The videos initially established a following on YouTube, before moving to private groups on the messaging platform Telegram. Mike Macartney, a 50-year-old based in Virginia, will now serve three years and four months in prison after pleading guilty to conspiracy to create and distribute animal 'crush' videos.
Wild macaque family - image from Stockcake.com
Known as the 'The Torture King', he plead guilty to creating and distributing sadistic videos of monkeys being tortured, which were posted on private social media channels.
Warning: this story contains upsetting and disturbing details of
animal abuse.
A US man who referred to himself as ‘The Torture King’ has been
jailed over his role in producing horrifying videos of monkeys being
tortured and killed.
Mike Macartney, a 50-year-old based in Virginia, will now serve
three years and four months in prison after pleading guilty to
conspiracy to create and distribute animal 'crush' videos.
Authorities had discovered that Macartney had played a leading role
in a video network that consisted of hundreds of customers around
the world paying for long-tailed macaques to be tortured and killed
on film.
The sadistic global network was originally exposed after a year-long
undercover investigation by the BBC’s World Service last year.
The videos initially established a following on YouTube, before
moving to private groups on the messaging platform Telegram.
As part of the private groups, hundreds of members discussed and
devised ideas on how to torture monkeys. Mr Macartney was one of the
members who directed several of these group chats.
Members could then commission an idea to become a reality. Torturers
in Indonesia and other Asian countries were paid to carry out the
torture on helpless monkeys, filming the scene and selling the video
to the paying customers. Macartney was found to be collecting funds
in connection with such videos.
The graphic videos are incredibly distressing and disturbing. "It
was extreme depravity", Joel Gunter, an investigative reporter with
the BBC team behind the initial investigation, previously told CBS.
"We saw a video of a baby monkey being put into a blender, videos
with power tools used on monkeys. It was torture like you can't
imagine".
At the sentencing last month, Macartney was given a reduced sentence
because he pleaded guilty and cooperated fully with the authorities
investigation. The judge also noted that arriving at an appropriate
sentence had been challenging because the global animal torture
network had been the first case of its kind.
The ruling is the latest development in authorities’ long-running
fight in bringing those involved in the network to justice.
The US Department of Homeland Security has now taken action against
nine of the network’s major players.
This includes Nicole Devilbiss, 35, of Jacksonville, who was
sentenced earlier this year in June to four years and three months
in federal prison for conspiracy to create and distribute animal
crush videos. During its investigation, law enforcement had located
a journal that detailed Devilbiss’s interest in obtaining a monkey
within the US to abuse to create additional content.
Arrests and sentencing have taken place outside of the US too.
Torturers in Indonesia include M Ajis Rasjana who was given a jail
sentence of eight months—the maximum sentence in the country for
animal torture—and Asep Yadi Nurul Hikmah, who's sentence was raised
to three years in jail as it also included the additional charge of
selling a protected species.
In the UK, two woman were jailed earlier this month for uploading
content of monkey torture to online chat groups and making payments
in connection with the videos. Holly LeGresley, 37, received two
years in prison, and Adriana Orme, 56, was jailed for 15 months.