http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/california/la-me-animal30oct30,1,899442.story?coll=la-headlines-pe-california&ctrack=1&cset=true
From the Los Angeles Times
Animal rights group says it flooded house
Underground organization claims responsibility for vandalizing home of UCLA professor who conducts research on monkeys.
By Larry Gordon
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
October 30, 2007
An animal rights group has claimed responsibility for flooding the
Westside home of a UCLA professor who uses lab monkeys in research on
nicotine addiction.
An
FBI spokeswoman said Monday that the agency is investigating the claim
that the Animal Liberation Front used a garden hose to flood the house
of professor Edythe London on Oct. 20 in an attempt to stop her animal
experiments.
The FBI, along with UCLA and Los Angeles police,
are treating the vandalism as a case of domestic terrorism and are
probing possible ties to a June incident in which an incendiary device
was lighted, but did not explode, next to a car at the home of a UCLA
eye disease researcher, according to FBI spokeswoman Laura Eimiller.
In
a press release distributed to the media Monday, an underground entity
identifying itself as the Animal Liberation Front said it broke a
window at London's house and flooded the residence with a hose. The
announcement said the group considered starting a fire there, but did
not want to risk igniting brush fires that might have harmed animals
"human and non-human."
UCLA officials said the flooding caused between $20,000 and $40,000 in damage. London could not be reached for comment.
UCLA
Chancellor Gene Block issued a statement Monday condemning what he
described as a "deplorable and illegal act of extreme vandalism," and
said the university would not retreat from the legal use of animals in
research that can benefit society. He insisted that all UCLA research
complies with federal laws to ensure humane care of lab animals.
The
group's claim was posted by a Woodland Hills-based website called the
North American Animal Liberation Press Office. Jerry Vlasak, a trauma
surgeon who is an activist in that press office and who protests
against animal euthanasia at animal shelters, declined to say how he
received the information about the vandalism and said he did not know
the responsible parties.
But Vlasak said Monday that he sent
the communique to the media so the incident would "not be dismissed as
a random act of violence." He said he condones the flooding at London's
house "if it is helpful to get her to stop torturing innocent animals."
About
a year ago, Santa Monica police and federal agents raided Vlasak's
Agoura Hills house as part of an investigation into the Animal
Liberation Front, which law enforcement officials described as a
shadowy network that has sabotaged animal research labs, firebombed
properties and made numerous death threats.
Authorities said
Monday that Vlasak has not been charged with any crimes stemming from
that investigation. FBI spokeswoman Eimiller said she could not confirm
or deny whether the North American Animal Liberation Press Office is
being investigated in the flooding and previous threats against UCLA
professors.
Last year, Vlasak was convicted of "targeted
protesting" -- in violation of a Los Angeles municipal ordinance -- for
demonstrating against euthanasia at the home of a Department of Animal
Services employee. He was sentenced to 30 days' electronic monitoring
and is appealing the ruling.
Authorities are still offering
$170,000 in rewards for information leading to the arrest and
conviction of those responsible for two previous UCLA-related incidents
for which animal rights groups claimed credit.
An incendiary
device was lighted but did not ignite June 24 next to a car parked at
the Westside home of Dr. Arthur Rosenbaum, chief of pediatric
ophthalmology at UCLA's Jules Stein Eye Institute. A similar incident
occurred last year at a Bel-Air house, which apparently was targeted by
mistake instead of the house of a UCLA researcher who lived nearby.
London,
who has been at UCLA since 1999, is a professor in two departments at
the David Geffen School of Medicine: Psychiatry and Biobehavioral
Sciences, and Molecular & Medical Pharmacology. Her work on
nicotine and methamphetamine addictions has included experiments on
vervet monkeys. Plans for an upcoming study call for some of the
monkeys to be ultimately killed and autopsied, according to the school.
According
to Block's statement, London conducts "groundbreaking research aimed at
better understanding and treating nicotine and methamphetamine
addiction and other neuropsychiatric disorders that afflict millions of
people." A university website said her research group pioneered the use
of positron emission tomography, an imaging tool known as PET scanning,
to show a relationship between drug craving and activity in brain
regions that link memory with emotion.
larry.gordon@latimes.com