The Riverside Press-Enterprise

All surviving monkeys heading to lab after crash

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DANVILLE, PA. » The last of the escaped monkeys from the crash of a truck towing a trailer load of 100 of the animals was accounted for by late Saturday, a day after the pickup collided with a dump truck on a Pennsylvan­ia highway, authoritie­s said.

Several monkeys had escaped following Friday’s collision, Pennsylvan­ia State Police said. But only one had remained unaccounte­d for as of Saturday morning, prompting the Pennsylvan­ia Game Commission and other agencies to launch a search for it amid frigid weather.

Kristen Nordlund, a spokespers­on with the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said in an email Saturday evening that all 100 of the cynomolgus macaque monkeys had since been accounted for.

Three were dead being euthanized.

The email did not elaborate on why the three were euthanized or how all came to be accounted for. But Nordlund said those euthanized were done so humanely according to American Veterinary Medical Associatio­n guidelines.

The shipment of monkeys was en route to a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention-approved quarantine facility after arriving Friday morning at New York’s Kennedy Airport from Mauritius, an Indian Ocean island nation, police said.

The CDC said the agency was providing “technical assistance” to state police in Pennsylvan­ia.

The collision occured Friday on a state highway near an Interstate 80 exit in Pennsylvan­ia’s Montour County, Trooper Andrea Pelachick told The Daily after

Item newspaper

The location of the quarantine facility and the type of research for which the monkeys were apparently destined weren’t clear, but cynomolgus monkeys are often used in medical studies. A 2015 paper posted on the website of the National Center for Biotechnol­ogy Informatio­n referred to them as the most widely used primate in preclinica­l toxicology studies.

Trooper Lauren Lesher had said concern about the monkeys was “due to it not being a domesticat­ed animal and them being in an unknown territory. It is hard to say how they would react to a human approachin­g them.”

Lesher said state police secured the scene for the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Health and the CDC.

The drivers of the trucks weren’t harmed and a passenger was transporte­d to a medical center for treatment of suspected minor injuries, according to the state police’s crash report.

A crash witness, Michelle Fallon, told the Press Enterprise newspaper of of

Sunbury.

Bloomsburg that she spoke with the pickup driver and a passenger after the crash. The driver appeared to be disoriente­d, and the passenger thought he might have injured his legs, she said.

Crates littered the road Friday as troopers searched for monkeys, rifles in hand. Valley Township firefighte­rs used thermal imaging to try to locate the animals, and a helicopter also assisted, the Press Enterprise newspaper of Bloomsburg reported.

The pickup was heading west on I-80 when it got off at the Danville exit and then immediatel­y tried to get back on, driving across the other lane, the newspaper reported.

Fallon told the Press Enterprise that said she was behind the pickup when it was hit on the passenger side by the dump truck, , tearing off the front panel of the trailer and sending more than a dozen crates tumbling out.

Fallon peeked into a crate and saw a small monkey looking back at her, she told the newspaper.

“They’re monkeys,” she told another motorist.

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 ?? JIMMY MAY — FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The driver of a pickup transporti­ng monkeys pulls a crate of monkeys off of the road after a crash Friday near Danville, Pa.
JIMMY MAY — FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The driver of a pickup transporti­ng monkeys pulls a crate of monkeys off of the road after a crash Friday near Danville, Pa.
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