The worldâs largest animal-rights organization is suing the public airport that serves Rock Springs, Wyoming, saying the airport discriminated against it by not allowing an advertisement equating leather carry-on bags with animal cruelty.
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) on Tuesday sued the Southwest Wyoming Regional Airport and its director, Devon Brubaker, in his official capacity in the federal U.S. District Court for Wyoming.
The lawsuit revolves around PETAâs 2022 attempt to buy and display an ad in the airportâs terminal showing a live cow half-converted into a leather luggage bag.
âWas She Killed to Make Your Carry-On?â reads the proposed ad, with a smaller caption that says, âCruelty doesnât fly â Choose vegan.â
Brubaker on the airportâs behalf rejected the ad, saying itâs âjust not something (the airport) needs to have in (its) terminal,â and that it was âless than appropriate for (the) family environment,â according to PETAâs lawsuit complaint.
The document elaborates: âPETA believes that like humans, cows are intelligent, sensitive and social individuals with distinct personalities who crave companionship and play.â Â
If the airportâs terminal is a forum meant for the exchange of speech, then it is unconstitutional for the airport to reject someoneâs protected speech on the basis of the speakerâs viewpoint, the group contends.
PETA alleges that the airport did just that, and then enacted a policy that is both discriminatory and unconstitutionally vague.
The group is asking the federal court to make the airport run PETAâs ad âon the same terms offered to other advertisersâ at the airport.
PETA is also asking for an award of ânominal,â or small monetary damages, reimbursement of its attorneyâs fees and court costs, and for the court to declare that the airport violated PETAâs rights and drafted a discriminatory and unconstitutionally vague advertising policy.
The airport had not yet been served with the lawsuit Wednesday, though it was filed publicly late Tuesday.
Brubaker told Cowboy State Daily on Wednesday that he couldnât comment on the lawsuit at this phase.
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Some Finer Details
PETAâs complaint says its media buyer, Lex Smith, contacted the airport June 21, 2022, about buying four weeks of advertising space for the cow-cruelty ad.
The airport didnât have a written policy on advertising content at that time, the complaint alleges. But the airportâs agreement with its advertising agency, Royal Flush Advertising, says the airport reserves the right to reject ads that are offensive to the moral standards of the community, the document says.
The complaint says that PETAâs request sent Brubaker looking for an ads content policy, and that he essentially copied the Casper Airportâs policy and cited it June 24, 2022, when rejecting PETAâs pitch.
The policy wasnât officially enacted until July 13, 2022, at a meeting of the airport board, the complaint says.
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PETAâs New Yearâs Pitch
PETA emailed Brubaker months later, Dec. 28, 2022, again asking for space for its ad.
Brubaker reportedly responded Jan. 5, 2023, saying the terminal didnât have room for the ad at that time.
PETA asked for any subsequent dates, the complaint says.
âMr. Brubaker responded and made clear that any effort by PETA to appeal his decision would be futile,â says the document.
PETAâs later correspondence with the airportâs attorney George Lemich also was futile, the groupâs complaint claims.
These Bucks
Taxidermy mounts of moose, elk and other animals adorn the airportâs walls. It has reportedly used pro-rodeo and pro-horseback riding messaging to tout its own business, and hosted ads by steakhouses and sushi bars.
PETA claims these âpro-meat eating, anti-animal rights viewpointsâ reveal an âanti-animal rights biasâ undergirding the airportâs rejection of PETAâs ad.
âThey silenced one side of a critical debate about humansâ proper relationship with animals â even as the Airport continued to amplify views on the opposite side of that debate,â says the complaint.
Same Legal Concept, Way Different Angle
Wyomingâs federal court grappled with this same issue last year, albeit from an entirely different angle.
Christian evangelical speaker Todd Schmidt, of Laramie, sued the University of Wyoming for not letting him display a sign calling out a transgender student as âa maleâ and including the Bible verse, âGod created male and female.â
Schmidt invoked roughly the same legal reasoning PETA now cites: that because UWâs student Union is a public forum to some degree, UW could not ban his speech on the basis of his viewpoint.
Schmidt won.
U.S. District Court Judge Nancy Freudenthal early in the case granted Schmidt an injunction so that UW couldnât ban him from the student Union as it had after the sign incident. He later agreed to a settlement that affirmed his free-speech rights.
âViewpoint discrimination is âan egregious form of content discrimination,ââ wrote Freudenthal in her injunction order on Schmidtâs case, quoting from earlier case law. âThe government must abstain from regulating speech when the specific motivating ideology or the opinion or perspective of the speaker is the rationale for the restriction.ââ
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.