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Supreme Court rules no monkey farm in Puerto Rico
Published on January 18, 2012 Email To Friend    Print Version

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico -- In a conclusion to a lengthy and hard-fought lawsuit that was filed by Guayama citizens and People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), the Puerto Rico Supreme Court has upheld previous decisions by lower courts and determined that Bioculture, Inc.'s monkey-breeding facility in Guayama was constructed illegally and cannot open for business.

The commonwealth's highest court has also denied a motion for reconsideration on the ruling from Bioculture, making this decision the final blow to Bioculture's plan to capture more than 4,000 monkeys from Mauritius, confine them to cages in Guayama, and then sell their offspring for use in painful and deadly experiments at notorious facilities abroad, such as Shin Nippon Biomedical Laboratories, Charles River Laboratories, Pfizer, and Covance.

PETA investigations and government inspections have revealed that animal abuse and violations of federal laws took place in these facilities.

"From citizens' protests and local ordinances all the way to the Supreme Court, Puerto Rico has made it quite clear that it wants no part of Bioculture's bloody business," says PETA vice president Kathy Guillermo. "The final nail is now in Bioculture's coffin, and the 4,000 monkeys and generations of their offspring who would've suffered and died for the company's profit have been officially spared."

In 2010, Guayama Mayor Glorimari Jaime Rodriguez announced that the municipality had unanimously adopted a new law explicitly banning the import, export, breeding, and use of monkeys in experiments within its boundaries.

Previously, the Puerto Rico Senate Environmental Committee found that Bioculture's facility was improperly built on land that was not zoned for the business's purposes, and the US Environmental Protection Agency fined Bioculture thousands of dollars for violating the federal Clean Water Act.

Actor Benicio Del Toro and renowned primatologist Jane Goodall have voiced opposition to the project as well.
 
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