Action Alert Contact:
Sarah J. Helming, Deputy Administrator
email: [email protected]
Deputy Administrator Helming,
You must prosecute the Alpha Genesis Corporation for the negligence which
allowed over forty monkeys to escape, endangering both the monkeys
themselves and local residents. This facility must be fully penalized -- a
fine of $12,722 per infraction/per animal.
Search underway for escaped monkeys in Yemassee. Keep doors and windows closed, police say
From Karl Puckett, Chloe Appleby, Evan McKenna, IslandPacket.com, November 7, 2024
Monkeys are on the loose in Yemassee, according to police, who are
advising residents to keep their doors and windows closed. Late Wednesday
evening, police reported that 43 Rhesus macaque monkeys had escaped from the
Alphas Genesis facility on Castle Hall Road.
All of the monkeys are females, Town Clerk Matthew Garnes said, which are
more likely to congregate. They weigh 5-6 pounds and are probably going to
be skittish, he said. When monkeys have escaped in the past, all of the
animals have been captured, said Garnes, at least since he began his job in
2017.
A new employee assigned to the facility left three doors open, allowing the
monkeys to escape, Garnes said. The were discovered missing at 9 p.m.
Wednesday.
Traps have been strategically placed in the area in attempts to capture the
escapees. Yamassee police said they were assisting by using thermal imaging
cameras to locate the animals. There is no health risk associated with the
animals but residents are strongly advised to keep doors and windows secure
“to prevent these animals from entering homes,” police said.
Yemassee Police Chief Gregory Alexander said Alpha Genesis is leading the
effort to capture the monkeys. “This is something they do every day if a
primate gets out of its enclosure,” Alexander told The Beaufort Gazette and
Island Packet Thursday morning. “So they are very familiar with how to get
them back.” The monkey handlers often use fresh fruit and vegetables and
bananas to lure the animals in, Alexander said.
“Usually,” said Alexander, “some of the staff have what I would say is a
relationship with them. Some of them name them and they’ll come to them so
they have the techniques they use to apprehend the primates.”
Escapes have happened before and police are not concerned, Alexander said,
but the public should not attempt to pet or grab the monkeys if they see
them, even though they are in good health.
“We’ve had people call us and say, ‘We’d love to have a pet monkey,’” said
Alexander. “But they shouldn’t be used as pets.” Police also are asking
residents to contact 9-1-1 immediately if they see the monkeys and refrain
from approaching them. Alpha Genesis Inc. runs a primate research center and
maintains a colony of 6,000 monkeys in rural Yemassee 25 miles northwest of
Beaufort.
This isn’t the first time monkeys have escaped form the facility, known
locally as the “monkey farm.” In 2014, 26 monkeys escaped and 19 escaped in
2016. The controversial facility that breeds monkeys for research has been
the target of criticism from animal rights groups over the research and
treatment of the animals.
In 2018, Alpha was fined $12,600 by the federal government for six
violations including the escape of some of the animals. The U.S. Department
of Agriculture leveled the fines for six violations that occurred between
December 2014 and February 2016, according to a USDA document obtained by an
animal rights group. In 2020, the facility won a $4.6 million contract from
the National Institutes of Health related to vaccine research during the
COVID-19 pandemic.
Alphas Genesis says it specializes in providing specific-pathogen-free
primates to the biomedical research community. With more than 100 acres of
quarantine, breeding, holding and research space, it says, it is one of the
largest primate facilities designed specifically for monkeys in the country.
The company is experienced in vaccine development, therapeutic drug
therapies, viral pathogenesis, small molecule administration,
pharmacokinetics and experimental surgical procedures, it says on its
website. Alpha Genesis also has a breeding site at the 4,000-acre Morgan
Island just north of St. Helena Island across the Morgan River, which is
home to some 3,500 rhesus macaque monkeys. Locals often refer to the island
as “monkey island.” In 2021, Congresswoman Nancy Mace took a trip to that
island two years ago to raise awareness about Alpha Genesis’ research.
Stop Animal Exploitation Now! (SAEN), an Ohio-based national watchdog that
monitors research facilities, said Thursday it had filed a complaint with
Sarah J. Helming, deputy administrator of the USDA’s Animal and Plant Health
Inspection Service, calling for an investigation into potential violations
of animal handling and housing regulations. The complaint calls for the
maximum penalty of $12,722 per infraction/per animal. “The clear
carelessness which allowed these 40 monkeys to escape endangered not only
the safety of the animals, but also put the residents of South Carolina at
risk,” SAEN Executive Director Michael Budkie said in a press release.