Florida man pleads guilty to distributing monkey torture videos after ICE investigation
Francisco Javier Ravelo, a 36-year-old U.S. citizen in Florida, pleaded guilty in federal court to distributing videos depicting the torture of adult and baby monkeys involving mutilation and burning. The Justice Department said Ravelo personally distributed more than 40 such videos. He now faces up to seven years in federal prison.
As reported by Fox News, the case was built by ICE's Homeland Security Investigations, and it was prosecuted under the Preventing Animal Cruelty and Torture (PACT) Act, the federal law President Donald Trump signed during his first term in 2019.
More than 40 videos. Mutilation. Burning. Baby monkeys. This is the market Ravelo fed, and federal investigators dismantled it.
Officials put the industry on notice
U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Florida Jason Reding Quiñones called the case "deeply disturbing" and a "serious federal crime" that "fuels a market built on brutality." Quiñones, a former state court trial judge, drew a direct line between animal cruelty and escalating human violence:
"As a former state court trial judge who presided over domestic violence cases, I was trained to recognize lethality factors, warning signs that violence is escalating. Deliberate cruelty to animals is one of the clearest red flags."
That connection is not speculative. Law enforcement professionals have recognized the link between animal cruelty and broader violent behavior for decades. Someone willing to torture a baby monkey on camera and distribute the footage is not someone whose depravity stops at animals.
Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Adam Gustafson, of the Justice Department's Environment and Natural Resources Division, was blunt about what comes next for anyone else involved in this kind of content.
"If you are involved in this sadistic activity, we will prosecute you."
Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons credited HSI with assembling the case from the ground up and made clear the agency's reach extends further than people like Ravelo expect:
"I hope this serves as a warning to others who acquire or distribute this kind of content: HSI will find you, and you'll end up in federal court just like Ravelo did."
The PACT Act delivers
This prosecution exists because of the legal framework Trump put in place. When he signed the PACT Act into law in 2019, he called it "something that should have happened a long time ago." He was right. Before the PACT Act, federal law left gaping holes in the prosecution of animal cruelty cases. The act made it a federal crime to intentionally crush, burn, drown, suffocate, impale, or otherwise subject animals to serious bodily injury, and critically, to distribute depictions of such acts.
Ravelo's guilty plea is the law working exactly as intended. A federal statute signed by Trump, enforced by Trump's DOJ and ICE, was used to prosecute someone distributing footage of baby monkeys being tortured. That's a pipeline from policy to accountability, and it produced a result.
Trump has expanded the effort this year, launching a new multi-agency initiative to strengthen enforcement of the Animal Welfare Act. The initiative specifically targets chronic puppy mill violators and dogfighting rings. The U.S. Department of Agriculture said the administration is "taking historic actions" that "will boost compliance with existing laws, protect our companion animals." The organization Humane World for Animals commended the initiative.
The darker market behind the videos
More than 40 torture videos distributed by a single individual point to something larger than one man's depravity. There is a market for this content. Someone was watching. Someone was requesting it. Someone, somewhere, was producing the footage Ravelo circulated.
This is the part of the story that should unsettle anyone paying attention. Ravelo pleaded guilty to distribution, not production. The supply chain behind these videos involves people who physically harmed these animals, filmed them, and made them available for distribution. Whether those individuals have been identified or charged remains unclear from what has been made public. But the distribution network itself tells you there is demand, and where there is demand for filmed animal torture, the rot goes deeper than one defendant in a Florida courtroom.
Quiñones framed it correctly: this "fuels a market built on brutality." Markets don't exist without buyers. HSI tracked down one distributor. The question now is how many more are operating in that same ecosystem.
Enforcement requires will
Laws on the books mean nothing without the will to enforce them. The PACT Act sat ready. ICE's Homeland Security Investigations did the work of pulling evidence together, tracking Ravelo down, and building a case strong enough to produce a guilty plea in federal court. The DOJ prosecuted it. That chain of execution matters as much as the statute itself.
Lyons noted that Ravelo "didn't count on HSI being able to track him down, pull together evidence and present it to the judge." People who traffic in this kind of content operate under the assumption that no one is looking. That assumption just became more expensive.
Seven years in federal prison. That is what awaits Francisco Javier Ravelo. For the next person thinking about distributing footage of animals being burned and mutilated, the calculation just changed.



