Despite Ten Arrests, Jenny McQueen Continues to Work for Animals

Originally Published on The Vegan Profile

Jenny McQueen is a retired provincial government employee dedicated to fighting for animals. She takes part in and organizes non-violent activism, including animal rescues, disruptions, and events for Direct Action Everywhere, Fur Free Toronto, We the Free and PETA to name a few. She is also the co-founder of Animal Rights Toronto, and the founder of #ZipOffTheCruelty, a campaign against the fur trade.

Crashing a Toronto fashion show
Crashing a Toronto fashion show
#ZipOffTheCruelty in action with FurFree Toronto
#ZipOffTheCruelty in action with FurFree Toronto

Vegan for over 30 years, her activism journey began in the mid-90s in the UK with protesting circuses and providing information to the public. Attending a vegan conference in Thailand led her to meet fellow activist and Canadian Peter who became her husband — and she moved to Canada in 2000. They live in Toronto with their fur family. Jenny’s biggest challenge in doing this work is balancing her time and energy between the multiple areas where animal abuse occurs.

Jenny has also experienced what she terms “major occurrences” in her work as an activist. For example, there was a police raid at 6:00 a.m. when she was dragged out of her house, cuffed, then the house was searched. This was after a pig rescue mission near Lucan, Ontario, an arrest she went to trial for; charges were eventually dropped, leading to a very frustrated and angry response by the animal agriculture industry in Ontario.

The Lucan action is an example of a common action with Direct Action Everywhere (DXE) called open rescue. Jenny was privileged to be part of the team from 2016 to 2018 where a total of 6 piglets were rescued from ending up on dinner plates.

Lily the mother goat, rescued from a slaughterhouse
Lily the mother goat, rescued from a slaughterhouse
Quality time with rescued chicken Chralize
Quality time with rescued chicken Chralize

Jenny has been arrested ten times.

If I can help by creating dramatic grassroots actions, or even by getting arrested for civil disobedience, the hope is that it could further the cause of animals in a positive way. The hope is that with the legal tangles, and possible trials, there is the opportunity to get more exposure for animals and for the perilous, awful, awful conditions that they’re in.”

Yes, it is very jarring, being arrested, being handcuffed, and confined in a police cell for non-violent actions, but you just carry on in whatever way you can. Thankfully we have great lawyers as well (Gary Grill has represented Jenny a few times) who represent animal rights activists. We’re generally safe in their hands.”

In 2023, Jenny received a criminal record from a Quebec pig farm occupation, found guilty on the charges of mischief and obstruction, despite the judge commenting that the footage taken at the farm from the day of their arrests was“poignant, disturbing and impactful” and acknowledging that they were there to help the pigs, not harm them.)

Jenny McQueen occupying a pig farm in Quebec
Jenny occupying a pig farm in Quebec
Justice for Them banner outside pig trial in Quebec
Jenny & Peter McQueen outside PigTrial in Quebec

Jenny still gets involved with teams who do legal rescues, for example, rescuing 22 pigs from a hoarding situation. Another exciting and weeks long rescue happened when she helped organize the rescue of two Pekin ducks from a Toronto park.

Many of the actions Jenny takes get media coverage, which provides public exposure to some of the cruel industries that use animals. She feels one of the roles of activists is to create noise to shift public opinion and get lawyers and politicians involved. A lockdown action Jenny was involved in at the Chocpaw sled dog operation prompted animal rights journalist Jessica Scott-Reid to cover the industry in the Toronto Star.

Regan Russell came to Jenny’s rescue during an action at another dog sled operation. Several activists, along with documentary filmmaker Fern Levitt, were at Windrift Kennel where dogs are kept chained up their entire lives, except when they are put to work pulling sleds. As you can imagine, and as Jenny and other activists have witnessed, dogs suffer their entire lives in dogsledding operations, and they don’t really know how to be a dog. At Windrift,the workers came out and immediately started being violent. There was even a guy trying to attack the activists with a shovel. McQueen recounts:

Protest at dog sled operation
Chocpaw sled dog lockdown

“One of our people got a bloody nose and was thrown to the ground. His camera was thrown into the wilderness. I had a female worker grab a chain that was wrapped around my neck. Instead of chaining ourselves to the sled dogs this time, we put chains around our necks, like a symbolic thing. This lady grabbed the chain around my neck, and she wouldn’t let go. I started to lose consciousness and then Regan stepped in. Everyone else was trying to get her off me through logic, but Regan stepped in and pulled the hat over her head and put some pressure on her back. The woman finally loosened her grip on the chain.”

Another high-profile action Jenny took part in was at a chicken slaughterhouse in Toronto. Trained on what to do at the DxE Animal Liberation Conference, the activists quickly entered the slaughterhouse carrying a tub of dry cement, jugs of water, and chains and pipes. Four activists put their arms through the pipes and chained themselves to them — Jenny being one — and other activists set to work adding the water to the dry cement.

“There was no way to move us, and we were there for six hours. We shut down the slaughterhouse. We had another team rescuing four chickens, and another team taking the chickens to a sanctuary. The police came and eventually after six hours, with negotiation, we weren’t arrested. They’d have to destroy the cement and that would be pretty near impossible. It’s a really good bargaining tool when you’re in a lockdown. And the fact that there are four people means that we can’t easily be lifted and taken away. It’s a very effective method.”

