Animal rescue group says it bought 1,500 beagles from Wisconsin facility
targeted by protesters
[April 30, 2026]
By SCOTT BAUER
MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Animal refuge groups said Wednesday that they have
agreed to buy nearly 1,500 beagles at a Wisconsin dog breeding and
research business that was the site of a violent clash earlier this
month between activists trying to break in and police who repelled them
with tear gas and pepper spray.
Big Dog Ranch Rescue and the Center for a Humane Economy said they have
entered into a confidential agreement with Ridglan Farms to buy 1,500 of
the facility's roughly 2,000 beagles for an undisclosed price. It's
unclear what the plans are for the remaining dogs.
Ridglan Farms did not immediately return a message seeking comment.
“It's a very big win and I am ecstatic to have these dogs out and get
them into loving homes," Lauree Simmons, president and founder of Big
Dog Ranch Rescue, told The Associated Press.
Simmons said she could not discuss the payment for the dogs, how long
the deal had been in the works or how many beagles remain at Ridglan
after the deal.
The 1,500 dogs will be transported later this week from Ridglan to
partner agencies as well as to Big Dog Ranch Rescue facilities in
Florida and Alabama, Simmons said. They will receive medical exams,
microchips and vaccinations before they are assessed for adoption, she
said.
“These dogs need to learn to walk on a leash," Simmons said. "They need
to learn to live in a home environment, be housebroken, spayed and
neutered.”
But even if they don't work out at their adopted homes, they can always
come back to Big Dog Ranch Rescue, Simmons said. Big Dog Ranch Rescue
says its facility in Loxahatchee, Florida, is the largest cage-free,
no-kill dog rescue operation in the country.

Animal activists have been pushing for 10 years to have the dogs at
Ridglan Farms adopted, not sold to other research facilities.
Simmons said her group was not involved in the recent protests that drew
increased attention on Ridglan, but she credited activists with raising
awareness about what was happening.
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Animal rights activists converge at the Wisconsin State Capitol to
demand that the governor and attorney general do what they can to
shut down a beagle breeding and research facility, Monday, April 20,
2026, in Madison, Wis. (AP Photo/Scott Bauer)

“What they did was put the message out," Simmons said of the
activists. “What we did, we wanted to do legally and in the best way
and for the best outcome of these dogs for the future.”
About 1,000 activists from across the country came to Ridglan Farms
in rural Blue Mounds in an attempt on April 18 to take the beagles
kept there about 25 miles (about 40 kilometers) southwest of the
capital, Madison. They were met by police who repelled them with
tear gas, rubber bullets and pepper spray. The Dane County Sheriff’s
Department said 29 people were arrested and five face felony
burglary charges.
Activists filed a federal lawsuit in Wisconsin last week alleging
that police used unnecessary force to repel those trying to break
into the facility and take the dogs. Ridglan has said those who
tried to break in were a “violent mob” who launched “an assault on a
federally licensed research facility."
In March, activists broke into Ridglan and left with 30 beagles.
Sixty-three people were referred from the sheriff's department to
the district attorney for potential charges related to that break
in.
Ridglan Farms agreed in October to give up its state breeding
license as of July 1 as part of a deal to avoid prosecution on
felony animal mistreatment charges. Ridglan Farms has denied
mistreating animals, but a special prosecutor determined that
Ridglan Farms was performing eye procedures on the dogs that
violated state veterinary standards.
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