terça-feira, 22 de abril de 2025

Help Dogs Now

 

Give Now
 

Dear,

A Colorado laboratory deprived Bo of the comfort of a bed, the opportunity to walk outside—and even his voice. A veterinarian at the laboratory shoved forceps down his throat and crudely cut his vocal cords to stifle his cries.

For years, the laboratory imprisoned Bo in a barren kennel with a cold tile floor, even when he was so old and weak that a worker described him as “falling apart.” By the time he turned 11, the elderly beagle was suffering from neck pain and struggling to walk on stiff, bowed legs.

The facility’s veterinarian put forceps down dogs’ throats and used the tool’s “teeth” to take what he called “a little bite” out of their vocal cords.

Free Bo!
 

Bo isn’t alone. A PETA undercover investigator found that Red Beast Enterprises—a contract laboratory that tests drugs and other products on animals for companies and universities—confined more than 100 dogs and nearly 30 cats in barren conditions. Every dog had been “debarked” and denied pain relief following the gruesome procedure—yet afterward, their frantic barking was still deafeningly loud.

Workers forced dogs to ingest experimental drugs that made them vomit and suffer from diarrhea. A 3-year-old dog named Mantis had a massive seizure and was euthanized after being used in an experiment testing antibiotics.

Animals were left to suffer without veterinary care when they were sick or injured, and some paced endlessly in circles, seemingly driven mad by despair. Many were desperate for even a shred of affection, while others cowered or trembled at the sight of a human.

Help Dogs Now
 

Thanks to compassionate people like you, PETA has shut down laboratories like this before—and with your help, we can do it again. Our investigations have led to the release of dogs used in experiments and the first-ever federal convictions of a supplier of animals for experimentation.

Now, we need you with us to help animals at Red Beast Enterprises and other shoddy laboratories like it.

Even after he was mutilated by humans, Bo wagged his tail when he saw PETA’s investigator, longing for a gentle touch. Our investigator pleaded to adopt Bo but was told that he would never be allowed to leave the facility. If Bo is still alive, he’s still imprisoned there, waiting to be rescued. He and the other animals suffering at Red Beast Enterprises deserve to spend the time they have left in loving homes—and we are their best hope.

Free Bo!
 

Thank you for caring about animals like Bo.

Kind regards,


Daniel Paden
Vice President of Legal Advocacy

 

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