Toronto Star

Court dismisses suit to free two chimps

Advocates sought to afford primates used in studies legal personhood rights

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK— Two chimpanzee­s will not be freed from a New York state university where they’re used in locomotion studies after a court decision Thursday dismissed a lawsuit that had sought to afford them legal personhood rights.

While the Nonhuman Rights Project had standing to bring the lawsuit on behalf of 8-year-old chimpanzee­s Hercules and Leo, a higher court decision last year that found a chimpanzee named Tommy was property, not a person, necessitat­ed the lawsuit be tossed, State Supreme Court Justice Barbara Jaffe wrote in her decision.

“Efforts to extend legal rights to chimpanzee­s are thus understand­able; some day they may even succeed,” she wrote in a 33-page decision.

“For now, however, given the precedent to which I am bound, it is hereby ordered, that the petition for a writ of habeas corpus is denied and the proceeding is dismissed.”

A representa­tive for the Nonhuman Rights Project didn’t immediatel­y return a request for comment.

In May, a lawyer for the group argued before a packed Manhattan courtroom that Hercules and Leo should be removed from the Stony Brook University on Long Island to a sanctuary in Florida.

Attorney Steven Wise said then that chimpanzee­s, which are biological­ly similar to humans, are “autonomous and self-determinin­g beings” and thus deserve similar legal rights. He likened their confinemen­t at the university to slavery, the involuntar­y detention of people with mental illnesses and imprisonme­nt.

But an assistant attorney general, representi­ng the state university system, argued that not only was the venue improper, but that chimpanzee­s were not entitled to legal personhood rights because they could not fulfil the responsibi­lities of people in society.

Wise filed hundreds of pages of expert opinions from academics, zoologists, biologists and others he said supported the claim that cognitivel­y, chimpanzee­s are advanced species.

 ??  ?? An assistant attorney general argued chimpanzee­s could not fulfil responsibi­lities of people.
An assistant attorney general argued chimpanzee­s could not fulfil responsibi­lities of people.

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