Sid Yost, an animal trainer who has worked on films like Get Out, Logan, and The Hunger Games, has reportedly been fined $30,000 by the U.S. government for physical abuse and neglect violations, according to The Hollywood Reporter. Some of the claims date back to 2008.

Per T.H.R., Yost’s violations include “failing to provide animals with sufficient space, sanitary living conditions, and uncontaminated food.” In addition, he has been accused of using physical abuse against wolves, and hitting tigers, a monkey, and a lion with sticks. In addition to the $30,000 fine, Yost has also reportedly lost his Animal Welfare Act license, which will block him from working on TV and film work. However, it does not stop him from working with other animal trainers and suppliers, as T.H.R. notes.

This is not the first time Yost has been criticized for his treatment of animals. Back in 2013, T.H.R. investigated the longtime trainer after the U.S. Department of Agriculture filed a lengthy complaint against him, which included a variety of additional grim accusations:

“Yost also is accused of providing substandard veterinary care, shoddy shelter, and poorly cleaned facilities, of being unable to account for the acquisition of some animals, including ferrets and a fox—the concern being that they could be black-market purchases—and of employing ‘on multiple occasions’ a stick to hit a monkey named Rowdy, a lion named Romeo, and multiple tigers.”

At the time, Yost said the U.S.D.A. “overstated, exaggerated, misrepresented, and conflated stale and outdated facts in a misguided effort to ‘score points’” against him. In addition, he said the stick was “the type of lightweight walking cane with a curved handle found in pharmacies worldwide,” and it was only used to “tap” the animal, “never to hurt or harm.”

Yost, who operates out of a 58-acre ranch near Covington, Louisiana, has been in the animal business for nearly four decades. On some occasions, it can be a deeply profitable trade. In a 2013 profile by theTimes-Picayune, which the T.H.R. investigation points out, it was revealed that two of his dogs—a golden retriever named Maverick and a Rottweiler mix named Titus—made $150,000 a year. Dogs end up being “80 percent of what people ask for,” he said.

Lisa Lange, the senior vice president of PETA, released a statement, per T.H.R., after Yost’s license was revoked.

“The authorities did the right thing by fining Sidney Yost and revoking his license, and now Hollywood needs to step up and stop hiring this longtime abuser,” she said.

The news about Yost arrives almost exactly one year after the scandal surrounding the family film A Dog’s Purpose. After a video was leaked of a distressed German shepherd named Hercules seemingly being forced to perform a stunt, PETA encouraged people to boycott the film. Producer Gavin Polone said the video was “an inaccurate picture of what happened” on the set, and star Dennis Quaid defended the film’s crew, saying he “never saw any abuse of any animal.” That wasn’t enough to quell the controversy, but the film ultimately ended up doing just fine at the box office.

Yost did not respond to T.H.R.’s request for comment.