everywhere, or DxE, a Berkeley-based animal rights group that Rosenberg joined when she was 12 years old.

Petaluma Poultry, a subsidiary of Perdue, has said that DxE is an extremist group that is intent on destroying the animal agriculture industry. The company says the animals were not mistreated.

“Zoe Rosenberg and her associates illegally broke into Petaluma Poultry — not to save animals, but to steal sensitive company information,” said spokesman Rob Muelrath in a statement. “This was not an isolated incident. It was a coordinated operation, carried out with others. As the court has already noted, their actions triggered a temporary facility shutdown and posed contamination risks that created a more dangerous situation than they claimed to be addressing.”

DxE is known for animal rescues and protests that often garner national attention. Prosecutors say Rosenberg entered Petaluma Poultry without authorization four times and attached GPS devices to 12 delivery vehicles before taking the chickens from a trailer and leaving with them, while about 50 DxE members demonstrated outside, the Press Democrat reported.

Rosenberg's lawyers said she spent months looking into the alleged abuse and she consulted a veterinarian who was concerned about images that appeared to show animals being boiled alive.

Deputy District Attorney Matt Hobson told the jury in his closing arguments that the action at Petaluma Poultry in 2023 was not out of concern for the animals but an effort to get publicity.

“Getting filmed is more important than those chickens. Getting publicity is more important than those chickens,” Hobson said, pointing out Rosenberg’s defense didn’t call to the stand the veterinarian who reportedly checked on the rescued animals.

In recent years, similar cases involving animal rights activists have gone to court with mixed results in front of juries across the U.S. But in California's Sonoma County, where agriculture is one of the main industries, Rosenberg faces an especially uphill battle.

Sonoma County just two years ago successfully prosecuted DxE co-founder Wayne Hsiung for his role in two factory farm protests in Petaluma. Hsiung was sentenced to 90 days in jail and two years of probation, the San Francisco Chronicle reported. The county is believed to have prosecuted more cases against animal rights activists than any other in the country.

Another DxE member, Raven Deerbrook, faced similar charges to Rosenberg before reaching a plea agreement in June 2024. She described herself as a former DxE member and testified for Rosenberg last week, saying she launched an investigation into Petaluma Poultry and notified Rosenberg about possible animal cruelty, the Press Democrat reported.

As a condition to stay out of custody, Rosenberg, a University of California, Berkeley student, had to wear an ankle monitor until around the beginning of the trial last month.

“An immense amount of government resources have been spent prosecuting me for the alleged ‘crime’ of rescuing four abused chickens from a Perdue slaughterhouse,” she wrote in an Instagram post on Monday.

“Most distressing, however, is the fact that these resources are not being spent on stopping the criminal animal cruelty at Perdue’s facilities. Poppy, Ivy, Aster, and Azalea are safe but so many others are not," she said, referencing the names her group gave to the chickens she took. They are now at an animal sanctuary.

Prosecutors say the break-ins to the processing plant fit a pattern of Rosenberg's activism.

“You want open rescue to be something that happens everywhere?” Hobson asked Rosenberg during cross-examination last week.

“Yes,” Rosenberg replied.

Rosenberg was previously arrested in April 2022 for chaining herself to a basketball post during an NBA playoff game between the Memphis Grizzlies and Minnesota Timberwolves. She was protesting Rembrandt Farms, which houses millions of chickens and is owned by then Timberwolves’ owner Glen Taylor, for alleged animal abuse.

