Over 4,000 beagles destined for drug experiments finding new homes
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[August 10, 2022]
(Reuters) - About 4,000 beagles are
looking for homes after animal rescue organizations started removing
them from a Virginia facility that bred them to be sold to laboratories
for drug experiments.
"It's going to take 60 days to get all of these animals out, and working
with our shelter and rescue partners across the country, working with
them to get these dogs into eventually into ever-loving home," said
Kitty Block, president and chief executive of the U.S. Humane Society.
Shelters from South Elgin, Illinois, to Pittsburgh have begun receiving
the dogs, which will get medical exams, vaccinations and other
treatments before becoming available for adoption.
In May, the U.S. Department of Justice sued Envigo RMS LLC alleging
Animal Welfare Act violations at the facility in Cumberland, Virginia.
In June, parent company Inotiv Inc said it would close the facility. In
July, Envigo settled with the government, without paying any fines.
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Inotiv did not respond to a request
for comment.
Government inspectors found beagles there were being killed instead
of receiving care for easily treated conditions; nursing mother
beagles were denied food; the food they received contained maggots,
mold and feces; and over an eight-week period, 25 beagle puppies
died from cold exposure, the Humane Society said in a statement.
Some were injured when attacked by other dogs in overcrowded
conditions, it added.
The beagle rescue effort began much earlier, according Bill Stanley,
a Republican state senator for Virginia. "I tried to shut them down
in 2019, but was not successful. But over the years, we never
stopped fighting."
(Reporting by Aleksandra Michalska; Editing by Richard Chang and
Lisa Shumaker)
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