DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Dozens Face Felony Charges After Raid of Beagle Research Facility

July 8, 2026
in News
Dozens Face Felony Charges After Raid of Beagle Research Facility

Dozens of people were charged with felonies after trying to steal thousands of beagles from a Wisconsin research facility — a major development in a case that has drawn increased attention to animal testing practices.

The facility, Ridglan Farms, outside Madison, breeds the beagles for research intended to improve veterinary medicine, but is now winding down operations. Protesters have tried on separate occasions in recent months to steal beagles from the facility in response to allegations of animal mistreatment, and in one case succeeded. The company has denied that it abuses animals.

Prosecutors in Dane County, Wis., filed charges on Friday against at least 47 people they believe participated in a March break-in that ended with the removal of 22 dogs. The people, including members of a national animal rights group, have each been charged with burglary, according to a criminal complaint. Four other individuals who the authorities believe played a large role in the incident face additional charges, filed in April.

For all but those four individuals, the maximum sentence for this latest round of charges is 12.5 years. Members of the group include residents of 19 U.S. states, Washington, D.C., and Canada.

On March 15, the group, wearing a mix of white lab jumpsuits and all-black outfits, piled out of vans parked near Ridglan Farms. Some used hammers, crowbars and other tools to cut through fencing surrounding the facility and to break at least one window, according to the complaint. A few carried portable radios with attached earpieces. Others livestreamed their actions on Facebook, the complaint said.

Weeks of planning predated the incident, according to the complaint. Organizers recruited participants, created a travel guide, held a training session, scoped out the facility and purchased materials, including protective gear, saws and mallets. The local authorities arrested dozens of participants at the scene.

“Roads were blocked,” Kalvin Barrett, the Dane County sheriff, said. “Drones were used.”

About a month later, the police used tear gas and rubber bullets to halt another attempt by a group of over 1,000 activists, and several more were arrested.

Wayne Hsiung, founder of Direct Action Everywhere, a national animal rights group, was among those arrested. “Only a deeply corrupt system” would deploy tear gas and rubber bullets against “peaceful activists,” Mr. Hsiung previously said in a statement from jail.

Law enforcement officials were “just trying to protect the property and uphold the law,” Sheriff Barrett said.

Charges filed last week in Dane County concern the theft of beagles in March. But the sheriff’s office has also recommended charges related to the April incident to the Dane County District Attorney’s Office, Sheriff Barrett said.

It could not be reached for comment.

All individuals charged thus far are expected to appear in court in August, a Dane County official confirmed. Meanwhile, Ridglan Farms is winding down its operations.

Last fall — after former employees testified that dogs at the center had undergone eye surgeries without general anesthesia — a special prosecutor found that Ridglan Farms performed procedures that constituted animal mistreatment.

The highly publicized beagle theft attempts prompted increased scrutiny of Ridglan Farms’ operations this year. In response to public concerns about the welfare of dogs at the facility, the sheriff’s office in April requested to accompany state officials on an unannounced walk-through of Ridglan Farms. That request was denied, Sheriff Barrett said. Ridglan Farms could not be reached for comment on Tuesday.

“Law enforcement cannot just go in there and shut it down because we don’t agree with what we’re seeing or what’s happening there,” Sheriff Barrett said.

Ridglan Farms previously bred beagles for experiments done on site and sold the dogs to other research labs. The company was expected to surrender its breeding license this summer, ending its ability to sell dogs to outside labs — a consequence of a state investigation. The facility would have maintained permission to perform experiments on its own beagles.

Now, though, Ridglan Farms is on track to close this August, said Lauree Simmons, president and founder of Big Dog Ranch Rescue.

After purchasing dogs from Ridglan Farms in May, Big Dog Ranch Rescue, which has campuses in Florida and Alabama, reached a deal with the company: Ridglan Farms will close its Wisconsin center, and Big Dog Ranch Rescue will purchase the remaining beagles, Ms. Simmons said.

Other rescue groups across the country have also purchased dogs from Ridglan Farms. Currently, nearly 500 beagles remain there, Ms. Simmons said.

“I think with all of the activists’ actions that brought this really to the world’s attention, I think they may have had enough,” Ms. Simmons said. The beagles that Big Dog Ranch Rescue has purchased from Ridglan Farms range from puppies to 10-year-olds, Ms. Simmons said. Many were scared and shy when they first arrived, she added, but “have really rebounded.”

“This facility had a long history of violations, and they’re not the only one,” Ms. Simmons said. “Animal testing in this country, especially on dogs, is cruel and unnecessary.”

The post Dozens Face Felony Charges After Raid of Beagle Research Facility appeared first on New York Times.

Daily Horoscope: July 8, 2026
News

Daily Horoscope: July 8, 2026

by VICE
July 8, 2026

Wednesday has a split personality, and knowing that going in makes all the difference. The Moon settles into Taurus this ...

Read more
News

Pasadena doctor who drove wife, children off cliff has murder charges dismissed

July 8, 2026
News

Maine Democratic Party Calls Out Graham Platner for Trying to Influence Senate Replacement Process

July 8, 2026
News

‘Stop, my god’: Fiery CNN debate breaks out with Trump loyalists over faces on money

July 8, 2026
News

‘Stop, my god’: Fiery CNN debate breaks out with Trump loyalists over faces on money

July 8, 2026
Lauren Bennett, ‘Party Rock Anthem’ and G.R.L. singer, dies at 37

Lauren Bennett, ‘Party Rock Anthem’ and G.R.L. singer, dies at 37

July 8, 2026
Trailing in Polls, a Moderate Goes on the Attack at a Michigan Senate Debate

Trailing in Polls, a Moderate Goes on the Attack at a Michigan Senate Debate

July 8, 2026
Former mayor of Mississippi’s capital city pleads guilty in bribery scheme

Former mayor of Mississippi’s capital city pleads guilty in bribery scheme

July 8, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026