• Feds—Demand Refund From UCSF Abusers

    Written by Jeff Mackey

    PETA is asking the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to take back money awarded to the University of California–San Francisco (UCSF) for cruel experiments on monkeys in which federal animal welfare laws were repeatedly violated.

    Lack of Care for Animals—and the Law

    In 2011, federal inspectors cited UCSF for two violations of animal welfare laws over the school's abuse of a monkey named Petra, who is pictured below:


    Photo: PETA via USDA
    Petra

    UCSF was cited for continuing to torment Petra in a cruel brain experiment for nearly two years despite her deteriorating health and for failing to remove surgically implanted hardware from Petra's skull, as the experimenters were required to do.

    Internal UCSF records obtained by PETA reveal that Petra developed a terrible bacterial infection in the wound where her head was cut open. She rapidly began to lose weight, circled endlessly in her cage, and ripped out her own hair—a common behavior in primates imprisoned in laboratories. Primates are highly social animals, but in laboratories, they are often isolated in small stainless-steel cages as Petra was. As a result, they suffer from severe depression and boredom. 

    UCSF Pockets Money, but Petra Pays the Price

    NIH policy prohibits spending grant money on experiments that violate federal animal welfare laws. Yet NIH awarded UCSF more than $2.1 million just during the period when Petra was abused, so PETA is urging NIH to demand the return of these funds.  UCSF is no stranger to violating federal animal welfare laws. In 2005, UCSF paid more than $90,000 for dozens of violations of the Animal Welfare Act, which is one of the largest fines ever paid by an animal laboratory. 

    What You Can Do

    Please contact the NIH and ask that they demand UCSF repay funds awarded during the period when experimenters violated the law by abusing Petra. Are animals like Petra suffering in your school's laboratories? Help save animals from misery and death in experiments by urging your alma mater to stop experimenting on animals.

  • Vivisector of the Month: Dr. Dora Angelaki

    Written by Jeff Mackey

    We've told you before how cats and ferrets suffer in archaic training courses at Washington University in St. Louis. Now, we've obtained a photo of the miserable living conditions for a monkey named George, who is also confined to this facility:

    Information on who is experimenting on George was not released, but we wonder if it might have been Dora Angelaki, who has been crowned Vivisector of the Month for the month of June. Angelaki, who recently left Washington University to become chair of the neuroscience department at Baylor College of Medicine in Texas, drills screws into monkeys' skulls and implants a "head ring," which attaches to an apparatus to control the animals' heads. She also implants coils into their eyes and electrodes into their ears before strapping the monkeys to a chair designed to immobilize their bodies as they are spun and shaken so that Angelaki can observe their ability to track a target. In some cases, she damages parts of the monkeys' brains first. Angelaki has received more than $18 million in federal tax money for her primate experiments.

    How You Can Help Animals in Laboratories

    While Angelaki has left Washington University, there are still animals there who need your help. Please urge the school to end the use of animals in cruel and archaic intubation training exercises and replace them with modern, effective teaching methods.

REPORT CRUELTY

If you have a general question for PETA and would like a response, please e-mail Info@peta.org. If you need to report cruelty to an animal, please click here. If you are reporting an animal in imminent danger and know where to find the animal and if the abuse is taking place right now, please call your local police department. If the police are unresponsive, please call PETA immediately at 757-622-7382 and press 2. 

PETA Tweets

Follow PETA on Twitter!

Chicken Photo: © Rommel Manuel