Press Release
Florida Sanctuary Retires All Chimpanzees and Monkeys At Defunct
Coulston Primate Lab
ALAMOGORDO, N.M., Sept. 18, 2002 -- The notorious Coulston
Foundation primate-testing laboratory has shut down and each
of the 266 chimpanzees and 61 monkeys will be permanently removed
from research, the Center for Captive Chimpanzee Care announced
today.
The Center, a non-profit organization that currently cares
for 25 chimpanzees at its innovative sanctuary in Florida, took
over the Coulston facilities on September 16. The primates range
in age from 2 to 40 years old.
"We are thrilled to offer these long-suffering chimpanzees
and monkeys the best possible outcome in the nearly decade-long
controversy over this laboratory," said Dr. Carole Noon,
founder and director of the Center. "After endless rhetoric
nothing had been accomplished on the chimps' behalf. They had
run out of options. The Coulston Foundation had been reduced
to selling baby chimps just to make payroll. Now we begin the
process of rehabilitation and restitution for the terrible wrongs
inflicted on these individuals in the name of science."
The Center was approached this spring by Foundation CEO Dr.
Fred Coulston, whose lab was facing bankruptcy and foreclosure
after years of mounting regulatory problems and opposition from
animal advocates. Prior to contacting the Center, Coulston had
tried and failed to find a buyer for his financially ruined
lab.
According to the Center, the Coulston Foundation was investigated
at least seven times and formally charged an unprecedented four
times by the U.S. Department of Agriculture for violating the
federal Animal Welfare Act. The charges included the negligent
deaths of ten chimpanzees and four monkeys.
Among these were Donna, a 36-year-old chimpanzee formerly owned
by the Air Force, who died from a massive infection and ruptured
uterus after carrying a large dead fetus in her womb for weeks,
as well as Robert, James and Raymond, who literally cooked to
death when a malfunctioning heater sent the temperature in their
cage soaring to 150 degrees.
Coulston was also facing possible disqualification of his lab
by the Food and Drug Administration for widespread and repeated
Good Laboratory Practice violations. In 2001, after repeated
inspections, the FDA warned Coulston that it would not accept
any study results from its lab while the violations continued.
This eviscerated the lab's private client base.
In 2001, after years of funding the lab despite its record
of violating federal law, the National Institutes of Health
discontinued all support to Coulston. The move dealt a deathblow
to the lab, which had received as much as two-thirds of its
annual income from the federal agency.
In addition to the loss of its critical NIH funding and inability
to attract private clients because of the FDA sanctions, the
lab was dealt another crippling blow when its major creditor,
First National Bank of Alamogordo, filed foreclosure papers
last December for over $1.1 million in
outstanding loans. Over the past year, state and federal tax
liens filed against the lab totaled $427,000.
Until the Center stepped in with an offer to purchase the Coulston
Foundation buildings and equipment conditioned on the donation
of all the chimpanzees and monkeys, the lab was unable to make
payroll and its employees were threatening to walk.
The Center's purchase was made possible by an unprecedented
grant of $3.7 million from the Arcus Foundation of Kalamazoo,
Michigan, a long-time supporter of the Florida sanctuary.
According to Dr. Noon, if the Arcus Foundation had not embraced
her vision and taken responsibility for these chimpanzees their
future at best would not have been anything more than continued
misery and exploitation. "This is the largest single effort
on behalf of captive chimpanzees ever," said Dr. Noon.
The Animal Rights Foundation of Florida, Doris Day Animal League,
Friends of Washoe, In Defense of Animals, and New England Anti-Vivisection
Society provided additional support.
Among the chimpanzees being permanently retired are 16 of the
celebrated Air Force chimpanzees, who are survivors or descendants
of chimpanzees used in the U.S. space program. Also included
are chimpanzees unceremoniously dumped by the NIH, New York
University and New Mexico State University and acquired by Coulston.
"We are pleased to initiate this effort to save hundreds
of chimpanzees from the hopeless and hidden world of biomedical
research," said Jon Stryker, founder of the Arcus Foundation.
"It's time to fulfill society's responsibility for these
individuals who were used by science then
callously discarded by the federal government and academic institutions.
Our commitment
includes a dollar for dollar matching grant for operational
support through the year 2003."
With the addition of the 266 Coulston chimpanzees, the Center
will care for 291 individuals who will be housed at expanded
facilities in Florida and, at least temporarily, in New Mexico.