A vegan activist who stormed a steak house and Tesco meat aisle is the daughter of a millionaire meat selling CEO.

Morgan Kayleigh Giampaolo raided the Touro steak-house in Brighton to play animal slaughter noises to diners last week.

She also attended a Tesco in Hove with 'Direct Action Everywhere' as they held a 'silent disruption' event, standing in the meat aisle with signs saying: 'It's not food it's violence' and graphic images of abattoirs while mothers pushed toddlers past them in prams.

Morgan's father, American businessman David Giampaolo, runs Pi Capital and is Chairman of Gousto, where customers can buy steak, sausage and lamb.

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Morgan Kayleigh Giampaolo raided the Touro steak house in Brighton to play animal slaughter noises to diners last week, but is the daughter of a wealthy meat seller

The group posted about their demonstration on Facebook, pictured, and said they were highlighting the 'mass killing of innocent animals' in a 'public and non violent way'

David Giampaolo cited Bill Clinton, David Petraeus and Colin Powell as some of his biggest influences in an interview with the Financial Times

Customers can order 'recipe boxes' online and receive four recipes of their choosing for £47.75; recipes include 'Moor-ish Lamb & Sweet Potato Tagine,' 'Sausage Burger & Sweet Onion Mayo,' and 'Venison, Fondant Potato, Carrot Purée & Shallot Jus.'

According to the Sun, Morgan attended her father's wedding this year and lives with her mother, David's ex-wife, Kendra McConnell, in Hove.

Last week Direct Action Everywhere entered Touro Steakhouse in Brighton and got into a chanting match with a carnivorous stag party who yelled back 'Stand up if you love meat.'

Members of the stag party, including a £250 'Oompa Loompa impersonator', started chanting back at them and even persuaded fellow diners to join in.

Most of the diners at the Brazilian-themed restaurant appeared unmoved by the protest and carried on talking and eating, even when the activists played the noise of a cow being killed and shouted 'It's not meat, it's violence' repeatedly.

A group of vegan activists, including David Giampaolo's daughter stormed the steakhouse in Brighton, pictured, and played sounds of cows being slaughtered to the diners

After the group started shouting an anti-meat chant, a stag party stood up and sang back 'Stand up if you love meat' as members danced around, pictured left and right

Some customers appeared to be laughing, pictured, as the protest carried on around them

Protesters also waved graphic images of animal slaughter and placards with anti-meat messages, left and right, and remained at the restaurant for around 20 minutes

A month ago the group were also out in force at a Tesco in Sussex where they occupied the meat aisle, this time a silent demo.

They held emotive and distressing signs of animals in front of meat aisles as people tried to get on with their shopping

Despite it being a silent demo, the group still had a speaker who used used language charged with Marxist rhetoric as they paraded through the Tesco

Dan Holmes, 30, who was part of the stag party, told MailOnline: 'A protest is fine, but they overstayed their welcome and were becoming annoying. If they had just had signs then that's one thing, but playing sounds of animals being killed was going over the top.'

A month ago the group were also out in force at a Tesco in Sussex where they occupied the meat aisle, this time a silent demo.

They stood before the meat aisle with pictures of animals being slaughtered and blocked shoppers off, including mothers with toddlers in prams.

In a video posted to the group's Facebook page one of the demonstrators says, 'You create the demand, you fund these industries and perpetuate this animal cruelty.'

The speaker in the video uses the quote, often attributed to the communist tyrant Joseph Stalin: 'A single death is a tragedy a million deaths is a statistic.'

On the Pi Capital website, David's profile describes his financial successes in health and fitness companies, as well as being a senior adviser and sitting on various company boards, he is Chairman of Gousto.

The Telegraph reported that he had raised £56.5m in investments for the luxury ready-meals company, based in London.

The boss cited Bill Clinton, David Petraeus and Colin Powell as some of his biggest influences in an interview with the Financial Times.