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.
More than 40 monkeys escape from South Carolina research facility
From Theresa Braine, NYDailyNews.com, November 7, 2024
More than 40 monkeys escaped from a South Carolina research facility and
were still on the loose Thursday, sparking a massive search as authorities
emphasized that they pose no danger to the public.
The rhesus monkeys launched their great escape from the Alpha Genesis
Primate Research Center on Wednesday at around 1 p.m. when a new employee
left the door open while cleaning their enclosure, the Yemassee Police
Department said in a statement. The total number of escaped monkeys was
confirmed on Thursday to be 43.
The tiny primates were described as “very young females weighing
approximately 6-7lbs,” Yemassee police said. They had not been used for
testing due to their age and size, with a spokesperson from Alpha Genesis
confirming that they’re “too young to carry disease.”
Traps were set up around the area, and the police department was using
thermal imaging cameras in their search for the rogue rhesus. Rain was
hampering the efforts “as the monkeys are hunkered down,” police told The
Post and Courier.
As of Thursday afternoon, the animals had been spotted.
“Alpha Genesis currently have eyes on the primates and are working to entice
them with food,” police said. “The public is advised to avoid the area as
these animals are described as skittish, and any additional noise or
movement could hinder their safe capture.”
Police cautioned residents to lock their doors and windows and to report
sightings rather than approach the animals themselves.
“There is almost no danger to the public,” Yemassee Police Chief Gregory
Alexander told The Post and Courier. “Just don’t try to take these things
home or pet them. We’re getting a lot of that on our social media. [Taking
them] is a felony because they don’t belong to you.”
The company breeds the monkeys for medical testing and research at its
compound in Beaufort County, about 50 miles northeast of Savannah, Ga. As of
May, there were 6,701 primates housed at the facility on Morgan Island, also
known as Monkey Island for its unique population, The Post and Courier
reported.
This wasn’t the first escape from the facility. In 2014, 26 monkeys made a
getaway, while another 19 broke out in 2016, though they were apprehended
six hours later, the newspaper said.
In 2018, Alpha Genesis was fined $12,600 when dozens of primates made a run
for it, in addition to an incident that left some without water and other
problems with the way the monkeys were housed. The company has come under
scrutiny from animal rights advocates in the area.
Animal rights group Stop Animal Exploitation Now demanded an inspection from
the U.S. Department of Agriculture over the latest caper.