Pig Trial: Anita Krajnc found not guilty of mischief charge for giving water to pigs - Action News
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Pig Trial: Anita Krajnc found not guilty of mischief charge for giving water to pigs

A judge ruled Thursday that animal rights activist Anita Krajnc, who gave water to pigs outside a slaughterhouse, was not guilty of mischief.

Activist was charged with mischief after she gave water to pigs headed to an Ontario slaughterhouse

Anita Krajnc and actor Mckenna Grace, who attended with PETA, celebrate after charges were dismissed against Krajnc for giving water to pigs en route to slaughter. (Samantha Craggs/CBC)

An Ontario Court judge has found animal activist AnitaKrajnc not guilty of mischief for giving water to pigs outside a slaughterhouse.

Alot of taxpayer money was wasted on this case.- Gary Grill, Anita Krajnc's lawyer

Judge David Harris dismissed a charge Thursday againstKrajnc, the 49-year-oldfounder of Toronto Pig Save. Krajnc was charged after she poured water into the openings of a metal trailer outside Fearman's Pork Inc. in Burlington, Ont., in June 2015.

The trial began last year and included five days of testimony. If convicted, Krajnc could have been fined and sent to jail for six months.

It was clear Krajnc was giving the pigs water, Harrissaid, and not an "unknown liquid" as police initially alleged.And the pigs were slaughtered anyway, which means she didn't obstruct their "lawful use."

Harris rejected the assertion by Krajnc's vegan lawyers, James Silver and Gary Grill, that pigs are persons and not property. He also had stern words for the lawyerscomparing Krajnc to Gandhi,Nelson Mandelaand Susan B. Anthony, a comparison that seemed designed to generate headlines for her cause and"look good in the social media posts."

Compassion is not a crime.- James Silver, defence lawyer

He was also annoyed thatKrajnc's lawyers compared her giving water to pigs to Hungarians giving water to Jews headedto concentration camps.

"I found the comparison to be offensive," Harris said, "and I will be attaching noweight to it in my decision."

Krajnc didn't ask to be charged, Silver said outside the Milton, Ont., courthouseafterward. But since she was, she had the right to present her argument.

"The Crown decided that this was a case that they wished to pursue," he said. "At the very outset, the Crown always had the opportunity to stop the process. In fact, it took weeks before Anita was charged in the very first place. They never had to start the process."

"A lot of taxpayer money was wasted on this case," Grill said.

Overall, Silver called the dismissal a victory. Harris's decision shows "compassion is not a crime," he said.

Farm groups, meanwhile, called it a "disappointing day." They maintain that Krajnc was messing with the food supply.

Anita Krajnc, centre, with lawyers James Silver and Gary Grill are flanked by media and animal activists in March. (Samantha Craggs/CBC)

"What was at stake was our family farms and producing safe quality food," said ClarenceNywening, president of the Christian Farmers Federation of Ontario. "This puts a big jeopardy on our livelihood now."

This puts a big jeopardy on our livelihood now.- Clarence Nywening, Christian Farmers Federation of Ontario

Bruce Kelly, program manager with Farm and Food Care Ontario, didn't see it as a precedent. "This was one day and one court and one incident on one sidewalk in Burlington."

Krajnc's case has attracted intense international interest. It has inspired 150 other Pig Save groups, and celebrities such as Maggie Q and Moby have lent support. Mckenna Grace, the 10-year-old star of the movie Gifted, attended Thursday.

This isn't the end of Krajnc's legal woes. She's charged with obstructing police after a truck rollover near Fearman's in October.

Her next appearance on that charge is May 17 in Milton court.

samantha.craggs@cbc.ca | @SamCraggsCBC