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Horrific Research Monkey Deaths Prompt Calls For Crackdown

Research Monkeys

SCOTT SONNER   03/18/10 04:57 AM ET   AP

SPARKS, Nev. — Workers at a Nevada research lab were checking on a primate room when they came across a ghastly sight: Thirty dead monkeys were essentially cooked alive after someone left the heater on. Two others were near death and had to be euthanized.

At a lab run by the same company, a monkey died last year after it was sent through a washer while still in its cage. The temperatures were so scalding the monkey never had a chance.

The two cases have led to calls for greater oversight and enforcement of the animal research industry after an alarmingly high number of deaths in recent years.

Critics say fines for violations at animal research labs are so puny that they do nothing to deter violations. The lab where the monkeys died in Nevada was fined a mere $14,000 for the two incidents, according to records from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

"The penalties have given them virtually no motivation whatsoever to cease violating the law," said Michael Budkie, the executive director of the Ohio-based Stop Animal Exploitation Now. "If they are literally killing animals through negligence, something is wrong with the system."

The group asked Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack last month for an independent investigation into animal deaths at research labs.

Agriculture Department records show there were 97 negligent animal deaths at research facilities nationwide over the last two years, a figure that does not include lab mice and rats.

One of the biggest violators was Charles River Laboratories, where the 33 monkeys died at facilities in Reno in 2008 and Sparks in 2009.

The Massachusetts-based company is one of the world's largest suppliers of clinical and laboratory research services to pharmaceutical and biotech companies.

It also is a leading importer of research animals and breeds some of its own animals for medical research. Its researchers in Nevada are working to find a cure for cancer, new flu vaccines and better ways to treat obesity.

Spokeswoman Amy Cianciaruso said survival rates for major diseases are at an all-time high thanks to the discovery of new drugs made possible in part by the work of scientists at Charles River labs. The company has called the monkey deaths a "terrible and unfortunate tragedy," but said they were isolated cases and corrective actions were taken. Agriculture Department records show one employee was fired and another disciplined.

"Charles River's work is an essential component of the research that has led to these discoveries and has played a vital role in medical advances for humans as well as animals," Cianciaruso said.

The dead monkeys represent a tiny fraction of the tens of thousands of primates used for research around the country.

Charles River is one of 26 registered U.S. importers of non-human primates, a group that includes zoos, universities and private labs, said Christine Pearson, a spokeswoman for the National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Together they imported 27,388 animals in fiscal year 2008 and have averaged approximately 25,000 primates per year over the past four or five years, she said. Charles River alone reported it housed nearly 10,000 primates nationwide in 2008.

Congress first passed the Animal Welfare Act in 1966 and amended it in the 1980s to set new minimum standards for dogs used in research and the psychological well-being of primates. It was amended again in 2008, raising fines from $2,500 to the current $10,000 per violation for negligent acts.

Budkie said if the Agriculture Department fails to act on its request for an investigation into research animal deaths, his group will appeal to Congress to step up enforcement and raise fines.

Rep. Steve Israel, D-N.Y., a senior member of the House Appropriations Committee, co-authored the amendment raising the fines in 2008 and has been urging USDA to fully exercise its authority under the law ever since.

"I increased the penalties for Animal Welfare Act violators from $2,500 to $10,000 in 2008 for one reason: Serious violators of the Animal Welfare Act should be punished more severely," he said in a statement to The Associated Press on Wednesday.

"I hope the Administration uses this authority effectively and fines those who break the law," he said.

The monkey deaths have become a public relations headache for Charles River, an 8,000-employee company that had sales of $1.2 billion in 2009.

The company's roots date to the 1940s when a young veterinarian, Dr. Henry L. Foster, bought a Maryland rat farm and began breeding the rodents in Boston. Foster later began breeding Rhesus monkeys following a trapping expedition in the foothills of the Himalayas.

Those animals were used to create a stock of 800 that were transported to two isolated islands in the Florida Keys, where workers trapped 400 to 500 young a year to sell to labs around the world.

