Paper Leash
A LICENSED VETERINARIAN. A BEAGLE BREEDING FACILITY. 311 DOCUMENTED VIOLATIONS. A BOARD THAT BLINKED. AND THE MOMENT A THOUSAND PEOPLE SHOWED UP WITH CROWBARS AND SLEDGEHAMMERS AND DECIDED THE SYSTEM HAD FAILED LONG ENOUGH. Imagine finding out that the doctor responsible for your care has been performing surgeries on patients for twenty years. Without anesthesia. And when regulators find out — they let him keep going. That is not a hypothetical. That is exactly what happened in Blue Mounds, Wisconsin. And the patients were beagles. Richard Van Domelen — goes by Dr. Rick — was the licensed veterinarian and facility manager of Ridglan Farms, a beagle breeding operation that sold research animals to the NIH, the CDC, the Mayo Clinic, and Bristol Myers Squibb. For decades, it operated almost entirely out of public view. By the time regulators got serious, they had documented 311 violations of Wisconsin administrative code. Whistleblowers testified that devocalization surgeries were being performed using paralytic agents instead of anesthesia — meaning the animals could feel everything but could not move. The reason: he didn't want to hear the noise. It was a spreadsheet decision. The Wisconsin Veterinary Examining Board had all of this in front of them in early 2025. They gave him a restricted license and let him keep going. It took a surprise inspection, a unanimous emergency vote, and the revocation of his license in September 2025 to remove his credentials. He kept showing up anyway. The license was never really the point. The operation was the point. And then a lawyer from California, who had been watching this for nearly a decade, ran out of patience. This episode covers the full story — the machine Ridglan built, the regulatory failures that protected it, the thousand people who showed up with crowbars and sledgehammers on a cold April morning, the tear gas and rubber bullets and one man whose teeth were knocked out by police as he lay on the ground, and the deal that finally got 1,500 beagles out of those windowless buildings. The man who designed a twenty-year system of deliberate suffering is facing retirement. The man who reached through a broken window to hand a dog to safety is facing up to 31 years in prison. That gap is what this episode is about. This is Paperleash. True crime. The victims are animals. Stay obsessed. Stay skeptical. Stay loud. FULL SHOW NOTES ABOUT THIS CASE Ridglan Farms is a beagle breeding and research facility located in Blue Mounds, Wisconsin — a rural town in Dane County, approximately 25–30 miles outside Madison. Founded in 1966. Privately owned and family run for its entire 60-year history. The facility bred beagles specifically for sale to pharmaceutical companies, contract research organizations, and university laboratories. Documented clients include the National Institutes of Health, the Centers for Disease Control, the Mayo Clinic, and Bristol Myers Squibb. Ridglan is one of only two large-scale beagle breeding facilities in the United States that supply animals for scientific research. As of October 2025, Ridglan reached an agreement with the La Crosse County District Attorney that it would surrender its Wisconsin Department of Agriculture breeding license and cease selling dogs bred for biomedical research — effective no later than July 1, 2026. DR. RICK — RICHARD VAN DOMELEN Richard Van Domelen is a licensed veterinarian who served as facility manager and day-to-day operator of Ridglan Farms. He held a Wisconsin veterinary license in good standing for decades. What whistleblowers testified (October 2024 formal hearing): * Cherry eye removals performed by unlicensed staff without proper anesthesia * Devocalization surgeries performed using paralytic agents rather than anesthesia — meaning animals were immobilized but fully conscious and able to feel pain * The board later found this conduct had been ongoing for nearly 20 years Why devocalization: To reduce noise. To make the facility quieter and cheaper to operate. Not cruelty for cruelty's sake — a cost and efficiency decision. That is what makes it so cold. The board's own language in its final findings described Van Domelen as someone who "does not abide by many of the rules and laws pertaining to