Does Jenny ever feel in danger during some of these actions? “I’ve experienced violence from workers in the past. I was part of a lockdown, the slaughterhouse seven we called it, at the cow slaughterhouse back in 2014 and we refused to get up. It blocked the slaughterhouse trucks coming in. In the end, all the tactics trying to drag us away were bruising. And some injuries occurred when the police dragged us away too. We were all arrested at that point. You can certainly experience violence as an activist.”

Arrested at cow slaughterhouse blockade
Arrested at cow slaughterhouse blockade

That has been the experience for many activists, and Regan Russell losing her life while bearing witness to pigs on June 19th 2020 is the ultimate act of violence. Jenny believes that this tragedy has incited people to become active. “It’s put a fire in people’s hearts to carry on in her name and a lot of people became activists upon hearing of her awful killing.

Despite the arrests, Jenny did not have a criminal record until the trial in Quebec. Previously, all charges had been dropped. She’s paid fines and been made to do community service hours with the nonprofits she supports, something that is not a punishment for this activist.

Things have changed in the 30 or so years since Jenny began her activism journey, and the biggest help for the animal rights movement has come from social media. “When I first started, I would get a letter in the mail with instructions for the demonstration. It’s changed significantly. Now with social media, you create your event and you send your invites. It’s like, build it and they will come. You have a worldwide reach. You receive messages of support from around the world and you can support other people so that is enormous.”

Tofurky giveaway with PETA
Tofurky giveaway with PETA

Jenny does something every day to advance the movement — working on organizing the next action from home, or something as simple as handing out a card with information. She’s proactive with this latter form of activism, having business-sized cards printed inexpensively at Vistaprint. They contain documentaries to watch, a QR code pointing to events, other organizations fighting for animals, a website to take a vegan challenge and information about the fur trade. Jenny suggests this is a form of activism anyone can do.

Volunteering with an animal rights organization is something that doesn’t necessarily have to involve street-level activism. Many organizations rely on volunteers for things like website, social media, content creation and design help. Supporting and visiting animal sanctuaries is another great way to get involved.

Jenny adds, “You can hold a sign outside a supermarket. You can order literature from some of the main organizations. Even if a person wants to bear witness, they don’t need to approach the trucks, they can simply hold a sign and be in community with the other activists. Every effort matters.”

Start gently and know your limits. Whatever it is you feel comfortable with — everyone has their own style and experience. You might like making art. You might want to write a blog, you might want to send letters to the editor,” she advises.

For others, Jenny suggests that they may find it empowering to be given a megaphone and speak to the crowds. “You might find your voice on a megaphone; you just don’t know until you try it.“

For those who want to be fully involved, Jenny adds, “If you have the opportunity to bear witness and to see the animals, nothing beats seeing an animal face to face. It has no comparison. I’ve seen mother pigs in gestation crates, you’re face to face and you’re apologizing to her because you can’t save her. Nothing beats that because all your senses are assaulted with smells, sights, sounds — nothing beats being face to face.”

Volunteering at Promised Land animal sanctuary
Volunteering at Promised Land animal sanctuary


Protesting outside Nucro-Technics in Toronto
Protesting outside Nucro-Technics in Toronto

Jenny is a coordinator with DxE Toronto, a core member of Fur Free Toronto, a local organizer for PETA, and an organizer of National Animal Rights Day, an event held on the first Sunday in June each year.

The National Animal Rights Day is what got me involved with open rescues, because it’s where we hold deceased animals in a very respectful way, almost like a memorial. We’ve held that over the years in Toronto and had an interesting time with the police trying to shut us down and city council not giving us any space until fairly recently.”

National Animal Rights Day
National Animal Rights Day

As Jenny explains, DXE’s actions centre around “disrupting the normalization of animal violence, the way society views animals. A lot of the DXE action is disrupting places where animal use is considered normal, like running into the Royal Agricultural Winter Fair in Toronto with a banner and disrupting slaughterhouses. Direct Action Everywhere is dear to my heart.”

She adds that she is buoyed by DxE’s missionWe will achieve revolutionary social and political change for animals in one generation.

Handcuffed at the Royal Agricultural Winter Fair
Handcuffed at the Royal Agricultural Winter Fair

Despite the arrests, the trials, the physical trauma, and most especially witnessing animals in horrific conditions, Jenny continues to do the hard work. “I think what keeps me going is the fact that we need to keep active. I think all of us would prefer just to be in the countryside enjoying the scenery. But when you know all the horrors that are happening to animals, that keeps you going, knowing that you can make a small change, that you can spread awareness, and you can support other people.

In May 2026 Jenny and the court system meet again. This time, the criminal charge was “disobeying a court order”. It’s a strange world where exposing the lies from animal agriculture becomes a crime. The arrest happened at the live pig display at the FARM building inside the CNE – the Canadian National Exhibition. On a brighter note, the protests at the CNE over the years resulted in the mother pig being spared from the exhibition, with her piglets, her presence had been used to continue the lies of industry. In 2025 she was replaced with a comical inflatable pig, with the previously proud staff standing awkwardly beside her.

Jenny says she will try to avoid being arrested in the future, but will always defend animals, and hopes that society’s opinion of them evolves.  The outreach card that she gives out on a daily basis says: Discover how your actions can match your values and you’ll love being kind to all kinds.


Jenny’s profile was originally posted on The Vegan Writer in 2021 and updated for Animal Rights Toronto in April, 2026.