For Immediate Release:
December 8, 2021
Contact:
Tasgola Bruner 202-483-7382
Baltimore â This morning, PETA sent a formal complaint to Stateâs Attorney for Baltimore City Marilyn Mosby, requesting a criminal investigation into the possible violation of anti-cruelty laws involved in the gruesome and deadly brain experiments on owls conducted at Johns Hopkins University (JHU) by experimenter Shreesh Mysore.
Mysore cuts into barn owlsâ skulls, implants electrodes into their brains, restrains them, clamps their eyes open, and bombards them with sounds and lights for up to 12 hours. When the owlsâ brains become too damaged to use for further experimentation, he kills them. PETA notes that only approval from a university animal care and use committee would exempt this mutilation and killing from Marylandâs cruelty-to-animals lawsâand because JHUâs Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee approved Mysoreâs experiments even though he lacked mandatory state permits for using owls for this purpose, its approval is invalid.
âAnyone who mutilates, torments, and kills owls without a required permit would certainly face cruelty-to-animals charges,â says PETA Vice President Shalin Gala. âShreesh Mysoreâs horrific experiments arenât exempt from Marylandâs animal protection laws since he failed to get required permits, and PETA is asking the stateâs attorney to hold him and Johns Hopkins University accountable.â
The Maryland Department of Natural Resources has confirmed that Mysore failed to obtain mandatory scientific collecting permits from 2015 to 2018âeven though the agency sent him remindersâyet his experiments on barn owls continued during this time frame and may have involved owlsâ deaths. He purports to experiment on owls to research human attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, despite significant hearing and vision differences between the species and his admission that results from experiments like these can be âmisinterpret[ed].â
In 1981, PETAâs landmark Silver Spring monkeys investigation into the Institute for Behavioral Researchâthen a federally funded laboratory in Marylandâled to the nationâs first arrest and criminal conviction for cruelty to animals, the first confiscation of abused animals from a laboratory, and the first U.S. Supreme Court victory for animals used in experiments.
PETAâwhose motto reads, in part, that âanimals are not ours to experiment onââopposes speciesism, a human-supremacist worldview. For more information, please click here, visit PETA.org, or follow the group on Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram.
Source: Peta.org