veterinary medicine" and poses a risk to "public health, safety, and welfare." License revoked: September 30, 2025 — following an emergency unanimous vote by the Wisconsin Veterinary Examining Board, after a surprise inspection found continued violations of the stipulated agreement issued in March 2025. What happened after revocation: He remained at Ridglan as facility manager. The license governed his ability to practice veterinary medicine — it did not govern his ability to manage a business. He lost the paperwork. He kept the power. Criminal charges: A special prosecutor was appointed by a Wisconsin Circuit Court in 2025 to investigate alleged violations of state animal cruelty laws. As of this recording, no criminal charges have been filed against Van Domelen.The special prosecutor declined to pursue criminal charges against Ridglan in exchange for the facility surrendering its breeding license by July 1, 2026. THE 311 VIOLATIONS Wisconsin Department of Agriculture inspection records documented 311 violations of Wisconsin administrative code at Ridglan Farms. Violations began appearing in records approximately 2016 and accumulated over subsequent years. Documented violations included failing to handle animals in a manner that "does not cause physical harm or unnecessary injury" — the minimum standard of care under Wisconsin law. The USDA issued consistently positive inspection results throughout the same period. THE REGULATORY FAILURE — THE BOARD BLINKED Early 2025: Dane4Dogs and the Animal Activist Legal Defense Project file a formal complaint with the Wisconsin Veterinary Examining Board requesting revocation of Van Domelen's license. They present whistleblower testimony, documented violations, and former employee accounts. March 2025: The board issues a stipulated agreement — restricting what Van Domelen can do while the investigation continues. His license remains active. He remains in charge. September 2025: A surprise inspection finds Van Domelen in violation of the stipulated agreement's conditions. Record-keeping problems documented on top of existing violations. September 30, 2025: Emergency board vote. Unanimous. License suspended. After suspension: Van Domelen continues working at Ridglan as facility manager. The license revocation does not legally require him to leave the property or cease his management role. WAYNE HSIUNG AND DIRECT ACTION EVERYWHERE Wayne Hsiung, 44, is a California attorney and co-founder of Direct Action Everywhere (DxE), a national animal rights organization. He had been monitoring Ridglan since at least 2017, when a six-person DxE team attempted a small-scale rescue at the facility. No animals were removed. The world did not notice. Note on prior legal history: Hsiung has prior convictions related to animal rescue actions. In 2023 he was convicted of felony charges stemming from trespassing and removing chickens and ducks from two Sonoma County, California farms. He was ordered in late 2025 to pay approximately $200,000 in restitution and received a 90-day jail sentence and two years of probation. He has also been acquitted in separate cases — including a 2022 Utah jury acquittal on burglary and theft charges for removing piglets from a Smithfield Foods facility. His legal record is complicated and contested; it is presented here in full for transparency. The March 15, 2026 rescue: Between 60 and 100 activists converged on Ridglan before dawn. They breached the perimeter fence and entered one of the buildings. 22 beagles were removed. 27 people were arrested. Hsiung was arrested while reportedly attempting to serve legal papers. He had used tools including a sledgehammer and crowbar to breach the building during the operation. The dog he personally removed from a cage through a broken window — serial number YPP5 — was later named James. James now lives with Hsiung, his wife Rose, and their dog Oliver in California. After March: Ridglan fortified the property. Trenches. Hay bales. Barbed wire. Reports of electric fencing. Seventeen law enforcement agencies coordinated a response. Hsiung publicly announced a second mass rescue for April 19th. The April 18–19, 2026 mass rescue: * Hsiung called the action early — Saturday, April 18th, one day before the announced date * More