CHAPTER 1
Cruelty Unspoken: Law and Policy Regarding Animals and Sexual Deviance
Stevens grew out of efforts to restrict a form of human-animal sexual interaction that the public found particularly disturbingânamely the production of âcrush videosâ catering to a previously little known fetish. This concern did not arise in a vacuum. Effects to enact and enforce legislation related to interspecies sexual practices have had a lengthy and uneven history.
Bestiality, or animal sexual assault, is one of the rarest forms of animal cruelty and, over the last few decades, has rarely been prosecuted as a primary offense in the absence of other charges of animal cruelty or other crimes. Ironically, such crimes have the longest history of investigation and prosecution in Western society.
The proscription of sexual contact with animals dates from Old Testament times. Deuteronomy states, âcursed be he that lieth with any manner of beast,â1 while Exodus warns âwhosoever lieth with a beast shall surely be put to death.â2 The severity of the penalties for such acts had little or nothing to do with concern about the harm to animals, but rather was based on the notion that such actions upset the natural order of the universe and could lead to the production of monstrous offspring that were the work of the Devil.3
The penalty for such activities in many Western cultures was often death for both the human and non-human participants. Such a trial was depicted as the starting point for the 1993 film The Advocate (released in the United Kingdom as The Hour of the Pig), which was based upon the career and case files of Bartholomew Chassenée, a lawyer in fifteenth-century France who served as an advocate for animals that were accused of crimes.4 Many well-documented cases of such prosecutions exist.5 However, the societal response to bestiality was often inconsistent. There were few prosecutions for bestiality in Colonial America despite the strong Puritan presence.6 In contrast, there were approximately 700 executions for bestiality in Sweden from 1635 to 1778.7
The response of the modern American legal system to sexual activity involving animals has also been inconsistent. Sodomy laws once existed in every state and criminalized various sexual behaviors, including oral and anal sex, even between consenting adults, as well as homosexual behavior, gross lewdness, gross indecency, pedophilia, necrophilia and bestiality. Often all of these were included within the catch-all categories of sodomy or crimes against nature. Since the 1970s, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and other groups have successfully challenged state sodomy laws, usually on the grounds of persecution of individuals based on their sexual orientation and the criminalization of behaviors transpiring between consenting adults. More than 30 states have subsequently repealed their sodomy laws through legislative or court action.8
The repeal of sodomy laws often had the effect of essentially decriminalizing animal sexual assault, unless the act involved some other crime such as animal cruelty, indecent exposure, trespass or breaking and entering. In response to this unintended change, many state legislatures re-enacted provisions specifically targeting bestiality as distinct from other traditional âcrimes against nature.â Approximately 37 states have enacted laws that prohibit sexual contact between humans and animals. Most of these laws were enacted in the last decade: Pennsylvania in 1999, Iowa in 2001, Illinois and Maryland in 2002, Washington (state) and Arizona in 2006, Indiana, Tennessee, and Colorado in 2007, Alaska in 2010, and Florida in 2011. About half of these states provide for felony penalties in cases of animal sexual assault, with provisions for imprisonment for up to twenty years and fines of up to $50,000.9
This climate of increasing concern about sexual offenses involving animals helped set the stage for public reaction to revelations about the existence of crush videos. However, public and professional opinion did not unilaterally favor greater investigation and prosecution of such offenses. Efforts to restore criminal penalties for bestiality have been met with opposition from a contingent of self-described zoophiles who maintain a large Internet presence. Detailed how-to guides for the sexual abuse of animals involving various species can be found, along with information on laws, zoonotic diseases, personal advertisements, pro-zoophile resources, and even advice about how animal abusers can come out to their family and friends. Although such proponents maintain that their behavior constitutes a lifestyle choice analogous to other non-traditional sexual orientations, this view is countered by the prevailing legal, legislative, and societal view that such contact constitutes interspecies sexual assault.
The debate over the dangers of human-animal sexual interaction was further complicated by a number of scholarly reactions. In a 2001 review of Midas Dekkersâ (2000) Dearest Pet: On Bestiality, animal rights philosopher Peter Singer argued that sexual activities between humans and animals that result in harm to the animal should be illegal, but that âsex with animals does not always involve crueltyâ and that âmutually satisfying activitiesâ of a sexual nature may sometimes occur between humans and animals. Singer claims that our discomfort with zoophilia originates in our view of humans as separate and morally superior from the rest of the animal world rather than the direct harm to the animal.10
This apparent defense of animal sexual assault attracted voluminous criticism from animal protection groups and fellow philosophers. Regan criticized Singerâs position as a consequence of his adapting a utilitarian approach to animal rights, rather than a strictly rights-based one, and noted that the rights-based position distances itself from non-consensual sex.11 In an essay entitled âPets or Meat,â Case raises the issue of how to differentiate the act of bestiality from other âtricksâ pets are forced to perform, sometimes through coercion.12
More relevant to later arguments presented in support of strong legislation related to human-animal sexual interactions in general and Section 48 in particular was the growing body of literature from psychologists, clinical social workers and criminologists connecting aberrant sexual conduct with animals to the potential risks posed by the perpetrators to human beings. Beirne was the major voice for reinterpreting bestiality or zoophilia as âanimal sexual assault.â He makes the connection to violence against humans clear, noting that sexual abuse of animals parallels sexual abuse of women and children. It is also problematic because (1) human-animal sexual contact is almost always coercive; (2) often causes pain or death for the animal; and (3) animals are unable to consent or to communicate about their abuse.13 Likewise, Ascione notes that bestiality may be considered cruel even in cases when physical harm to an animal does not occur, drawing a parallel to cases of adult sexual activity with a child where consent is presumed to be impossible.14
Other research indicated that the sexual abuse of animals is often anecdotally linked to the sexual abuse of women and children. This form of domestic violence involves the use of animals for degradation and sexual exploitation of the battered partner. Bestiality may be a part of further tormenting and humiliating the victim.15 Child sexual abusers may also sexually abuse animals to enhance, expand, or extend the abuse of the genuinely powerless and unsuspecting victim.16 Some case studies of sexual abuse of children include reports of forcing children to interact sexually with animals.17
Animal sexual contact is higher in some clinical and adjudicated populations. In one study, psychiatric patients exhibited a significantly higher prevalence rate (55%) of bestiality than control groups of medical inpatients (10%) and psychiatric staff members (15%).18 Research also indicates a connection between animal sexual abuse and other types of violent crimes. Forty percent of the perpetrators of sexually motivated homicides who had been sexually abused as children report that they had sexually abused animals.19 Duffield et al. report on seven young incarcerated psychiatric patients identified as having committed a sexual act with an animal.20 They characterize this sample as âseverely disturbed young persons who may suffer with other psychiatric disorders, such as severe conduct disorder, personality disorder, substance abuse, or psychosis.â21 Other clinical findings supported greater concern about animal sexual assault. Frazier looked at thirty sexually violent juveniles. Of these, 90% reported having abused animals with 37% reporting sexual abuse of animals.22
The specific concern about the public health and safety issues raised by sexually-oriented animal cruelty grew, in part, out of a much broader growth of public policy concern about the large and growing body of literature showing the connection between many forms of animal cruelty and the potential for acts of violence against people.23 Although much of this literature existed well before 1980, it attracted little attention until popularized by animal advocacy groups, social service workers and growing public fascination with the life histories of violent offenders. Arguments based on this expanding body of literature were often at the core of proposed legislation, as well as the legal argumen...