About the coalition
How we got here.
This campaign did not start in 2026. It started in 2017, when three rescuers walked into a Wisconsin facility in broad daylight and carried three beagles into freedom. Everything that has happened since — the prosecution, the silence, the dropped charges, the special prosecutor, the surrendered license, the rescues, the riot police — flows from what was found on that day, and from a coalition of ordinary people who refused to look away.
The history
From three beagles to a thousand rescuers.
- April 2017
The first open rescue
Eva Hamer, Paul Picklesimer, and Wayne Hsiung walked into Ridglan Farms in broad daylight, documented the conditions, and carried out three beagles in distress: Julie, Anna, and Lucy. Julie — facility ID “DPS6” — has now lived in a loving home for almost a decade. Open rescue had arrived in Wisconsin.
- 2018
The arrests, then the silence
A year after the rescue, the three were arrested on felony burglary and theft charges — a potential 16 years in prison and a $35,000 fine. The Dane County District Attorney then sat on the underlying cruelty complaints for six years, ignoring nearly 1,000 emails from the public asking why a facility with hundreds of state violations was not being prosecuted.
- March 2024
Charges dropped — ten days before trial
Ten days before Eva, Paul, and Wayne were set to face a Dane County jury, the prosecution collapsed. Judge Mario White granted dismissal. The case the state had used to silence the rescuers became the case that exposed the silence.
Wayne Hsiung — “Why the Ridglan Prosecution Fell Apart” → - 2024
The push for a special prosecutor
With the District Attorney refusing to act, citizens petitioned the courts for a special prosecutor under Wisconsin law. A judge agreed to weigh the petition — the first formal admission that local prosecution had failed and the public had standing to demand otherwise.
- January 2025
A judge finds probable cause for felony cruelty
After an evidentiary hearing where Ridglan's own footage and inspector reports were entered as exhibits, a Wisconsin state court judge ruled there was probable cause to charge Ridglan Farms with felony animal cruelty. The factual core of the activists' case became the official finding of the court.
- October 2025
Ridglan agrees to surrender its breeding license
Under a settlement with the special prosecutor, Ridglan Farms agreed to surrender its Wisconsin commercial dog-breeding license by July 1, 2026 and to stop selling dogs to other laboratories. The facility that had operated for decades was forced to commit to closing its breeding pipeline.
- March 15, 2026
We went in. We got them out.
100+ rescuers converged on Ridglan at dawn and removed 30 beagles from a facility with 311 documented cruelty violations. Police seized 8 of the dogs, returned them to the facility, and arrested 27 of the rescuers. For most of the dogs who made it to safety, it was the first time they had been outside.
See the evidence → - April 18, 2026
1,000+ ordinary Americans came back
Teachers. Doctors. Nurses. Students. Families. Democrats and Republicans. They came committed to non-violence. Wisconsin law enforcement met them with tear gas, then pepper spray, then rubber bullets at close range, then their hands. Hundreds came home with injuries — and the kind of memories that don't go away.
See the full record →
Why it took a coalition
No single organization could have moved this.
The coalition
Who’s behind it.
Local Wisconsin nonprofit · founded by Rebekah Robinson
Dane4Dogs
A Wisconsin 501(c)(3) that has worked for years to end the breeding, sale, and use of dogs and cats for laboratory experimentation. Helped pass six municipal ordinances banning the practice across the state. Sued — and beat — Ridglan Farms when the facility tried to silence them.
Policy + alternatives · led by Amy Van Aartsen
The Marty Project
A nonprofit advancing public policy that replaces dogs in product-safety testing with evidence-based scientific alternatives. Co-led the documentation effort that obtained UW–Madison records of 19 Ridglan dogs purchased between 2022 and 2023.
Open rescue + grassroots organizing
Direct Action Everywhere (DxE)
The grassroots network that brought open rescue to Wisconsin in 2017. Eva Hamer, Paul Picklesimer, and Wayne Hsiung were DxE investigators when they carried out Julie, Anna, and Lucy. DxE has been organizing on Ridglan ever since.
Legal strategy + writing · Wayne Hsiung
The Simple Heart Initiative
Wayne Hsiung's organization, focused on the legal and moral case for the right to rescue. Publishes the public-facing record of the campaign and coordinates legal defense for arrested rescuers.
Training + mentorship for new activists
Animal Activism Collective
Trains new activists through mentorship, online education, and in-person events. Many of the people who showed up at Ridglan on March 15 and April 18 came through AAC.
Records, FOIA, and policy
Rise for Animals
Investigative nonprofit that has obtained and published records central to the Ridglan case — buyers, federal citations, and the regulatory paper trail that made the cruelty undeniable.
Wisconsin advocacy
Alliance for Animals
A Wisconsin 501(c)(3) whose president, Kristen Schrank, signed the February 2026 open letter to the District Attorney alongside 100+ other organizations and humane societies.
National pressure + lab oversight
PETA
PETA's Laboratory Oversight & Special Cases division, led by Dr. Alka Chandna, has elevated Ridglan into the national conversation around animal experimentation.
Ballot initiatives + political organizing
Pro-Animal Future
A collective of voters, volunteers, and small donors building scalable citizen ballot initiatives to end factory farming and animal cruelty. Bringing the kind of political infrastructure to the animal-rights movement that has been missing for decades.
Everyday people
This is what a coalition looks like when ordinary people decide enough is enough.
There are still 2,000 dogs inside.
Add your name. Donate to the coalition. Show up to the next action. The campaign that brought the case this far runs on people deciding to be part of it.