USDA Terminates Deadly Cat Experiments, Plans To Adopt Out Remaining Animals
The U.S. Agriculture Department announced Tuesday that it's putting an end to a controversial research program that led scientists to kill thousands of cats over decades.
Since 1982 the USDA's Agricultural Research Services division had been conducting experiments that involved infecting cats with toxoplasmosis — a disease usually caused by eating undercooked contaminated meat — in order to study the foodborne illness. Once the cats were infected, and the parasite harvested, the felines were put down.
In a statement announcing the decision, the agency said "toxoplasmosis research has been redirected and the use of cats as part of any research protocol in any ARS laboratory has been discontinued and will not be reinstated."
Additionally, the USDA said it is in the process of putting the 14 remaining uninfected cats up for adoption by agency employees.
The experiments came under increasing scrutiny over the last year and public outcry intensified over recent weeks in the wake of a report by the White Coat Waste Project that found the USDA's researchers also forced the lab cats to eat dog and cat meat obtained in overseas markets.
(Score: 3, Funny) by krishnoid on Wednesday April 03 2019, @07:21PM
Redirected to NIMH, under the supervision of ... well, an advanced research group that grew out of a previous experiment. A few PETA spokespeople in attendance looked alternatively terrified and conflicted when asked about it and wouldn't comment further.