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THE DE-SCENT OF MUSK: USDA to investigate monkey experiments funded by Elon Musk’s Neuralink

Macaque monkeys used in the experiment were caged alone, had steel posts screwed to their skulls, suffered facial trauma, seizures following brain implants, and recurring infections at implant sites.

CHRISTOPHER HUTTON: The Department of Agriculture will investigate allegations that Neuralink, Elon Musk’s company for developing neural interfaces, is torturing and mutilating monkeys. Officials will investigate the “invasive, fatal monkey experiments funded by Elon Musk’s Neuralink” after the animal advocacy group Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine [PCRM] filed two Feb. 10 actions against the company and the University of California, Davis, for their treatment of monkeys in the design of neural interfaces…

A spokesperson confirmed to the Washington Examiner that PCRM’s complaint had been received but could not confirm the investigation. PCRM sent one complaint to the USDA alleging the animals were being poorly treated and filed a lawsuit seeking additional photos and videos about the state of the 23 monkeys in Neuralink’s charge. UC Davis has withheld photo and video evidence, hiding critical details about the fate of the monkeys in the process and prompting the animal advocacy group to take legal action, Beckham told the Washington Examiner.

The lawsuit is an amended version of an initial lawsuit filed by the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine in May of last year requesting the initial records, which the advocacy group did not receive until October. The reports demonstrated monkeys were euthanized, caged alone, and subjected to steel posts being screwed to their skulls, among other abuses, PCRM alleged…

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service has confirmed that it will look into the invasive, fatal monkey experiments funded by Elon Musk’s Neuralink, in response to a complaint filed by the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine. The confirmation was made by deputy administrator Elizabeth Goldentyer, DVM, in an email to the organization last Friday.

The brain-computer implant experiments took place at the University of California, Davis, through 2020 and involved 23 monkeys, 15 of whom died, according to records obtained by the Physicians Committee. The experiments, in which portions of the monkeys’ skulls are removed and electrodes are implanted in their brains, now continue at a private Neuralink facility in Fremont, California. SOURCE…

PCRM PRESS RELEASE STATEMENT:

PCRM: The Physicians Committee filed a complaint with the USDA on Feb. 10, pointing out that Neuralink and UC Davis staff failed to provide dying monkeys with adequate veterinary care, used an unapproved substance known as “BioGlue” that killed two monkeys by destroying portions of their brains, and failed to provide for the psychological well-being of monkeys assigned to the experiment.

Macaque monkeys used in the experiment were caged alone, had steel posts screwed to their skulls, suffered “facial trauma,” seizures following brain implants, and recurring infections at implant sites. In some cases, as a result of deteriorating health, Neuralink and UC Davis euthanized monkeys before they were even used in the planned experiment. UC Davis received more than $1.4 million from Elon Musk’s company Neuralink to carry out the experiments.

The Physicians Committee also filed a second public records lawsuit to compel the university to release videos and photographs of the monkeys used in the Neuralink-funded experiments. The university initially withheld nearly all documents, and only released veterinary and health records following a Physicians Committee lawsuit filed in May 2021. UC Davis has confirmed that Neuralink employees removed videos from the public institution.

“These horrific experiments are even more troubling because there is no need to subject animals to suffering and death,” says Ryan Merkley, director of research advocacy with the Physicians Committee. “Human-relevant, nonanimal methods already exist and can advance brain-computer interface research.”

“A private company was allowed to remove videos of these experiments from a public institution,” says Deborah Dubow Press, Esq., associate general counsel with the Physicians Committee. “The avalanche of media coverage about what Musk is doing proves that there is a huge amount of interest in seeing those videos and leads one to wonder what exactly they are so determined to hide”. SOURCE…

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