Your help is needed for animal emergencies

Your support is needed so that we can answer every emergency call that we receive.
   
 
 

Dear Aaaaaaa,

In a shuttered drug lab in Wisconsin, a cat and several rabbits are left trapped without anyone to care for them. In Texas, a turtle found by the side of a road with a cracked shell struggles to survive. In a trash-strewn vacant lot in Indiana, an abandoned dog languishes alone on a heavy chain.

Each of these animals was rescued, thanks to the determination of PETA caseworkers who receive dozens of calls and e-mails for help about suffering animals every single day. We're on call 24/7 to help them, but the only way we can answer each and every one of these calls—or carry out all our other work to uncover, expose, and stop cruelty to animals—is through your support.

Name: Aaaaaaa Dsfsd Sd
Member ID: 903758554
Annual Fund Supporter Status: PENDING
Campaign Deadline: July 31, 2018
Animals in your community need our help year-round. Please give $5 or more to the 2018 Annual Fund for Animals today.
Donate Now!
 

The 2018 Annual Fund for Animals leverages the power of caring PETA donors to save animals from being abused and neglected in any way.

From launching in-depth eyewitness investigations of laboratories or cruel meat, egg, or dairy industry farms to rescuing individual dogs and cats from abusive owners, PETA will use your gift to support work that saves animals' lives.

Here are just a few ways our Annual Fund for Animals has helped animals during the last year:

  • Following a 10-year PETA campaign that included three eyewitness investigations in South America, Israel banned the importation of beef from slaughterhouses that use the archaic "shackle and hoist" method of kosher slaughter.
  • After years of pressure from PETA, the Coast Guard became the first branch of the U.S. military to end the shooting, stabbing, dismembering, and killing of animals in trauma training exercises.
  • Soon after PETA exposed the appalling cruelty at The Pet Blood Bank in Texas, the filthy dog blood farm closed, 151 greyhounds were released for adoption, and the greyhound-racing industry embraced long-overdue policies related to dogs and blood banks.

But for every facility we help shut down or animal we save, there is a new report of cruelty or another animal who urgently needs our help. PETA's Cruelty Investigations Department is on call 24 hours a day, seven days a week, to respond to any and all reports of abuse and neglect, including the many calls that we receive in the evening and on weekends.

We get phone calls about starved horses, urgent e-mails about dogfighting rings, alerts from distressed individuals who have seen sickly birds in pet stores or mice stuck on glue traps, and more. Sometimes, we receive calls from kind people about a lonely dog chained and ignored in a backyard or an injured cat roaming the streets. These people know that when an animal is in trouble, PETA will help.

We cannot answer these calls—or continue all of our work to uncover, expose, and stop cruelty to animals—without your gift to the 2018 PETA Annual Fund for Animals before the July 31 deadline.

By being one of the 1,000 donors we need, you'll be helping us raise the funds required to support our investigative, rescue, advocacy, and informational efforts that protect animals.

When living, feeling beings are in trouble, PETA will do all that we can to help them. Thank you for your compassion—your support makes a critical difference for those who need our help.

Kind regards,

Ingrid E. Newkirk
President

 

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