Earlier this month, 43 monkeys escaped Alpha Genesis, a monkey breeding facility in South Carolina that supplies animal testing labs. Years ago, Kathleen Conlee, vice president of Animal Research Issues at the Humane Society of the United States, worked at this facility, and what she saw there made her become an advocate for animals used in labs. Here she reflects on these escapees and what needs to be done to change how primates are treated once and for all.


When I first saw news about dozens of young monkeys escaping Alpha Genesis in the small town of Yemassee, South Carolina, the very facility where I used to work (then owned by a different company), memories of what I saw there came flooding to the forefront of my mind.

People from all corners of my life, past and present, sent the news to me. I realized that, while we are on the front lines of trying to make change for animals used in experiments every day, so many people aren’t aware that monkeys and other animals are still suffering in laboratories. Concerned messages poured in from the public asking what can be done to help these helpless animals.

It has been reported that 39 of the monkeys have been captured by the lab so far. The chance of life at a sanctuary is gone for them. We do not know yet what will happen to the four youngsters who remain at large. I am grateful that Born Free USA has offered to take in the animals at its sanctuary in Texas.

This latest escape, though, speaks to a larger systemic cruelty that is happening all the time. 

For one thing, this is not the first time monkeys have escaped Alpha Genesis, which has more than 10,000 primates at three sites and receives millions in taxpayer dollars every year. The facility has also been marked by multiple violations of the federal Animal Welfare Act in recent years. Back when I worked at the facility in the 90s, I remember animals escaping several times, including a group of approximately 30 monkeys who used a fallen tree to get out of their enclosure. All were ultimately recaptured and brought back to the lab.