See PDF
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Tuesday, February 13, 2018
Contact: Michael Budkie, SAEN, 513-575-5517
[email protected]
Primate Escapes and Injuries Continue to Plague University of Wisconsin, Claims Watchdog; USDA 'Open Case' Probe Still Targets UW
MADISON, WI – Primate escapes and injuries continue at the University of
Wisconsin, Madison, although the university's research program is already
the target of an "Open Case" by the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, as confirmed
by a USDA spokesperson.
SAEN, a non-profit Ohio-based non-governmental watchdog that monitors U.S
research facilities for illegal behavior and animal abuse, said documents it
recently obtained confirm multiple violations of the Animal Welfare Act by
the University of Wisconsin.
SAEN is calling for USDA – which enforces the Animal Welfare Act – citations
for inadequate animal handling, personnel qualifications, and facilities
against the University of Wisconsin.
SAEN said incidents recounted in UW correspondence discuss multiple
incidents of monkey escapes and injuries, despite numerous previous
citations for this very violation in previous USDA reports.
The recent primate escapes are revealed in UW correspondence dated Dec. 14,
2017 and February 10, 2017. A 2016 USDA inspection cited the UW for at least
12 incidents of escapes and injuries in one year, and that was itself a
repeat citation, referencing even earlier escapes.
The recent UW correspondence obtained by SAEN also discloses a serious
injury to a marmoset monkey, caused by a faulty enclosure.
"USDA action against the University of Wisconsin is long overdue," said
Michael A. Budkie, A.H.T., executive director and co-founder of SAEN, which
has filed multiple official complaints with the USDA after discovering
evidence animal deaths and injuries from federal records obtained from
Freedom of Information Act requests.
"This has to raise questions about the entire research program at the UW,"
added Budkie. "If the UW staff is so inept that it can't even lock down
enclosures to prevent escapes, then why should we believe that the staff can
do complicated scientific procedures?"
-30-
See also:
Return to Current Press Releases