than 1,000 activists converged on Ridglan Farms from across the country and around the world * Participants included UW-Madison law students, a former Baywatch actress named Alexandra Paul (who was arrested), and people who had traveled internationally * Law enforcement deployed: tear gas, rubber bullets, pepper spray, and OC Stinger Ball Grenades — a crowd control device condemned by Amnesty International and whose use has been linked to cancer * Rounds fired every 5–15 minutes. Hundreds of people gassed. * Nicholas Dickman: An activist who came through a cut in the perimeter fence. According to reporting by the New York Times with photographic documentation, police kicked and beat Dickman as he lay on the ground, knocking out his front teeth with steel-toed boots. He was then arrested. * 25 people arrested that day. Two broken noses. Multiple rubber bullet injuries. * Zero additional animals removed. * A former firefighter appeared at the Wisconsin State Capitol two days later — chemical burns still visible on his face — and told the crowd that what he witnessed at Ridglan was worse than what he had seen on Chicago police drug busts. Hsiung's charges (as of this recording): Wayne Hsiung has pleaded not guilty to four felony charges connected to the March protest and dog rescue at Ridglan Farms. He faces up to 31 years in prison if convicted. His next court date is June 2, 2026. Co-defendants: Aditya Aswani, Michelle Lunsky, and Dean Wyrzykowski — all facing felony burglary charges. All pleaded not guilty. The case will now move toward trial, where prosecutors would need to prove the allegations beyond a reasonable doubt. Hsiung outside the courthouse after his April 29 preliminary hearing: "We have never had this much evidence of animal abuse in an open rescue, probably in history. And because of that, this case demonstrates exactly why open rescue is the right strategy." The federal lawsuit: Activists filed a federal excessive force lawsuit alleging that Dane County officials actively conspired with Ridglan Farms to violate protesters' constitutional rights. The lawsuit is pending. Nicholas Dickman: Federal excessive force lawsuit pending. No officer involved has faced disciplinary action as of this recording. THE CONGRESSIONAL MOMENT April 16, 2026 — three days before the mass raid — Wisconsin Congressman Mark Pocan raised Ridglan Farms directly with HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. in a formal congressional hearing. He pointed out that the NIH was still funding researchers purchasing animals from a facility with 311 documented violations whose lead veterinarian had just had his license revoked for posing a risk to public health and welfare. RFK Jr. was on the record being asked about this. In Congress. On camera. THE DEAL — AND THE DOGS April 28–29, 2026: Big Dog Ranch Rescue and the Center for a Humane Economy entered into a confidential agreement with Ridglan Farms for the transfer of at least 1,500 beagles for an undisclosed monetary payment — confirmed to be well under $1 million. "For many of these beagles, this moment marks the first step toward a completely different life and will see sunshine and grass for the very first time," the statement read. May 1, 2026: Dog transfers begin. Big Dog Ranch Rescue has now completed removal of the 1,000 beagles it purchased. Dogs have been transported to facilities in Florida and Alabama for medical exams, microchipping, vaccinations, and placement. Center for a Humane Economy and Big Dog Ranch understand that Ridglan Farms continues to house approximately 500 other dogs. Both organizations are committed to continuing to work to secure ownership of those animals. Dogs have been placed across Wisconsin, Minnesota, Illinois, Florida, Nevada, New York, and California. Lauree Simmons, founder and president of Big Dog Ranch Rescue: "They started within an hour coming up to us, wanting attention. Some crawled into people's laps. Every single one of them are super sweet. I just know they know they're safe." Debbie Gibson and Geezer Butler (Black Sabbath) appeared at the Dane County Humane Society holding rescued beagles and calling for an end to animal testing. Alexandra Paul (Baywatch) — arrested during the April raid — was among those who had