Animal rights group demands UGA investigate 'shocking incidents of negligence'
Media Coverage About SAEN Stop Animal Exploitation Now

ACTION ALERT:

Contact:

Jere W. Morehead, President,
University of Georgia
[email protected]

President Morehead,

University of Georgia documents disclose negligence that has killed over 121 animals due to starvation, dehydration, drowning, or being left unattended during a surgical procedure.

These reports also disclose the dumping of 4 living animals into a carcass freezer. You must launch an internal investigation of all University of Georgia animal experimentation and terminate all responsible lab staff.

 

Animal rights group demands UGA investigate "shocking incidents of negligence"
By Eric Stirgus, AJC.com, June 5, 2018

An Ohio-based animal rights group accused the University of Georgia of animal abuse in its experiments and demanded the university conduct an investigation to end harmful practices.

The group, Stop Animal Exploitation Now, citing UGA correspondence with federal officials, wrote a letter to UGA president Jere Morehead on Monday asking for the investigation and the dismissal of all employees involved in the abuse.

The documents show more than 100 mice and rats were killed in the last two-plus years and that some pigs and deer were endangered as a result of unsanitary staff practices.

“These incidents...demonstrate a multi-year pattern of abuse, neglect, and incompetence at the University of Georgia, caused by lab staff. This negligence must NOT be allowed to continue,” the letter read.

The group requests a response within five business days.

UGA spokesman Greg Trevor said in a statement late Monday that researchers work to meet federal animal welfare standards during laboratory work, but “human error or facility failure can infrequently and regrettably lead to the loss of an animal.” The statement says the university has taken some personnel actions that have included employee termination “where appropriate.”

UGA has used animals to conduct research for cancer treatment, infectious diseases, neurological disorders and chronic diseases such as obesity. 

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