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News Stories
Animal rights protesters
torment scientists
By MARCUS WOHLSEN
BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) — In the hills above the University of
California's Berkeley campus, nine protesters gathered in
front of the home of a toxicology professor, their faces
covered with scarves and hoods despite the warm spring
weather.
One scrawled "killer" in chalk on the scientist's doorstep,
while another hurled insults through a bullhorn and
announced, "Your neighbor kills animals!" Someone shattered
a window.
Borrowing the kind of tactics used by anti-abortion
demonstrators, animal rights activists are increasingly
taking their rage straight to scientists' front doors.
Over the past couple of years, more and more researchers who
experiment on animals have been harassed and terrorized in
their own homes, with weapons that include firebombs,
flooding and acid.
Scientists say the vandalism and intimidation threaten not
just themselves and their families but the future of medical
research. Specialists in such fields as addiction, eyesight
and the aging brain have been targeted.
"It used to be everyone was worried about their laboratories
being broken into and their data being destroyed, their
animals being taken away," said Jeffrey Kordower, head of
the Society for Neuroscience's animal research committee.
"What they've decided to do now is make things more
personal."
Accompanying the attacks is increasingly tough talk from
activists such as Dr. Jerry Vlasak, a spokesman for the
Animal Liberation Front press office. In an interview with
The Associated Press, he said he is not encouraging anyone
to commit murder, but "if you had to hurt somebody or
intimidate them or kill them, it would be morally
justifiable."
The Washington-based Foundation for Biomedical Research said
researchers were harassed or otherwise victimized more than
70 times in 2003, up from just 10 the year before. The
number of attacks has held steady or risen ever since,
according to the group.
Activists say the escalation in tactics results from a
frustration that nonviolent methods have failed to stop what
they call the needless torture and killing of animals.
"An animal has as much of a right to life as we do. To take
a life without provocation is immoral, it's violent, there's
no excuse for it," said Jacob Black, 23, an organizer of
demonstrations at the homes of UC Berkeley researchers. "To
name and shame these people as morally bankrupt individuals
in our society is key."
A Web site aimed at Berkeley lists the names of a dozen
researchers and their home, work and e-mail addresses, their
photos, and often their home numbers. The roster also
includes graphic descriptions of each scientist's purported
work with animals.
"This information is here so that others may pressure these
individuals with legal protests — we do not participate in
or encourage illegal activity," the Web site says.
Despite that disclaimer, the late May protest in the
Berkeley hills left a window of the toxicology professor's
home shattered along with the window of a neighbor, who
sprayed demonstrators with a garden hose to drive them away.
Many scientists are reluctant to discuss the effect these
incidents have had on biomedical research. They worry that
any sign the attacks are succeeding could just lead to more
of the same.
But at least one researcher decided the pressure was too
much.
In 2006, activists began besieging the homes of several UCLA
professors. Masked protesters converged on scientists' homes
late at night, banging on doors, throwing firecrackers and
chanting, "We know where you sleep," according to court
documents.
Threatening calls and e-mails followed. Firebombs were left
near homes three times; two failed to go off, while the
third charred a front door. One professor's home was flooded
when a garden hose was shoved through a broken window.
During the onslaught, which lasted two years, a UCLA
scientist with small children informed protesters he had
stopped doing animal research.
"Effective immediately, I am no longer doing animal
research," vision researcher Dario Ringach wrote in an
e-mail. "Please don't bother my family anymore."
Though no one has been seriously hurt since the jump in home
protests, the attacks have drawn the attention of the FBI.
The agency has broad authority to investigate animal rights
incidents under the Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act of 2006.
"We consider this to be a serious problem, especially when
people's lives are being disrupted," said agent David
Strange, who oversees a domestic counterterrorism squad at
the FBI's Oakland office. "We call it terrorism because it
is a violent act violating federal criminal laws that has a
political or social motivation to it."
Six members of a Philadelphia-based organization were
sentenced to federal prison after they and the group itself
were convicted in 2006 of using a Web site to incite
threats, harassment and vandalism against people connected
with a company that tests drugs and household products on
animals.
But otherwise, few activists have been prosecuted, because
of free speech concerns and the movement's extreme secrecy.
Recently, federal investigators joined a probe into an
alleged February assault against the husband of a University
of California, Santa Cruz breast-cancer researcher who
experiments on mice. Police said masked activists pounded on
the family's front door during a birthday party for their
young daughter, and one threw a punch when the husband tried
to force them to leave.
Afterward, UC Santa Cruz Chancellor George Blumenthal backed
a proposed state law that would limit activists' access to
public information about animal experiments. Blumenthal
called acts against animal researchers "the greatest threat
to academic freedom that I've seen in the history of this
campus."
Activists say researchers drill holes into the skulls of
monkeys and cats in pursuit of esoteric discoveries that
will never help anyone.
But scientists say every effort is made to minimize the
suffering of animals used in experiments. Rigorous
government and university regulations provide detailed
protocols for the humane treatment of lab animals. And
scientists must show they have exhausted all other options
to obtain data before they turn to animals as test subjects.
In Kordower's work, drugs are used to induce symptoms of
Parkinson's in monkeys, which are then given experimental
treatments. Afterward, the monkeys are anesthetized and
killed and their brains dissected. The research, says
Kordower, director of neurobiology at Rush University in
Chicago, has led to clinical trials for promising genetic
therapies to treat Parkinson's.
Kordower has not faced attacks or protests. University of
Utah neuroscientist Audie Leventhal has.
The Animal Liberation Front claimed responsibility for
dousing a home owned by Leventhal with glass-eating acid and
covering it with animal rights slogans. Leventhal estimated
the damage at $20,000. At another home, the group claimed
responsibility for putting glue in the house's locks and
pouring salt to destroy the front lawn.
Leventhal said he will never abandon his research into the
effects of aging on the brain. In Leventhal's experiments,
anesthetized monkeys are paralyzed, put on life support and
shown flashing patterns on a screen as implanted sensors
measure brain activity.
"Even if I retire, I'm going to tell them I didn't retire,"
said the 56-year-old scientist. "There's no way they're
winning."
Still, he said, he has mostly been living out of state since
the protests began two years ago. He said he refuses to
teach classes to avoid having a fixed time and place where
activists can find him. His wife got so scared after
activists scaled the gate at their home in a Salt Lake City
suburb that she bought a gun, Leventhal said.
"I can see what they've done to me — if it gets enough
publicity — preventing people with half a brain in graduate
school from doing what I do," he said. |