come to advocate for the dogs. WHERE EVERYTHING STANDS AS OF THIS RECORDING SubjectStatusRidglan FarmsAgreed to surrender breeding license by July 1, 2026. Facility closing.Richard Van DomelenLicense revoked September 30, 2025. Special prosecutor investigation ongoing. No criminal charges filed. Still present at facility as of recent reporting.Wayne HsiungPleaded not guilty to 4 felony charges. Facing up to 31 years in prison. Trial date pending. Next court date: June 2, 2026.Co-defendants (Aswani, Lunsky, Wyrzykowski)All pleaded not guilty. Status conference June 1, 2026.Nicholas DickmanFederal excessive force lawsuit pending. No officer discipline.1,500 beagles (Big Dog Ranch deal)Transferred and being placed across the US.~500 remaining dogsStill at Ridglan. Advocates working to secure their release before July 1.Federal lawsuit (excessive force)Pending against Dane County Sheriff and officials. THE GAP Wayne Hsiung reached through a broken window and handed a dog to safety. He is facing up to 31 years in federal prison. Richard Van Domelen designed a twenty-year system of deliberate suffering. He is facing retirement. That gap is not an accident. It is a choice made by a legal system that has decided, consistently and clearly, that the act of exposing cruelty is more prosecutable than the act of committing it. ORGANIZATIONS — SUPPORT THEIR WORK * Direct Action Everywhere (DxE): directactioneverywhere.com — Wayne Hsiung legal defense updates * Big Dog Ranch Rescue: bigdogranch.org — beagle adoption information; dogs available across the US * Beagle Freedom Project: beaglefreedomproject.org — ongoing placements and advocacy * Dane4Dogs: The local Dane County organization that filed the original license revocation complaint * Center for a Humane Economy: centerforahumaneeconomy.org — negotiated the purchase agreement; continuing to work on remaining 500 dogs * Animal Activist Legal Defense Project: Legal support for activists facing charges * Dane County Humane Society: giveshelter.org — coordinated intake and placement of rescued dogs HOW TO ADOPT A RIDGLAN BEAGLE Dogs have been placed across Wisconsin, Minnesota, Illinois, Florida, Nevada, New York, and beyond — with transport routes being established monthly. Contact Big Dog Ranch Rescue at bigdogranch.org or the Beagle Freedom Project at beaglefreedomproject.org for current adoption availability. SOURCES * Wisconsin Veterinary Examining Board records (public) — stipulated agreement March 2025, emergency suspension September 30, 2025 * Wisconsin Department of Agriculture inspection reports — 311 violations (public record) * Dane County Circuit Court — Hsiung arraignment, charges, preliminary hearing April 29, 2026 * WMTV15 (NBC Madison) — ongoing Ridglan coverage: wmtv15news.com * Wisconsin State Journal / WisLawJournal — wmtv15news.com/2026/04/29/dane-county-case-against-suspect-ridglan-farms-break-in-moves-forward/ * Channel3000.com — Hsiung plea: channel3000.com * WSAW — charges filed: wsaw.com/2026/04/22/charges-filed-against-4-people-accused-ridglan-farms-march-break-in/ * Spectrum News 1 — beagle deal: spectrumnews1.com/wi/milwaukee/news/2026/04/29/ridglan-farms-beagles-dog-rescue * WTMJ — Big Dog Ranch completion: wtmj.com/news/2026/05/07/big-dog-ranch-rescue-completes-ridglan-beagle-removal/ * WPR — transfer update: wpr.org/news/welfare-organizations-complete-transfer-of-hundreds-of-ridglan-farms-beagles * FOX6 Milwaukee — adopted dog stories: fox6now.com/news/ridglan-farms-beagles-rescued-photos-052726 * Dane County Humane Society statement: giveshelter.org/news/ridglan-farms * AOL / Alexandra Paul arrest: aol.com/entertainment/baywatch-star-alexandra-paul-arrested-121933026.html * New York Times — Nicholas Dickman injuries (photographic documentation) * Seehafer News — Hsiung bond and trial: seehafernews.com/2026/05/01/accused-ridglan-protest-leader-heading-to-trial/ * Congressional hearing record — Rep. Pocan / RFK Jr. exchange, April 16, 2026 ABOUT PAPERLEASH Paperleash is a true crime podcast documenting crimes — and systems — in the animal welfare world. Every case is real. Every detail is verified. Every episode is an act of advocacy. I'm Lori. Stay obsessed. Stay skeptical. Stay loud.
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