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About Exposing the Big Game

Jim Robertson

Monkeys Headed for Lab Hunted with Assault Rifles, Killed

Rise for Animals, November 5, 2025

Editor’s Note: This article was updated on November 10, 2025 to reflect Rise for Animals’ receipt of records that suggest the escaped monkeys were en route to Bioqual, a contract research organization in Rockville, MD. An earlier version of this article stated the monkeys were en route to a facility in Florida, as had been reported by WIS-TV on October 28, 2025. 


The Crash and Killing

On Tuesday, a truck said to be carrying 21 rhesus macaques—boxed in wooden crates and shipped like cargo—flipped on a Mississippi freeway.

The crash turned several of these crates into “crumbled and strewn about” splinters. From the debris, several small (estimated 12-40 pound) prisoners managed to do what their captors feared most: break free.

But most didn’t get far.

Law enforcement “destroyed” them after hunting them down with assault rifles, telling the public that the victim animals needed to be “neutralized.”
(Photo: Scotty Ray Report)

Video footage shows monkeys sitting in and walking through grass, while law enforcement characterizes them as “on the prowl.”

In reality, these animals were likely experiencing some of their only moments of quasi-freedom—and some were experiencing the last moments of their lives.

After the crash, local law enforcement confirmed that “all but three of the escaped monkeys have been killed,” and boasted of having been “in contact with an animal diposal [sic] company to help handle the situation,” including by taking “the carcasses at the scene.”

But the death toll might actually be higher. A Mississippi resident has bragged about shooting one of the monkeys to death, and another monkey was claimed to have been captured by the Mississippi Department of Wildlife and Fisheries.

The rest—those “unable to break free from their cages”—were returned to the very institution that put them on the truck: Tulane University’s National Biomedical Research Center. (Later reports state that the monkeys are “now in the possession of their owner en route to their intended destination.”)

Hiding the Truth

For its part, Tulane has refused to answer even the most basic questions, much less take any responsibility . . . or express any empathy.

Despite direct media inquiries, Tulane has refused to say how many monkeys escaped, how many have been killed, who the monkeys “belong to” (Tulane would only state that the monkeys “belong to another entity,” though they “were taken from its research center”), who was transporting them, or where they were going.

(Photo: Jasper County Sheriff’s Department)

(As the Associated Press has observed, this incident “is the latest glimpse into the secretive industry of animal research and the processes that allow key details of what happened to be kept from the public.”)

What Tulane is reported to have verbalized, however, is a direct law enforcement to shoot any monkeys who “leave the wreck site.” Tulane would not respond to questions about why the escapees were executed.

We shouldn’t be surprised. This is how the animal research industry operates: secrecy, always; transparency and accountability, never.

The 21 monkeys—chillingly referred to as “specimens” by media—were en route to another research facility. Early news coverage stated that the monkeys were being sent to an unnamed “testing facility” in Florida, but this is not supported by new public records obtained by Rise for Animals, which suggest that the monkeys were en route to Bioqual, a contract research organization in Rockville, Maryland.

Tulane’s Cages and Abuse

Though we may not yet know the monkeys’ intended destination, we do know exactly where they came from.

Tulane is home to one of the nation’s seven, NIH-funded national primate research centers: the Tulane National Primate Research Center, which just changed its name to the “Tulane National Biomedical Research Center.” It’s a 500-acre facility “[c]omprised of grids of cages, administrative buildings and laboratories” that breeds animals for research, trades in their bodies with an estimated 500 investigators from more than 155 institutions globally….,” and itself exploits them in the name of “science.”

Public records further tell us that:

  • In 2025, Tulane held at least 4,277 rhesus macaques under its USDA Class B dealer license.
  • In 2024, Tulane reported 4,888 nonhuman primates “being bred, conditioned, or held for use in teaching, testing, experiments, research or surgery,” as well as 773 others actively being used for experimentation.
  • In 2024, Tulane was issued an official warning by the USDA for failing to provide basic protections for its primates. A December 2023 inspection had found that “40 outdoor field enclosures” did “not provide adequate shelter from the elements.” The USDA also documented unacceptable “[c]leaning, sanitization, housekeeping, and pest control.”
  • In 2023, one of its female monkeys was found dead in her cage after becoming “entrapped in the enclosure.”

And, Tulane has also taken public heat for certain of its experiments on primates, including one in which “monkeys were spun at high rates of speed and had their vomiting rated,” one in which monkeys “lost use of their limbs” after having had their “nerves cut for an experiment on spinal cord injuries,” and one in which “human nipples were sewn onto male monkeys.”

Monkeys Desperate for Escape

This is the institution now behind the most public escape of primates used for research since the 2024 Alpha Genesis debacle, when 43 monkeys fled the company’s South Carolina breeding facility —only to be dragged back, one by one.
And, here’s a kicker: Tulane and Alpha Genesis are in business together. 

Public records obtained by Rise for Animals show that the Tulane National Primate Research Center purchased monkeys from Alpha Genesis as recently as June of this year.