Animal rights activist Zoe Rosenberg, right, who is on trial for taking four chickens from one of Perdue Farms' major poultry plants, stands next to her attorney Chris Carraway outside Sonoma County Superior Court in Santa Rosa, Calif. on Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Terry Chea)

Animal rights activist Zoe Rosenberg, right, who is on trial for taking four chickens from one of Perdue Farms' major poultry plants, stands next to her attorney Chris Carraway outside Sonoma County Superior Court in Santa Rosa, Calif. on Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Terry Chea)

Animal rights activist Zoe Rosenberg, who is on trial for taking four chickens from one of Perdue Farms' major poultry plants, is pictured outside Sonoma County Superior Court in Santa Rosa, Calif. on Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Terry Chea)

Animal rights activist Zoe Rosenberg, who is on trial for taking four chickens from one of Perdue Farms' major poultry plants, is pictured outside Sonoma County Superior Court in Santa Rosa, Calif. on Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Terry Chea)

Animal welfare activist Zoe Rosenberg leads a protest march to the Sonoma County Sheriff's Office in Santa Rosa, Nov. 30, 2023. (Chad Surmick/The Press Democrat via AP)

Animal welfare activist Zoe Rosenberg leads a protest march to the Sonoma County Sheriff's Office in Santa Rosa, Nov. 30, 2023. (Chad Surmick/The Press Democrat via AP)

Animal welfare activist Zoe Rosenberg is arrested on a warrant by Sonoma County sheriff's deputy Joel Auerbach after a rally and subsequent march in response to the sentencing of fellow activist Wayne Hsiung at Sonoma County Superior Court in Santa Rosa, Nov. 30, 2023. (Chad Surmick/The Press Democrat via AP)

Animal welfare activist Zoe Rosenberg is arrested on a warrant by Sonoma County sheriff's deputy Joel Auerbach after a rally and subsequent march in response to the sentencing of fellow activist Wayne Hsiung at Sonoma County Superior Court in Santa Rosa, Nov. 30, 2023. (Chad Surmick/The Press Democrat via AP)

Animal rights activist Zoe Rosenberg talks to reporters outside the Sonoma County Superior Courthouse before her preliminary hearing May 3, 2024, in Santa Rosa, Calif. (Chad Surmick/The Press Democrat via AP)

Animal rights activist Zoe Rosenberg talks to reporters outside the Sonoma County Superior Courthouse before her preliminary hearing May 3, 2024, in Santa Rosa, Calif. (Chad Surmick/The Press Democrat via AP)

MADRID (AP) — A high-speed train derailed, jumped onto the track in the opposite direction and slammed into an oncoming train Sunday in southern Spain, killing at least 20 people and injuring dozens more, officials said.

The evening train between Malaga and Madrid went off the rails near Córdoba and slammed into a train coming from Madrid to Huelva, another southern Spanish city, according to rail operator Adif. The two trains were carrying around 500 passengers, according to media reports.

Antonio Sanz, regional health minister for the Andalusia region where the crash happened, said officials told him that there are over 20 dead and they fear the death toll may rise further.

Rescue operations are ongoing, he said, adding that 73 injured passengers have been taken to six different hospitals.

He said at least one passenger carriage had rolled down a four-meter (13-foot) slope.

Francisco Carmona, the firefighter chief of Cordoba, told Spanish national radio RNE that one of the trains was badly mangled, with at least four wagons off the rails.

The situation at the crash site “is very serious,” Sanz said. “We have a very difficult night ahead.”

The regional Civil Protection chief, María Belén Moya Rojas, told Canal Sur the accident happened in an area that is hard to reach.

Local people were taking blankets and water to the scene to help the victims, she said.

High-speed trains, running on an extensive national network, are a popular way to travel in Spain.

Spain’s military emergency relief units joined the deployment of other rescue units. The Red Cross also provided support to healthcare officials.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said in a post on X that she was following “the terrible news” from Cordoba.

“Tonight you are in my thoughts,” she wrote in Spanish.

ADIF said train services between Madrid and cities in Andalucia would not run Monday.

Wilson contributed to this report from Barcelona, Spain.

Passengers wait in the hall of Madrid train station on Sunday, January 18, 2026, following the announcement of the suspension of service due to an accident in which two trains derailed in Cordoba. ( Carlos Luján/Europa Press via AP)

Passengers wait in the hall of Madrid train station on Sunday, January 18, 2026, following the announcement of the suspension of service due to an accident in which two trains derailed in Cordoba. ( Carlos Luján/Europa Press via AP)

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