Animal studies that can’t be exported

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 2005:

Some U.S. animal studies are considered too risky to send
abroad–like the biological defense studies to be done at the $167
million Galveston National Laboratory at the University of Texas
Medical Branch, scheduled to open in 2008.
Such facilities are designed to be ultra-secure, but have had lapses.
New York City attorney Michael C. Carroll argued in his 2004 book Lab
257 – The Disturbing Story of the Government’s Secret Plum Island
Germ Laboratory that research accidents may have introduced Lyme
disease and West Nile fever to the U.S.
Whether or not that happened, three lab mice who were
infected with deadly strains of plague as part of a federal
biodefense project disappeared in early September from separate cages
at the University of Medicine & Dentistry of New Jersey. The loss
was disclosed two weeks later by Josh Margolin and Ted Sherman of the
Newark Star-Ledger.
In January 2005 Boston University was embarrassed by the
disclosure that two researchers were infected by a potential lethal
form of the rabbit-borne disease tularemia in May 2004, and another
in September. Their illnesses were not identified until October.
Boston University reported the cases to city, state, and
federal health agencies, as required, but they were not revealed to
the public until after November 2004 hearings on university plans to
build a “Biosafety Level 4” high-security lab at its South End
medical campus, located amid a densely-populated urban neighborhood.

Latest U.S., U.K., & Down Under lab stats

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 2005:

Current lab animal use statistics from the U.S., Britain,
Australia, and New Zealand show mixed trends. The total numbers of
animals involved in experiments are up over the past decade, yet
remain well below the reported peaks, and the numbers of animals
used per experiment are still trending down.
The most recent U.S. figures:

Animal Top yr Peak total 2004
Dogs 1979 211,104 64,932
Cats 1974 74,259 23,640
Monkeys & apes 1987 61,392 54,998
Guinea pigs 1985 598,903 244,104
Hamsters 1976 503,590 175,721
Rabbits 1987 554,385 261,573
Farm animals 1991 214,759 105,678
Other tracked 1992 529,308 171,312
All tracked 1985 2,153,787 1,101,958

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Hurricane Katrina & Rita rescuers shift gears from rescue & reunion to rehoming

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 2005:

NEW ORLEANS–All animals rescued from the aftermath of
Hurricanes Katrina and Rita became eligible for adoption on December
15, 2005, following the expiration of the last mandatory holding
periods prescribed by the Louisiana and Mississipi state
veterinarians.
“We’re setting up two new rescue centers, in New Orleans and
Gulfport,” Best Friends Animal Society president Michael Mountain
told supporters. “Rescue teams will be bringing animals there for an
official 5-day holding period in case the pets still have a local
family. After that, we’ll be driving or flying them to carefully
chosen shelters around the country to be placed in good new loving
homes.
“Best Friends is functioning as the lead agency in this
effort,” Mountain continued. “The Humane Society of the United
States, the American SPCA, and United Animal Nations are helping to
fund the rescue centers. UAN is also providing volunteer support.
The American Humane Association has offered their emergency rescue
truck to do sterilizations if needed. The Helen Woodward Animal
Center will be bringing many of the rescued pets into their
nationwide ‘Home for the Holidays’ adoption drive,” Mountain added.

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U.S. Supreme Court refuses to overturn right to sue police who shoot dogs

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 2005:

WASHINGTON D.C. –The United States Supreme Court on December
5, 2005 refused to review an April 2005 ruling by the 9th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals that law enforcement officers have a duty to
consider alternatives to shooting dogs.
The appellate court refused to block a lawsuit brought by
seven Hell’s Angels motorcycle club members against seven San Jose
police officers and a Santa Clara County sheriff’s deputy.
The Hell’s Angels contend that their civil rights were
violated when the police officers and sheriff’s deputy in January
1998 shot a Rottweiler and two other dogs while raiding two homes in
search of evidence pertaining to the 1997 fatal beating of a man at
the Pink Poodle nightclub in San Jose.
The appellate verdict noted that the raid was planned in
advance. Though the investigators “had a week to consider the
options and tactics available for an encounter with the dogs,” the
verdict pointed out, they “failed to develop a realistic plan for
incapacitating the dogs other than shooting them.”
The original case will now proceed to trial.
The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruling followed a 1994
decision by the same court that reversed a lower court verdict and
held that killing a pet without urgent necessity violates the Fourth
Amendment, protecting citizens against unreasonable search and
seizure.