Charles River remains a frequent target of animal rights activists over what happened in the primate quarantine room on May 28, 2008.

A series of errors began when a repair technician left the heater in the "ON" position at 8:20 a.m. An alarm three minutes later warned the temperature in the primate room had risen to an unsafe 84 degrees, but no one noticed it, a Department of Agriculture report shows. Another alarm went undetected nearly two hours later.

It wasn't until 12:30 p.m. that lab personnel found 30 dead monkeys. Surviving monkeys were moved to a cooler location and given fruit; two later had to be put down.

Workers quickly opened the doors to circulate air and gently sprayed down the monkeys with a hose, according to a government report. It's not known how hot it got in the quarantine room.

It wasn't the only problem for the company.

Another monkey died after going through a cage washer last year. In 2007, Agriculture Department reports show two monkeys at the now-closed Sparks lab had fingers amputated after they were caught in the wiring of their cages while being moved, and a third monkey suffered a cut to the tip of its tail.

In addition, the former director of laboratory sciences at the Sparks lab has filed a civil lawsuit accusing the company of mistreating research animals, falsifying records to cover up the abuse and firing him in October 2007 for complaining about it.

The company denied the allegations and said the worker was fired because he made derogatory and sexual comments to women.

Charles River refused a request from The Associated Press to tour its Reno facility.

The company says it has moved beyond the monkey deaths.

"We have discussed the incidents in Reno extensively. We don't have anything new to add about that," Cianciaruso said. She said that as a matter of policy, the company doesn't respond to "animal activist groups."

"They just make false claims so we don't engage in a 'he said, she said' back and forth," she said.

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SPARKS, Nev. — Workers at a Nevada research lab were checking on a primate room when they came across a ghastly sight: Thirty dead monkeys were essentially cooked alive after someone left the he...
SPARKS, Nev. — Workers at a Nevada research lab were checking on a primate room when they came across a ghastly sight: Thirty dead monkeys were essentially cooked alive after someone left the he...
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03:12 PM on 03/31/2010
Fines obviously are no deterrent. We need laws that would make animal cruelty a felony, and mandatory prison time.
07:56 PM on 03/22/2010
It's disturbing how many times I've seen people defend cruelty on this site. These are sentient beings, not toys to be used, abused and discarded!
11:20 AM on 03/22/2010
The individuals that perform these atrocities are demented freaks. They're subhuman. They get some kind of perverted satisfaction out of torturing these innocent helpless creatures.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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12:22 PM on 03/21/2010
I doubt that the figure quoted for negligent animal deaths, (97) is correct, it is probably far greater than that. Someone left the heater on? How about someone turned the heater UP? Two primates died of scalding burns because they were LEFT IN THEIR CAGES during a cage wash. How does that happen? This "line of work" by it's very nature attracts sadists. Those who are not quickly learn to dumb down and become callous in order to continue to do this. There is no "care". These intelligent, familial creatures are warehoused until being used in grotesque, redundant "research" with little or no effective Government oversight. Charles River Labs is a sinister company dealing in death.
08:10 PM on 03/20/2010
This has happened several times...so who is being paid off to let these people stay in business? Why has USDA not closed them down....is someone at USDA getting money under the table? It just keeps happening.....maybe that's why it continues.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kliff215
10:33 PM on 03/18/2010
how about this guy? is he too good to use for science?
06:55 PM on 03/18/2010
Animals should not be in labs PERIOD! We have no right to torture another species in the name of science or any thing else. There is no gain if it costs lives of innocent beings that had no choice in the matter. Humans have this superiority complex and it's not justified by anything. These monkeys should never have been taken from their natural habitat to begin with. It's just all wrong.
04:03 PM on 03/18/2010
Vegans who take no medications that were tested on animals and have no investments that include pharmaceutical, animal testing, meat or fishing industries, clothing industries and any other business that does business with any of these companies are the only ones who truly are entitled to be outraged with this. All the rest of us are condoning the killing of animals for our benefit to some extent.
07:55 PM on 03/18/2010
I have nothing to post, you said it all.