Ultimately, then—and despite the industry’s deafening silence—this crash only further pulls back the curtain on the perverse reality of animal research.

Exposing an Industry Built on Cruelty

It’s an industry in which living beings are:
Institutionalized.
Forced to breed.
Stuffed into wooden boxes.
Shipped like cargo to suffer and die in experiments.
And, killed—potentially with AR-style weapons—when they dare to run . . . or just take a walk through the grass.

This is how the animal research industry chooses to operate—because it can.
But it doesn’t have to stay this way. Not if we stand together and say: no more.

You Can Protect Primates

Your Call to Action: Call on your legislators to oppose additional funding for primate research infrastructure in the final FY 2026 appropriations bill. 

Bobcat trapping season starts Saturday, open in 40 Indiana counties

WFIU | By Natalie Fitzgibbons

Published November 7, 2025 at 2:21 PM EST

A bobcat.
Bobcat trapping season starts Saturday for 40 Indiana counties.

Bobcat trapping season begins Saturday for 40 Indiana counties. The season lasts until Jan. 31 or until a quota of 250 is met. Licensed trappers will be limited to one bobcat per person.

The counties open for bobcat trapping are mainly in the southern region of the state including Monroe, Brown, Morgan and Orange counties.

A state law that passed in 2024 required the Indiana Department of Natural Resources to establish a bobcat harvest season. In years prior, proposals were made to allow a bobcat harvest season which sparked controversy and delayed decisions. Bobcats were considered an endangered species until 2005.

Read more: Governor signs 67 bills ranging from reading remediation to bobcat hunting

This is Indiana’s first regulated bobcat harvest season, said Geriann Albers, DNR’s furbearer and game bird program leader.

This season is not about reducing the population but a way for the DNR to offer an outdoor activity, as with wild turkey or white-tailed deer.

“We feel bobcats are doing really well, Albers said. “We feel like this will be sustainable, and it’s an opportunity we could offer without negatively impacting the populations. And we’re really trying to balance so people can enjoy bobcats in whatever way that they choose to.”

Bobcats are more prominent in the southern counties because their expansion came from states south of Indiana, Albers said. The southern counties offer bobcats forest habitats, which they are fond of, but they are expanding north as they tend to follow waterways.

This season is only for trapping with hunting prohibited. Trapping is a more cautious start with low quotas and bag limits. And, there are fewer trappers than hunters. It also allows room for growth and possibly adding bobcat hunting in the future, she said. Footholds, cage traps and cable devices are devices allowed for bobcat trapping.

Read more: DNR Proposes Allowing Trapping, Hunting Bobcats

“I know there are a lot of people who are worried that, you know, we’re going to drive bobcats back to extinction and things like that, but that is absolutely not what we want,” she said. “We care about bobcats. We want bobcats to thrive in Indiana. We think this season is very conservative and allows bobcats to still be very present on the landscape.”

Individuals will not only need a trapping license to set traps but a bobcat license to harvest a bobcat as well. Licenses can be purchased through the DNR while the season is open. As of Tuesday, 869 bobcat licenses have been sold, Albers said.

Trappers will also need to ensure the bobcat they harvest is properly tagged to make it legal. Bobcats are on the Convention on the International Trade of Endangered Species list, Albers said. They are not endangered but they look like species that are endangered internationally.

“There is a requirement that they have to get a tag to prove that it’s a legally harvested North American Bobcat for it to then go on the international market, to ensure that it’s not one of those endangered species like an Iberian lynx,” she said.

Hunter missing nearly 3 weeks in California rescued, truck found in ‘gnarly’ area

Miranda AdamsUpdated: Nov 4, 2025 / 02:56 PM CST

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FRESNO COUNTY, Calif. (KSEE/KGPE) – New details are emerging about what may have happened to the Selma hunter who was rescued after missing for weeks in the Fresno County mountains.

According to one of the men who found his truck, it was in a “very gnarly section” where only “rockcrawlers could make it up.”

Bryce Anderson says his off-roading club, the Hill Hoppers, stumbled across Ron Dailey’s truck on Sunday, just one day after Dailey himself was found by a group of hunters on the Swamp Lake Trail.Search underway for ‘experienced’ hunter in Oregon 

“Our club was doing the annual trail closure run, where we go through and make sure no one is in there and we lock the gates behind us,” Anderson said. “We just happened to find his truck six miles in from the South Gate.”

Those six miles, he says, are typically reserved for off-road vehicles.

“[It’s a] very gnarly section of trail where only well-built rock crawlers can go,” he told YourCentralValley.com on Monday. “We were in disbelief that a stock truck could make it in that far.”

But he was not surprised that the truck could not make it back.Remains found near Mississippi River ID’d as man missing since 1990 

“It was badly damaged, had a spare tire on, and the front end was lifted up on a high lift jack,” he said. “The back window was broken out when we found it. I assume from trail damage. It looks like he removed the passenger seat and was sleeping in the cab.”

The Fresno County Sheriff’s Office says they will be interviewing Dailey in the coming days to find out more about what happened.