PETA claims free speech victory in WY’s cattle country | Western Livestock Journal
Home E-Edition Search Profile
News

PETA claims free speech victory in WY’s cattle country

Angus M. Thuermer Jr., WyoFile
Mar. 07, 2025 3 minutes read
PETA claims free speech victory in WY’s cattle country

The animal rights group PETA claimed a free speech victory Feb. 27, saying it reached a settlement in a lawsuit against the Rock Springs, WY, airport, which had refused to let it advertise a message criticizing leather luggage.

In the heart of Wyoming’s cattle and rodeo country, where cowboys ride leather saddles, cowgirls wear leather boots and most everybody else has leather gloves, airport officials blocked People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) from buying advertising urging fliers not to travel with leather luggage. The airport will pay PETA $35,000 in legal fees and allow it to advertise as it does others, the animal rights group said.

“PETA is celebrating this victory for the First Amendment and for cows who don’t want to be tormented and killed for their skins,” Asher Smith, PETA Foundation’s director of litigation, said in a statement.

The rejected ad depicts a leather handbag with a cow’s head and legs—it looks to be a red-and-white Holstein dairy cow seldom seen in the area. Next to the image is the question, “Was she killed to make your carry-on?”

In its suit, PETA claimed that the airport, which advertised rodeo events on various platforms, invented a reason to reject PETA’s carry-on criticism. “[R]ather than allowing the ad to run, the airport, as alleged, quickly scrambled to create a set of policy guidelines to justify rejecting it,” PETA said in a statement announcing the settlement.

An airport official did not immediately respond to a request for comment. However, the airport director responded March 3 saying the settlement allows for the placement of a PETA advertisement in the airport but “sets no precedents” on advertising policies or practices. “No taxpayer dollars were used to settle this case,” Director Devon Brubaker wrote in an email. “Our insurance carrier made a payment to settle the case to avoid the accrual of further legal fees.”

The organization originally fought the lawsuit. Court filings state that the parties have reached a settlement, but the case, filed in June 2024, appears to need judicial approval before it is completely resolved.

The airport’s actions were unconstitutional, the suit asserted. Further, travelers can easily find vegan leather for their carry-ons, the group said.

Cows have friends, hold grudges and mourn, PETA said. Cowboys and cowgirls who no longer want to saddle their consciousnesses with the burden of the leather industry can avail themselves of the organization’s empathy kits, the group said. — Angus M. Thuermer Jr., WyoFile

Republished from WyoFile.

Share this article

Join the Discussion

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Read More

Read the latest digital edition of WLJ.

March 20, 2026

© Copyright 2026 Western Livestock Journal