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Editorial feature: Putting a practical face on breed-specific legislation

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 2005:

On Sunday, November 27, 2005, surgeons Jean-Michel
Dubernard of the Hopital Edouard-Herriot in Lyon, France, Benoit
Lengele of Belgium, and Universite de Amiens chief of face and jaw
surgery Bernard Devauchelle collabaorated to perform the first-ever
partial face transplant. Taking the nose, lips, and chin of
brain-dead organ donor Maryline St. Aubert, 46, of Cambrai, the
team restored the most prominent features of Isabelle Dinoire, 38,
who in May 2005 was severely mauled by a Labrador retriever she had
recently adopted from a pound near her home in Valenciennes.
The pound dog involved in that case was neither a pit bull
terrier nor a Rottweiler, both breeds continuing to glut U.S.
shelters at a rate exceeding by more than fivefold their proportion
in the pet population. Nonetheless, the French face transplant
helped to focus attention on the increasingly vexing question of what
to about dogs who are easily capable of killing or maiming someone
with their first-ever bite.
ANIMAL PEOPLE editor Merritt Clifton has since September 1982
maintained a breed-specific log of life-threatening and fatal attacks
by dogs kept as pets. Guard dogs, fighting dogs, and police dogs
are excluded. As of December 6, 2005, 2,048 attacks had qualified
for listing, including 318 since the January/February 2004 edition
of ANIMAL PEOPLE editorially called on lawmakers to “Bring breeders
of high-risk dogs to heel.”

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Elephant Sanctuary to get last Cuneo eles

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 2005:

CHICAGO–The Elephant Sanctuary at Hohenwald, Tennessee, in
late December 2005 expects to receive nine female elephants from the
Hawthorn Corporation of Richmond, Illinois. The move will put John
Cuneo, 74, out of the elephant training and rental business after
48 years.
Cuneo started the Hawthorn Corporation as a traveling circus
in 1957. Later Cuneo found a more profitable business niche in
leasing animals to other circuses and boarding exotic animals.
Cuneo agreed in March 2004 to settle 47 alleged Animal Welfare Act
violations by divesting of his 16 elephants by August 2004. The
divestiture was repeatedly delayed by disputes over where to send
them.

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Trafficking brings H5N1 threat home

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 2005:

NEW HAVEN–Pickled “jellyfish” could bring the potentially
deadly H5N1 avian flu virus to the U.S., a courtroom learned on
December 15 in New Haven, Connecticut. Food King Inc. owner
Vichittra “Vicky” Aramwatananont pleaded guilty to smuggling more
than 27,600 pounds of chicken feet into the U.S. from Thailand,
mislabeled “jellyfish” to evade inspection. The chicken feet were
sold in 11 states.
“Aramwatananont faces up to six months in prison, but is not
expected to receive jail time when she is sentenced on March 24,”
reported Associated Press writer Matt Apuzzo. “Food King will pay
$170,000 as part of a plea agreement.”
Still passing mostly from bird to bird, rarely crossing into
humans and even more rarely into other mammals, H5N1 has killed 71
people in Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam, China and Cambodia since
2003: just over half the total number of people known to have become
infected. Most victims were poultry workers, cockfighters, or
members of the families of poultry workers and cockfighters, who
shared their homes with sick birds.

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Fate of rescued animals goes to court

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 2005:

Pasado’s Safe Haven, of Sultan, Washington, directing one
of the major ad hoc rescue centers near New Orleans, suffered a
major embarrassment after sending 61 pit bull terriers to Every Dog
Needs A Home, also known as the EDNAH Animal Rescue & Sanctuary, in
Gamaliel, Arkansas.
Another 18 pit bulls were sent to EDNAH by the Humane Society
of Louisiana, which since losing its own facilities to Katrina has
operated from a corner of the St. Francis Animal Sanctuary in
Tylertown, Mississippi.
An October 21 visit to EDNAH by Baxter County Sheriff John
Montgomery found more than 400 dogs packed into a two-acre lot, as
many as 75 of them running loose. One dog was found dead.
Founders William Hanson, 41, and his wife Tammy Hanson, 38,
were charged with cruelty and released on $1,000 bond each.
“It’s definitely not the type of facility that we thought it
was,” Pasado’s representative Diane Goodrich told Jane Stewart of the
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.
“Goodrich said the Pasado dogs arrived at Hanson’s shelter on
October 17, delivered in individual cages that were lined up on a
gravel road inside the shelter entrance. Apparently the animals and
the cages had not been moved since their arrival,” Stewart wrote.

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Coastal pastures became better habitat for sea cows than cattle

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 2005:

Hurricanes Katrina and Rita between them submerged as much as
a third of the cattle grazing land in Louisiana. Rainfall from Wilma
perpetuated conditions that had Debra Barlow of Hopeful Haven Equine
Rescue wishing for an ark.
“We are a horse rescue organization, but have opened our
arms to include all the livestock we can help,” Barlow e-mailed to
Brenda Shoss of Kinship Circle, whose daily bulletins throughout the
fall 2005 hurricane season made her the unofficial dispatcher for
rescue efforts from Alabama to Texas.
“We have rescued emus, cattle, horses, you name it,”
Barlow continued. “The rescued animals have been put in holding pens
since they can’t graze the saltwater-saturated alfalfa fields. The
salt content made the animals dehydrated and delusional. We are
hoping to flush the saltwater absorbed out their systems with feed,
clean water and hay.”
“The Army used helicopters to search for thousands of cattle
feared stranded in high water, amid reports that more than 4,000 may
have been killed in Cameron Parish alone,” Associated Press reported
after Rita hit.

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