PETA calls for probe after snake killed during filming of Netflix movie in Alabama
The supposed decapitation of a snake during the filming of a movie at Oak Mountain State Park has drawn the ire of PETA, which is calling for investigations by police and conservation enforcers.
The People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals has sent letters to the Pelham Police Department and the Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources requesting they look into the matter.
According to PETA, they received a report last week that the reptilian slaying happened when crew members of Netflix’s “The Devil All the Time” encountered a snake with red markings – possibly a species of the nonvenomous king snake – while moving rocks in order to prepare a path for foot traffic. “After reporting the presence of the snake to the assistant director Brian Bettwy, the snake was decapitated,’’ according to a letter written by PETA lawyer David Schwartz.
A “whistleblower” tipped off PETA, the organization said. “According to the report, the snake was not posing a threat to, or otherwise manifesting signs of preparing to strike, any member of the film crew during and after the snake’s discovery,’’ Schwartz wrote.
He went on to say no snake handler was present on the set, which is a common practice in the industry when filming in areas where snakes might be encountered. Also, he said, no attempt was made by anyone with the production company to contact a park ranger, state wildlife officer or any other person with authority to handle wildlife before the snake was decapitated.
PETA claims the decapitation of the snake violates regulations pertaining to state parks, which designate each state park as a game and wildlife sanctuary and make it “unlawful for any person to…kill…any wild animal” in any state park.
The American Veterinary Medical Association, according to PETA, does not consider decapitation without the use of an anesthetic prior to decapitation, and without the immediate destruction of the brain after decapitation. Snake “have a slow metabolism and high tolerance to hypoxia. As a result, the brain and other parts of the nervous system can continue to function – and thus the animal remains sensible to pain – for up to one hour after decapitation unless the brain is immediately destroyed. Such a procedure requires expertise and dexterity which cannot be acquired or adequately carried out by laypersons.”