ACTION ALERT:
Contact:
Dr. Robert Gibbens
Director, Animal Welfare Operations, USDA-APHIS
[email protected]
[email protected]
Sample Message:
Please levy the MAXIMUM FINE against UCLA for their blatant disregard of the
Animal Welfare Act when their negligence abused/caused the deaths of pigs
and rabbits. Their behavior should NOT be tolerated and MUST be punished to
the fullest extent of the law.
UCLA Accused Of Animal Abuse In Labs
From CBSLAStaff, Los Angeles, CBSLocal.com, February 23, 2022
UCLA is being accused of violating the Animal Welfare Act in connection
with the death of two rabbits and a pig at its research labs, an
animal-advocacy group announced Wednesday, but the university disputed the
organization’s “characterization of these events.”
The group Stop Animal Exploitation Now says it obtained a previously
unpublished UCLA report revealing that multiple animals developed
encephalitis, including one pig who died, and that two rabbits died from
what the organization described as negligence, one from choking and one from
anesthesia.
SAEN filed a federal complaint with the U.S. Department of Agriculture,
alleging the deaths and injuries violated federal law and multiple federal
regulations for animal handling, veterinary care, proper feeding, personnel
qualifications and other matters.
The complaint seeks the maximum federal fine of $10,000 per infraction/per
animal.
“Any laboratory which allows animals in a project to develop encephalitis
and kills another with faulty anesthesia should not be trusted to perform
scientific procedures,” SAEN co-founder Michael Budkie said in a statement.
“Supposedly `scientific’ data coming from UCLA animal labs cannot be
trusted.”
UCLA officials disputed the accusations.
“We disagree with SAEN’s characterization of these events. As always, we
will fully cooperate with any investigation by external regulatory bodies,”
Bill Kisliuk, UCLA’s director of media relations, told City News Service on
Wednesday.
“At UCLA, the Animal Research Committee is responsible for overseeing an
animal program involving approximately 950 protocols for over 400 different
principal investigators. Despite the complex nature of this program, we are
proud to report that unexpected problems such as these are infrequent. When
they do transpire, they are investigated promptly and modifications to
procedures are implemented where necessary,” he said.
According to SAEN, UCLA reported the incidents internally to the school’s
Institutional Animal Care & Use Committee. That report allegedly states that
on May 10, 2021, two rabbits “died prematurely. First rabbit was suspected
to have choked on its food as autopsy by our lab showed food pellets in
airway. … Second rabbit, died during surgery. Premature death was attributed
to anesthetics used by DLAM.”
The report also allegedly discusses the death of a pig, and illness of a
second one on Feb. 19, 2021.
“We’ve had 2 cases in which our pigs have contracted some form of
encephalitis or neurologic issues, one pig suddenly dying, while the other
recovered a few days later,” the report states, according to SAEN.
SAEN claims that “animals who are cared for in compliance with requirements
for adequate veterinary care should never develop encephalitis.”
Last year, SAEN accused USC of similar offenses, saying unauthorized staff
members amputated the ears of multiple mice in acts that were not connected
to scientific experiments, overdosed other mice with painkillers leading to
their deaths, and inflicted excessive stab wounds in the necks of pigs
during surgeries.
The group said USC officials placed the lab’s animal use protocols on
suspension for at least 90 days, denied access to the animal facility for
the individuals involved with the amputations, and suspended all animal use
activity at the lab where the mice were overdosed.
“It was the university that first discovered these incidents and self-
reported them to National Institutes of Health,” USC said in a statement to
the Daily Trojan. “The university has since taken a number of steps,
including enhanced retraining, to help ensure that they don’t reoccur.”