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FOLSOM, Calif. — Less than two months after its grand opening in Folsom, PETA is demanding that that city animals services investigate SeaQuest Aquarium on Palladio Pkwy.
In a letter sent to the City, PETA said that there have been numerous apparent violations of Folsom’s animal services ordinance, which requires that all animals be provided with “veterinary care when needed to prevent suffering” and “humane care and treatment…at all times.”
In the letter, PETA points to several instances of neglect and inhumane treatment of animals reported by eyewitnesses at the aquarium in December and January.
"Video footage taken by a visitor shows a fish who apparently jumped from its tank, likely suffocating on the ground for up to two minutes before a staff member finally placed the animal back in the tank," PETA said in a press release.
"In addition, a dead eel and a dead, decomposing stingray were reportedly found in the tanks — and fish whose breathing appeared rapid and strained were floating motionless in a cloudy tank," PETA said.
“Animals are in danger every minute they’re imprisoned at SeaQuest in the custody of inexperienced workers and repeatedly grabbed and poked at by visitors,” says PETA Foundation Director of Captive Animal Law Enforcement Brittany Peet. “PETA is calling on authorities to investigate these alarming claims and, if warranted, throw the book at this cruel, sleazy operation.”
"One former employee alleges that at least 300 animals died at the SeaQuest location in Las Vegas," PETA said in the above mentioned press release. "In November, PETA — whose motto reads, in part, that 'animals are not ours to use for entertainment' — protested the opening of the SeaQuest location in Folsom, and in October, actor Alec Baldwin sent a letter on PETA’s behalf urging his hometown of Massapequa, New York, not to allow the company to open an aquarium there."