Congrats on completely dominating this thread.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mister Biggles
02:46 PM on 03/18/2010
I could not care less what they do with the animals as long as it goes to try to cure human diseases.

No reason to waste them, though...

This is the MOST important thing an animal can contribute to the world.
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Hugatreetoday
Do or do not, there is no try.
02:51 PM on 03/18/2010
Then why don't you stop posting stupidity and go donate yourself to viviscetion right now....it's the MOST important thing you can contribute to the world.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mister Biggles
02:56 PM on 03/18/2010
No...my work against PETA is far more important.
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Franklin1776
Micro-bio rocks! So does Cell-bio!
03:21 PM on 03/18/2010
Do you have an argument other then "you're stupid"

Feel free to paste something from the internet if you want. Show your work!
08:12 PM on 03/20/2010
Go kill yourself.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mister Biggles
10:01 PM on 03/20/2010
Had some yummy cow meat with my spaghetti tonight.

Delicious.
02:39 PM on 03/18/2010
Is everybody in here a vegan. If not, you are eating animals who were treated much worse than these animals. One animal is just as good as another. Everybody has a right to complain about anything but unless you practice what you preach, we have a right to call you what you are, a hypocrite.
03:00 PM on 03/18/2010
COME ON, ANSWER ME.
03:04 PM on 03/18/2010
How about humans are animals?
02:36 PM on 03/18/2010
Here is a group of people that are licensed medical progessionals that oppose animal research, and offer up alternatives. http://www.pcrm.org/index.html
02:39 PM on 03/18/2010
Sorry, I thought I wrote "professionals", not "progessionals". lol
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Franklin1776
Micro-bio rocks! So does Cell-bio!
03:21 PM on 03/18/2010
Nice site. Lots on eating healthy and medical school. Didn't see many alternatives to animals in medical research though.
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JoeMentia
They hate us for our Free Dumb!
02:18 PM on 03/18/2010
It's this kind of chit that makes me want to believe in karma as some king of divine retribution.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Jase84
Independent Progressive
02:13 PM on 03/18/2010
"The company says it has moved beyond the monkey deaths."

I"m not an animal activist by any means but this comment kind of disturbs me. It's very nonchalant considering the situation.
02:25 PM on 03/18/2010
Yeah, it's like, "We've forgiven ourselves." These companies and their principals should be facing much stiffer fines, including jail for animal cruelty.
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Franklin1776
Micro-bio rocks! So does Cell-bio!
02:29 PM on 03/18/2010
Yep. They should be slapped with a big fine or have their animal facilities shut down.
02:09 PM on 03/18/2010
Have all of you outraged people checked all of your medications to see if they were tested on animals? Would you stop those medications even if they were the only medication that could help you or are you just against animal testing unless it helps you? What about investments do you know if any of your funds have investments with these firms? Just so you know, I don't care. I know if we never tested on animals we would still have many more diseases without cures.
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Hugatreetoday
Do or do not, there is no try.
02:13 PM on 03/18/2010
Have you been spayed or neutered? Please say yes.
02:26 PM on 03/18/2010
Can't answer, can you. Big talker.
01:54 PM on 03/18/2010
I'm not a PETA member or fan but these cases pretty much affirms PETA's protests for the decades they've been protesting the use and abuse of lab animals for testing.
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Franklin1776
Micro-bio rocks! So does Cell-bio!
02:04 PM on 03/18/2010
One negligent company means all Animal research is wrong?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
enlightened45
02:19 PM on 03/18/2010
Your obvious, vocal(as can be on HP) support of animal cruelty has me wondering if you are not Michael Vick with a moniker......
03:15 PM on 03/18/2010
What makes you think this is a situation that is contained to one or two labs? And, where in my statement do I condemn all labs? The labs should be regulated and inspected constantly like pet food is regulated and inspected constantly when made in this country. Pet food is more regulated and is inspected more that human food in this country.